We cook them the same as Carp! Bake them on a board and toss to the cats. Load up in the car and go to Captin D's. HA!HA!. Seriously we don't care for trout and we live right by a lake full of Crappie and Catfish.:D
looking for some good trout recipes besides just frying the fillets
highlife... the krystal of all beers
We cook them the same as Carp! Bake them on a board and toss to the cats. Load up in the car and go to Captin D's. HA!HA!. Seriously we don't care for trout and we live right by a lake full of Crappie and Catfish.:D
Moderator of Beginners n Mentoring forum
Takeum Jigs
I posted one one here for trout almondine (spelling)
We clean them put some garlic and a few onions and a couple lemon slices in a tin foil wrap and bake it or grill it.
He who dies with the most lures wins!
Thats why they call it fishin and not catchin!
I was stationed in Alaska and trout was the primary fish so I ate a very large number of them. One way we cooked them was to wrap them in foil and cook on the grill with a low temp for about 30-45 minutes. We added different seasoning depending on the availability. Flop in a couple spoons of butter to help keep it from sticking to the foil and add lemon juice and pepper, or you can add paparika. (spelling), Italian (spelling) dressing worked well, and butter with hot sauce worked well too. Smoked trout was good, but it was hard to get them to stay lit :-). Cedar board trout is some good eating (google it) and of course frying because down South we fry water. Good luck and good eating.
I like to make mine with butter, seasonings, and a small onion slice, wraped in foil in fire coals. The best I've ever had was on a stick, over a fire, for breakfast. I caught a 17" rainbow while backpacking and had nothing to prepare it with. Gutted it, skewered it and held it over a small fire till done. I've had better prepared trout but that was the best one ever.