freezing mackeral
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lumpy
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freezing mackeral
seeing as my freezer is empty and the shoals are starting to build up i have to start filling again. just a question though, do people find it best to fillet the mackeral and then vacuam seal them or freeze them whole and vacuam them
shore species 2008(25):dogfish(3.1lbs), bull huss (12lb 2oz), bass, shore rockling, coalie, whiting, pollack, conger (22.4lbs),flounder, thick lipped mullet (4.8lbs),turbot,ling (11.2lbs),ballan wrasse(4.5lbs), cuckoo wrasse, pouting, poor cod, cod (9.5lbs), dab, 3 bearded rockling, long spined scorpion fish, corkwing wrasse, plaice, trigger fish, sea trout, garfish
regards neil
regards neil
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EoinMag
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Leave the guts in them then vacuum pack and freeze, I only ever fillet on the beach or before the pan. They keep much better when frozen with guts in as long as you get them into the freezer fast and if for bait then you want guts for the scent trail.
2008 Species: Flounder, whiting, coal fish, Dogfish, rockling, dab.
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fenitbob
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I did a food safety course at some stage in the past and it said that large fish keep better if they are gutted as quickly as possible as once it dies the enzymes from the gut get into the blood and start digesting the fish
the problem is alot of the blood is in the gut too and makes for good bait
What I take from this is is if you can get them chilled or frozen quickly enough keep the guts but if you are out and are planning to stay out for a couple of hours gut them.
imo
the problem is alot of the blood is in the gut too and makes for good bait
What I take from this is is if you can get them chilled or frozen quickly enough keep the guts but if you are out and are planning to stay out for a couple of hours gut them.
imo
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donal
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lumpy
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mother had one lying around the house so just used it. broke at the mo so gotta go back to the cling film
shore species 2008(25):dogfish(3.1lbs), bull huss (12lb 2oz), bass, shore rockling, coalie, whiting, pollack, conger (22.4lbs),flounder, thick lipped mullet (4.8lbs),turbot,ling (11.2lbs),ballan wrasse(4.5lbs), cuckoo wrasse, pouting, poor cod, cod (9.5lbs), dab, 3 bearded rockling, long spined scorpion fish, corkwing wrasse, plaice, trigger fish, sea trout, garfish
regards neil
regards neil
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Adam S
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i have both gutted and not gutted them in the past, freeze them quickly after you catch em, havent noticed any difference
i glaze and vaccuum pack them, best if you use them inside 3 months i have found, still just about useable after 5
i glaze and vaccuum pack them, best if you use them inside 3 months i have found, still just about useable after 5
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SKIP
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VACUME PACKERS
Atlantic homecare are doing a vacum pack and seal.have to say you cant go wrong for 60euro i'd certainly recommend them
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peacockealot
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stevecrow74
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ok.. here goes... if you are going to eat any of the mackerel at any time.. as fenitbob said, gut it straight away, but this is for consumption purposes only...
dont freeze a mackerel whole then later fillet it and eat it.. this could cause a serious case of deli belly... not good.. some bacteria can survive extreme low temperatures and survive being frozen and thawed..
for bait, as soon as the mackerel is caught keep it cold, the flesh will start to deteriorate the longer it is left in the open... as fenitbob said the gut enzymes eat into the flesh..
as for packing, vacuum packing is the handiest as it takes up less space, wrapping in paper can be a pain in the rear when thawing the fish for use(paper gets everywhere, you know what i mean), wrapping in clingfilm seems to be a newer way of doing it, but you have to thaw the bait out a bit before you can fully unwrap it..
the ideal way of doing it is catching vacuum packing and in the freezer within 30min's, not possible in all cases though...
for some reason i find that breaking the neck( thumb in mouth and pulling up) the fish lasts a bit longer out in the open, dont know why but i presume its because there is a little blood loss in the process, which makes it harder for the gut enzymes to travel through the body(only a theory though)
another way, but kinda cruel is keep the mackerel alive as long as possible in a big bucket of water until the last minute.. i dont even do this .. its not fair on the fish, but i have seen it done...
but i cannot emphasize enough that if you are going to at any stage eat a mackerel, to fillet it on the spot and keep it separate from the whole mackerel, and dont eat a thawed frozen whole mackerel.. the consequences can be pretty bad :shock:
p.s. freezer burn is caused by loss of moisture from the fish, moisture will move to the coldest part of the freezer i.e. freezer walls and bottom..
