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By request from Nancy. I figured out how to do this by watching the guys on
the line at Red Lobster back in 1981. 4 flounder fillets, about 1-1/2 lbs. of like size 1/4 c. minced onion 1/4 c. minced celery 2 cloves garlic, minced 1-1/2 Tbs. mayonnaise dash Tabasco sauce dash cayenne pepper dash salt 4 Tbs. butter 1/2 c. dried breadcrumbs 1/4 tsp. dry mustard 1 Tbs. lemon juice 6 oz. flaked crabmeat 2 oz. diced shrimp (or use canned baby shrimp) 2-3 Tbs. melted butter Sweet ground paprika for colour 1/2 c. milk vegetable cooking spray Preheat oven to 350F. Saute onion, celery and garlic in 4 Tbs. butter until translucent. Transfer to a mixing bowl and combine with breadcrumbs, mayonnaise, dry mustard. Add crabmeat and shrimp, Tabasco, cayenne, lemonjuice, salt, pepper. Blend well to make stuffing.Spray a 13X9 inch baking dish with vegetable cooking spray. Place 2 flounder fillets in the dish. Spoon the crabmeat stuffing onto the center of the fillets, mounding it up in the center. Split the remaining fillets in half lengthwise. Wrap each of the two halves around the stuffing on top of the stuffed fillet, covering the sides but leaving the stuffing visible in the center. Secure overlapping ends with toothpicks if needed. Brush all over with melted butter. Sprinkle with paprika. Pour the milk around thefish (this keeps the fish moist during baking).Bake for 20-25 minutes until fish flakes easily with a fork, brushing with melted butter about halfway through cooking. Serves 2. |
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Nancy Young wrote:
"jmcquown" wrote By request from Nancy. I figured out how to do this by watching the guys on the line at Red Lobster back in 1981. Thank you! Only thing I don't have is the cooking spray. I'll be making this later this week. nancy I added the cooking spray to the recipe way back when; just brush the pan with oil! I was what? 21 years old? A newbie to cooking and Mom told me cooking spray was great! LOL |
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"jmcquown" wrote By request from Nancy. I figured out how to do this by watching the guys on the line at Red Lobster back in 1981. Thank you! Only thing I don't have is the cooking spray. I'll be making this later this week. nancy |
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On Sun 02 Apr 2006 08:44:19p, Thus Spake Zarathustra, or was it jmcquown?
By request from Nancy. I figured out how to do this by watching the guys on the line at Red Lobster back in 1981. 4 flounder fillets, about 1-1/2 lbs. of like size 1/4 c. minced onion 1/4 c. minced celery 2 cloves garlic, minced 1-1/2 Tbs. mayonnaise dash Tabasco sauce dash cayenne pepper dash salt 4 Tbs. butter 1/2 c. dried breadcrumbs 1/4 tsp. dry mustard 1 Tbs. lemon juice 6 oz. flaked crabmeat 2 oz. diced shrimp (or use canned baby shrimp) 2-3 Tbs. melted butter Sweet ground paprika for colour 1/2 c. milk vegetable cooking spray Preheat oven to 350F. Saute onion, celery and garlic in 4 Tbs. butter until translucent. Transfer to a mixing bowl and combine with breadcrumbs, mayonnaise, dry mustard. Add crabmeat and shrimp, Tabasco, cayenne, lemonjuice, salt, pepper. Blend well to make stuffing.Spray a 13X9 inch baking dish with vegetable cooking spray. Place 2 flounder fillets in the dish. Spoon the crabmeat stuffing onto the center of the fillets, mounding it up in the center. Split the remaining fillets in half lengthwise. Wrap each of the two halves around the stuffing on top of the stuffed fillet, covering the sides but leaving the stuffing visible in the center. Secure overlapping ends with toothpicks if needed. Brush all over with melted butter. Sprinkle with paprika. Pour the milk around thefish (this keeps the fish moist during baking).Bake for 20-25 minutes until fish flakes easily with a fork, brushing with melted butter about halfway through cooking. Serves 2. That sounds so good, I could just eat the stuffing! -- Wayne Boatwright @¿@¬ _____________________ |
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Wayne Boatwright wrote:
On Sun 02 Apr 2006 08:44:19p, Thus Spake Zarathustra, or was it jmcquown? By request from Nancy. I figured out how to do this by watching the guys on the line at Red Lobster back in 1981. 4 flounder fillets, about 1-1/2 lbs. of like size 1/4 c. minced onion 1/4 c. minced celery 2 cloves garlic, minced 1-1/2 Tbs. mayonnaise dash Tabasco sauce dash cayenne pepper dash salt 4 Tbs. butter 1/2 c. dried breadcrumbs 1/4 tsp. dry mustard 1 Tbs. lemon juice 6 oz. flaked crabmeat 2 oz. diced shrimp (or use canned baby shrimp) 2-3 Tbs. melted butter Sweet ground paprika for colour 1/2 c. milk That sounds so good, I could just eat the stuffing! The stuffing is the key! To hell with the fish! But, I was trying to duplicate what I saw being made when I was a waitress. I suceeded and then some. I tried this out at a friends house and she tried out a (not so great) wild rice dish. Oh well, we had fun! I really enjoy trying to duplicate recipes I've had in restaurants, although I don't usually have a peek in the back door (so to speak). That's how I came up with my butternut squash soup, among other things... just tasted it in a restaurant and decided I had to truy to make it at home ![]() Jill |
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"jmcquown" wrote Wayne Boatwright wrote: That sounds so good, I could just eat the stuffing! The stuffing is the key! To hell with the fish! But, I was trying to duplicate what I saw being made when I was a waitress. I suceeded and then some. This restaurant I go to, they used to have a special called Key West Chicken. I always got it when I saw it. Didn't get it for the chicken. Bet this stuffing will be making me very happy. nancy |
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On Mon 03 Apr 2006 05:05:16a, Thus Spake Zarathustra, or was it Nancy Young?
