What is the real truth, about cooking whole fish, and softening the bones? My hot, arid desert area actually got some good rain, this year, and there is a lot of water in the reservoirs, so I started fishing again, for the first time in twenty years.
The daily bag limit, for sunfish and crappie, where I live, is 25. The main one is bluegill(lepomis macrochirus), and I have 8 of them in my refrigerator, right now. I caught one last week, and cut out the guts, ribs, and spine, fried it in butter, and there wasn’t much meat left. These fish have hard, spiky fins, i wrapped them in parchment paper, throwing them in a cooler, and they punch through that. How is it, that you cook fish to make the bones edible? I understand that canned fish is exposed to really high pressure, but there’s a bunch of confusing information on the internet. People are claiming that a regular pressure/rice/slow cooker can’t pressurize enough, to soften bones, and that I’m going to choke.
Now, this sounds like propaganda, to me, intended to get me to waste food(and throw away good stuff, like fins and cheeks and eyes, which taste great), and brainwash me with “food safety.” If I make some slices in them, like I were going to fillet them, but don’t separate the fillet off, and I deep fry them, is that enough? I just need to remove the guts and gills, correct? Because I’m seeing these videos, of sweet and sour fish, and rednecks breading and frying bluegills, where they just do that.
How much boiling or frying does it take, to not be a food-wasting, uncultured poser?
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