Eventually my dad walked back up to the truck that was
parked not too far away. As soon as he was
out of sight, the waiting ended. My
sister’s (the Pie Goddess) line jerked, she grabbed her pole, set the hook, and
reeled it in. I ran to get the net to
the surprising cacophony of clapping and cheering from fellow fishers. The Pie Goddess had an audience! I unnecessarily netted the fish. It was little and the Pie Goddess decided to
throw it back. My dad missed the entire
show, but from then on the bite was on!
At least for the Pie Goddess. She
had a number of missed bites, but caught two more and kept one. I even managed to catch a little one that I
threw back. Somehow the girls caught the
fish and the boys were skunked!
But this is what the waiting game is all about: it’s fun –
you never know what might happen or what might not happen. But luck is always on my side with this game
because my dad and sister don’t eat fish, but my husband and I do! So even if I don’t catch anything, I always
go home with the fish!
But that means I have to figure out how to cook it. (I always manage to have someone else clean
it!) However, I still had to debone out
how to debone a trout. Wikihow gave 3
options on how to do it. Because this
fish was still on the small side, I decided to cook it with the bones in. The cooking part was actually a lot easier
than I expected. I thawed the fish,
combined olive oil, parsley, and a little salt and pepper and basted the inside
of the fish. Leaving the bones in with
all of the seasoning seemed strange, but I did it even though it felt wrong. I
wrapped it in foil and put it in the oven. It cooked fast too – maybe only 10
minutes.
And then for the deboning.
I couldn’t do it; I was too nervous of ruining the whole thing. The husband stepped up to the plate and did a
fabulous job! He put his fingers into
the hot fish and pulled the entire backbone out. Impressive!
There were no bones left in the meat of the fish!
Trout is a bit on the wild side and has a definite fishy
taste to it, but the olive oil and seasoning mellowed it out. We paired it with some shrimp (concocted by
the husband) and some veggies for a yummy, healthy dinner.
No comments:
Post a Comment