"jmcquown" wrote Wayne Boatwright wrote: That sounds so good, I could just eat the stuffing! The stuffing is the key! To hell with the fish! But, I was trying to duplicate what I saw being made when I was a waitress. I suceeded and then some. This restaurant I go to, they used to have a special called Key West Chicken. I always got it when I saw it. Didn't get it for the chicken. Bet this stuffing will be making me very happy. I'm that way with turkey and dressing. I actually don't like turkey very much, but we always have it at Thanksgiving and sometimes at Christmas. I always make cornbread dressing and it's the dressing that I mostly eat, not the turkey. -- Wayne Boatwright @¿@¬ _____________________ |
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"Wayne Boatwright" wayneboatwright_at_gmail.com wrote On Mon 03 Apr 2006 05:05:16a, Thus Spake Zarathustra, or was it Nancy Young? This restaurant I go to, they used to have a special called Key West Chicken. I always got it when I saw it. Didn't get it for the chicken. Bet this stuffing will be making me very happy. I'm that way with turkey and dressing. I actually don't like turkey very much, but we always have it at Thanksgiving and sometimes at Christmas. I always make cornbread dressing and it's the dressing that I mostly eat, not the turkey. Same here. Love that stuffing. At any rate, it was funny, we were on chat last night and the subject of eating fish came up. I said I had flounder, Jill mentioned stuffing it. Wait, I have shrimp in the freezer! Oh, I have a can of crab in the refrigerator! I have every ingredient, it is meant to be. That's why the joke, I have everything except the non-stick spray! Think I'll manage without it. nancy |
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On Mon 03 Apr 2006 05:24:19a, Thus Spake Zarathustra, or was it Nancy
Young? "Wayne Boatwright" wayneboatwright_at_gmail.com wrote On Mon 03 Apr 2006 05:05:16a, Thus Spake Zarathustra, or was it Nancy Young? This restaurant I go to, they used to have a special called Key West Chicken. I always got it when I saw it. Didn't get it for the chicken. Bet this stuffing will be making me very happy. I'm that way with turkey and dressing. I actually don't like turkey very much, but we always have it at Thanksgiving and sometimes at Christmas. I always make cornbread dressing and it's the dressing that I mostly eat, not the turkey. Same here. Love that stuffing. At any rate, it was funny, we were on chat last night and the subject of eating fish came up. I said I had flounder, Jill mentioned stuffing it. Wait, I have shrimp in the freezer! Oh, I have a can of crab in the refrigerator! I have every ingredient, it is meant to be. That's why the joke, I have everything except the non-stick spray! Think I'll manage without it. Yes, I believe you can. :-) -- Wayne Boatwright @¿@¬ _____________________ |
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On Mon 03 Apr 2006 05:38:01a, Thus Spake Zarathustra, or was it jmcquown?
