Friday
was once again fish day and we had the ingredients for Baja Fish Tacos. My
understanding is that fish tacos originated in Baja, California and Baja Style
means the taco should contain, at least, fried white fish, shredded cabbage, and creamy
white sauce. This shot is from the
food.com site and are not nearly as full as ours.
½ jalapeno
pepper, minced
1 tsp.
ground cayenne pepper
1⁄4 teaspoon
cayenne
I wish we'd gotten more photos but we got to busy cooking fish and building tacos as it came off, then eating of course. But I did get a shot of my Saturday morning breakfast - the batter didn't crisp up as nice as when fresh but it was still delicious and went well with a couple of scrambled eggs.
The
sauce recipe we used came from Vickie on her no longer in use blog and I made
it up ahead - this is a half recipe and I omitted the strike thrus.
Fish
Taco Sauce
Ingredients:
¼ cup sour
cream
¼ cup
mayonnaise
½ lime,
juiced
½ tsp.
minced capers
¼ tsp.dried
oregano
¼ tsp.
ground cumin
¼ tsp.
dried dill weed
Directions:
Mix
everything together and refrigerate for a few hours for flavors to marry.
For
our tacos, we got a couple packages of crappie fillets from our freezer and used
the recipe from Food.com with a few changes. The following is a half recipe of batter and it
provided plenty for our 16 pieces of fish.
The original recipe can be found by clicking on the link.
Fish
Tacos – Adapted from Food.com
Ingredients:
1 cup self-rising
flour
¼ teaspoon
garlic powder
¼ teaspoon
dry mustard
¼ teaspoon
dried whole Mexican oregano, rubbed to a powder
6 oz
cold beer, more or less for desired batter thickness
16 crappie
fillets
S&P
vegetable
oil (for deep frying)
6”
corn tortillas
Shredded
cheddar cheese
Bev’s
pico de gallo – tomato, cucumber, onion, lime juice
Shredded
cabbage
Directions:
1. Make
the batter: Whisk the flour, baking powder, garlic, cayenne, mustard,
and oregano until well blended. Stir in the beer until there are no lumps.
(Batter may be made several hours ahead and refrigerated).
2. Dry
the fish and season with S&P.
3. Pour
the oil into a deep, wide pan to a depth of 2 inches and heat to 350 degrees.
4. Dip the
fish in the batter, allow excess to run off, and lay the fish gently into the
hot oil.
5. Cook until golden brown, flipping as needed. Just a couple of minutes per side were sufficient.
5. Cook until golden brown, flipping as needed. Just a couple of minutes per side were sufficient.
6. Remove
the fish to a rack to drain.
7. To
serve, hold a tortilla in your hand and spread a spoonful of sauce over one
side. Top with fish, cheese, cabbage, and pico de gallo.
It would have been nice to have guac and some cilantro.
It would have been nice to have guac and some cilantro.
But they
were still great, and I do mean great, and everyone else agreed – had we had an
avocado for guacamole, they would have been fantastic and I can hardly wait to
make them again. As you can tell from the above shot, one fish fillet more than filled the tortilla.
After
eating my two tacos, I could not resist just adding the toppings to a remaining
piece of fish and eating it with a fork. I remembered the shot after a couple of bites.
I wish we'd gotten more photos but we got to busy cooking fish and building tacos as it came off, then eating of course. But I did get a shot of my Saturday morning breakfast - the batter didn't crisp up as nice as when fresh but it was still delicious and went well with a couple of scrambled eggs.
I know, you were expecting fish with fried eggs on top but this worked very well and what a great way to begin my day. Bev had another taco and she almost never eats fish for breakfast so that tells me how good they were.
Photos can be enlarged by clicking on them and the blue words are links.
Photos can be enlarged by clicking on them and the blue words are links.
Have a
great day and thanks for stopping by Almost Heaven South.
Larry
4/17/20
event date
YUM! I love fried fish tacos and yours look amazing. I like that Bev adds cucumber to her pico de gallo...I haven't tried it that way and I'm intrigued.
ReplyDeleteThe tacos sound great, and with your recommendation I'm going to make them.
ReplyDelete