to prevent this make sure that the mackerel is properly wrapped, this is why vacuum packing is the most recommended way of freezing meats and baits, and why cling film wrapping is a close second, paper wrapped baits can end up with freezer burn due to loss of moisture from the bait into the paper its self, if there is a build up of frost on a paper wrapped mackerel, chances re it has suffered freezer burn..
i hope this has cleared a few things up for people :wink:
dont freeze a mackerel whole then later fillet it and eat it.. this could cause a serious case of deli belly... not good.. some bacteria can survive extreme low temperatures and survive being frozen and thawed..
for bait, as soon as the mackerel is caught keep it cold, the flesh will start to deteriorate the longer it is left in the open... as fenitbob said the gut enzymes eat into the flesh..
as for packing, vacuum packing is the handiest as it takes up less space, wrapping in paper can be a pain in the rear when thawing the fish for use(paper gets everywhere, you know what i mean), wrapping in clingfilm seems to be a newer way of doing it, but you have to thaw the bait out a bit before you can fully unwrap it..
the ideal way of doing it is catching vacuum packing and in the freezer within 30min's, not possible in all cases though...
for some reason i find that breaking the neck( thumb in mouth and pulling up) the fish lasts a bit longer out in the open, dont know why but i presume its because there is a little blood loss in the process, which makes it harder for the gut enzymes to travel through the body(only a theory though)
another way, but kinda cruel is keep the mackerel alive as long as possible in a big bucket of water until the last minute.. i dont even do this .. its not fair on the fish, but i have seen it done...
but i cannot emphasize enough that if you are going to at any stage eat a mackerel, to fillet it on the spot and keep it separate from the whole mackerel, and dont eat a thawed frozen whole mackerel.. the consequences can be pretty bad :shock:
p.s. freezer burn is caused by loss of moisture from the fish, moisture will move to the coldest part of the freezer i.e. freezer walls and bottom..
to prevent this make sure that the mackerel is properly wrapped, this is why vacuum packing is the most recommended way of freezing meats and baits, and why cling film wrapping is a close second, paper wrapped baits can end up with freezer burn due to loss of moisture from the bait into the paper its self, if there is a build up of frost on a paper wrapped mackerel, chances re it has suffered freezer burn..
i hope this has cleared a few things up for people :wink:
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EoinMag
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stevecrow74 wrote:ok.. here goes... if you are going to eat any of the mackerel at any time.. as fenitbob said, gut it straight away, but this is for consumption purposes only...
dont freeze a mackerel whole then later fillet it and eat it.. this could cause a serious case of deli belly... not good.. some bacteria can survive extreme low temperatures and survive being frozen and thawed..
for bait, as soon as the mackerel is caught keep it cold, the flesh will start to deteriorate the longer it is left in the open... as fenitbob said the gut enzymes eat into the flesh..
as for packing, vacuum packing is the handiest as it takes up less space, wrapping in paper can be a pain in the rear when thawing the fish for use(paper gets everywhere, you know what i mean), wrapping in clingfilm seems to be a newer way of doing it, but you have to thaw the bait out a bit before you can fully unwrap it..
the ideal way of doing it is catching vacuum packing and in the freezer within 30min's, not possible in all cases though...
for some reason i find that breaking the neck( thumb in mouth and pulling up) the fish lasts a bit longer out in the open, dont know why but i presume its because there is a little blood loss in the process, which makes it harder for the gut enzymes to travel through the body(only a theory though)
another way, but kinda cruel is keep the mackerel alive as long as possible in a big bucket of water until the last minute.. i dont even do this .. its not fair on the fish, but i have seen it done...
but i cannot emphasize enough that if you are going to at any stage eat a mackerel, to fillet it on the spot and keep it separate from the whole mackerel, and dont eat a thawed frozen whole mackerel.. the consequences can be pretty bad :shock:
p.s. freezer burn is caused by loss of moisture from the fish, moisture will move to the coldest part of the freezer i.e. freezer walls and bottom..
to prevent this make sure that the mackerel is properly wrapped, this is why vacuum packing is the most recommended way of freezing meats and baits, and why cling film wrapping is a close second, paper wrapped baits can end up with freezer burn due to loss of moisture from the bait into the paper its self, if there is a build up of frost on a paper wrapped mackerel, chances re it has suffered freezer burn..
i hope this has cleared a few things up for people :wink:
I think if you have a good enough chest freezer with a quick freeze compartment and enough common sense to know when something is not fit for consumption then you can also go with my method.
2008 Species: Flounder, whiting, coal fish, Dogfish, rockling, dab.