| | |||||||
| Notices |
| Recipes You have some good combinations for seafood or other fare. Post it up in here and let us all enjoy the creation. |
What have you got to say about the topic of: "The Best Conch Salad". Here's how is started: "Good to know. Just for reference..... Channel Whelk Horned or knobbed Whelk"
| | LinkBack (3) | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
| | #11 | ||
| NBS Member Join Date: Jun 2006 Location: Westbrook CT
Posts: 1,318
| Good to know. Just for reference..... Channel Whelk ![]() Horned or knobbed Whelk | ||
| | |
| | #12 | ||
| NBS Member Join Date: Jul 2007 Location: Stonington
Posts: 593
| Andy, Those Bahamian conchs are a different animal than the smooth channel conch I catch. Tunaless described the channel conch pretty good, as they do look like they have burlap on them. Typically they are about the size of a mans fist perhaps somewhere between one or two pounds. The wholesalers will give you something around a buck per pound for them and as Tunaless says, they do go into pots very well. One could easily catch several hundred pounds if one wanted to target them and put out enough pots. The Bahamian conch is a very large animal that goes several pounds. It could reach the size of a bathroom sink. They are somewhat pink in color, very pretty looking, and all the Bahamian shopping market places sell the empty shells to tourists. When I got ashore, from a visiting a navy destroyer, I tried the native conch chowder. It was pretty good and I did see a cook pounding the hell of them. Probably they are tougher than our channel conch. I tried pounding a channel conch to see if I soften it up but made a mess out it. When I tried to make my conch salad, it sounds almost as what Tunaless described. Where I think I went wrong, I was eating it before it had a chance to marinate. I too, tried sea robin and while it was better than a Bluefish, I did not really care for it. However, those blowfish we used to catch by the bucket full, years ago, was dam good. You would only eat the tail section. The Italian fish stores called them "Chicken of the Sea". That is another fish I have not seen in the markets lately, although they are still around. I still catch a handful each season, aggravate them so they puff up, and then toss them over the side. As soon as they hit the water, they deflate and head for the bottom. | ||
| | |
| | #13 | ||
![]() Join Date: Oct 2006 Location: Norwood/Quincy/Marshfield,Ma/Islamorada,Fl
Posts: 663
|
I go down to fish Islamorada every year and eat conch fritters for the entire trip . I get them everywhere we stop. | ||
| | |
| | #14 | |||
| NBS Member Join Date: Oct 2006
Posts: 141
| Quote:
I get them for FREE which is great. I like them 4 different ways. One in a red sauce not spicy with thin slcied garlic and thin sliced scungilli(conch) cooked for 5 hours. The second in a garlic EVOO, chives and your flavor of pepper, the scungilli added last and taken right out of the pan. Third is the salad as I mentioned. I use a razor blade and slice them real thin after I clean them. I break the shell with a hammer, cut off the guts and keep the good meat, and then slice real thin. One of my favorite recipes is slice the scungilli really thin. marinate in lemon juice for a few hours. Make an alfredo sauce, add the scungilli and then add some fresh calamri. cook 2 minutes and plate over you favorite macaroni. | |||
| | |
| Ads Do NOT Show To Registered Members | |
| Bookmarks |
| Tags |
| conch, salad |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
| |
| LinkBack to this Thread: http://www.nbssportfishing.com/vBforum/f41/best-conch-salad-7141/ | ||||
| Posted By | For | Type | Date | |
| red conch salad Search Results 31 to 45 | This thread | Refback | 05-24-2008 12:00 AM | |
| NBS Sportfishing Forums | This thread | Refback | 03-22-2008 11:30 PM | |
| NBS Sportfishing Forums | This thread | Refback | 03-19-2008 12:49 PM | |