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Wis. Tom
02-12-2014, 07:24 PM
I need a good recipe for deep fried cod. I'm told to marinade them in milk first. Anyone got advice for me? I'm a BBQ man, and pitmaster's is my main cooking, but I want to try some of this cod I have frozen, and don't know where to start.

Hickory
02-12-2014, 07:34 PM
This is a quick and easy recipe for a beer batter that goes great with nearly any fish and seafood; it's basically a fish-n-chips batter made with a good beer, flour and a little oil. The keys here are cold batter, hot oil and quality fish. This recipe works well with tilapia, cod, haddock, walleye, seabass, snapper, halibut -- really any firm fish. You can even use it for shrimp, calamari or oysters. Serve this with chips, and a dipping sauce. I like simple mustard. This recipe makes enough batter for 2 pounds of fish or seafood.

Prep Time: 25 minutes

Cook Time: 15 minutes

Total Time: 40 minutes

Ingredients:
•2 pounds fish, shrimp, oysters, clams or squid
•8 T. self-rising flour
•2 T. olive oil
•About a half a bottle of good beer
•1/2 t. salt
•Oil for frying
•Kosher salt

Preparation:


Mix the flour, oil, salt and beer together in a bowl. Add the beer last and do it slowly, stirring all the time. You want enough beer in the batter to make it the consistency of house paint, or pancake batter.

Put the batter in the fridge for 20 minutes.

After 10 minutes, take out the fish and salt it liberally. Let it sit on the counter for 5 minutes or so, then slice it into pieces about the size of a large shrimp.

Heat the oil to 350 degrees. I use canola oil, but any vegetable oil will do.

When the oil is hot, dredge the fish into the batter and let it get coated thickly. Gently place it in the oil and repeat. Do not crowd the pot or deep-fryer. Do this in several batches.

Fry until the fish is golden brown, moving it around the oil so it does not stick anywhere. This take about 5-8 minutes.

Let the fish drain on a wire rack or paper towels.

Serve at once with a sauce (tartar sauce, cocktail sauce, mustard, hot sauce, ketchup, etc) and an ice cold beer.

Wis. Tom
02-12-2014, 09:06 PM
Thanks Hickory, that looks good and just what I was trying to find. Time to go cook.

MaryB
02-12-2014, 11:58 PM
Can go as simple as salt, pepper, and flour too.

Artful
02-13-2014, 12:18 AM
Do you like thin batter or thick? Have you tried Tempora style fried foods?

Wis. Tom
02-13-2014, 12:57 AM
I made it almost per Hickory and it turned out great. The only thing I added was alittle Emeril's original essence to the flour for just alittle "bam". The batter cooled is a secret that I didn't know. Thanks again. Still have fish left in the freezer that I need to cook up to make room and I love eating fish.