Nancy Young wrote: "Wayne Boatwright" wayneboatwright_at_gmail.com wrote On Mon 03 Apr 2006 05:05:16a, Thus Spake Zarathustra, or was it Nancy Young? This restaurant I go to, they used to have a special called Key West Chicken. I always got it when I saw it. Didn't get it for the chicken. Bet this stuffing will be making me very happy. I'm that way with turkey and dressing. I actually don't like turkey very much, but we always have it at Thanksgiving and sometimes at Christmas. I always make cornbread dressing and it's the dressing that I mostly eat, not the turkey. Same here. Love that stuffing. At any rate, it was funny, we were on chat last night and the subject of eating fish came up. I said I had flounder, Jill mentioned stuffing it. Wait, I have shrimp in the freezer! Oh, I have a can of crab in the refrigerator! I have every ingredient, it is meant to be. That's why the joke, I have everything except the non-stick spray! Think I'll manage without it. nancy Of course you will manage without the non-stick spray! A little brush of olive or canola oil in the baking dish. Don't forget, I recreated this 25 years ago when I thought non-stick spray was all that! I was but a fledgling cook. Jill ....And non-stick sprays were touted as a miracle. -- Wayne Boatwright @¿@¬ _____________________ |
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Wayne Boatwright wrote:
On Mon 03 Apr 2006 05:38:01a, Thus Spake Zarathustra, or was it jmcquown? Nancy Young wrote: "Wayne Boatwright" wayneboatwright_at_gmail.com wrote On Mon 03 Apr 2006 05:05:16a, Thus Spake Zarathustra, or was it Nancy Young? I have everything except the non-stick spray! Think I'll manage without it. nancy Of course you will manage without the non-stick spray! A little brush of olive or canola oil in the baking dish. Don't forget, I recreated this 25 years ago when I thought non-stick spray was all that! I was but a fledgling cook. Jill ...And non-stick sprays were touted as a miracle. You betcha! PAM was a girls best friend in 1980! I've learned since then! The stuffed flounder is still fantasic Oh, and you can use catfish ortilapia for this, too. Jill |
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jmcquown wrote:
By request from Nancy. I figured out how to do this by watching the guys on the line at Red Lobster back in 1981. SNIP Oh, I love stuffed flounder! Had some Friday night and the stuffing weas good but the fish iteself weas overbaked, dried out. Another idea - I stuff mine with a mixture of sauteed onion, mushroom, spinach, and feta cheese, plus some herbs (thyme, black pepper, and oregano). Aside from that cheese-with-fish argument, it's awfully good!!! |
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Jude wrote:
jmcquown wrote: By request from Nancy. I figured out how to do this by watching the guys on the line at Red Lobster back in 1981. SNIP Oh, I love stuffed flounder! Had some Friday night and the stuffing weas good but the fish iteself weas overbaked, dried out. Another idea - I stuff mine with a mixture of sauteed onion, mushroom, spinach, and feta cheese, plus some herbs (thyme, black pepper, and oregano). Aside from that cheese-with-fish argument, it's awfully good!!! Do with it as you will! I simply re-created something I had when I worked at Red Lobster. I can imagine some cheese in the stuffing, and feta would be great! What the heck, try some herbed feta As to avoiding overbakeddry fish, brush it with plenty of melted butter and add a little milk to the baking dish. I forgot to mention that. A little milk to the baking dish with fish keeps it moist. Jill |
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jmcquown wrote:
Jude wrote: jmcquown wrote: By request from Nancy. I figured out how to do this by watching the guys on the line at Red Lobster back in 1981. SNIP Oh, I love stuffed flounder! Had some Friday night and the stuffing weas good but the fish iteself weas overbaked, dried out. Another idea - I stuff mine with a mixture of sauteed onion, mushroom, spinach, and feta cheese, plus some herbs (thyme, black pepper, and oregano). Aside from that cheese-with-fish argument, it's awfully good!!! Do with it as you will! I simply re-created something I had when I worked at Red Lobster. I can imagine some cheese in the stuffing, and feta would be great! What the heck, try some herbed feta ![]() You should seriously consider it. I know you like fish, and when you go greek style (I forgot to mention that I've also added capers and kalamata olices to the stuffing), it's a whole different thing. Gives you some variety, ya know. As to avoiding overbaked dry fish, brush it with plenty of melted butter and add a little milk to the baking dish. I forgot to mention that. A little milk to the baking dish with fish keeps it moist. Thanks for the tip - I didn't make it, though, I had it at a place called Gus & George's Steak Seafood & Spaghetti. Decent hole-in-the-wall, but their crabcakes (same thing as the flounder stuffing I'd guess) are better than their flounder. I generally brush with butter or olive oil before baking fish, but the milk is a good idea, I'll remember that one! |
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jmcquown wrote:
By request from Nancy. I figured out how to do this by watching the guys on the line at Red Lobster back in 1981. 4 flounder fillets, about 1-1/2 lbs. of like size 1/4 c. minced onion 1/4 c. minced celery 2 cloves garlic, minced 1-1/2 Tbs. mayonnaise dash Tabasco sauce dash cayenne pepper dash salt 4 Tbs. butter 1/2 c. dried breadcrumbs 1/4 tsp. dry mustard 1 Tbs. lemon juice 6 oz. flaked crabmeat 2 oz. diced shrimp (or use canned baby shrimp) 2-3 Tbs. melted butter Sweet ground paprika for colour 1/2 c. milk vegetable cooking spray Preheat oven to 350F. Saute onion, celery and garlic in 4 Tbs. butter until translucent. Transfer to a mixing bowl and combine with breadcrumbs, mayonnaise, dry mustard. Add crabmeat and shrimp, Tabasco, cayenne, lemonjuice, salt, pepper. Blend well to make stuffing.Spray a 13X9 inch baking dish with vegetable cooking spray. Place 2 flounder fillets in the dish. Spoon the crabmeat stuffing onto the center of the fillets, mounding it up in the center. Split the remaining fillets in half lengthwise. Wrap each of the two halves around the stuffing on top of the stuffed fillet, covering the sides but leaving the stuffing visible in the center. Secure overlapping ends with toothpicks if needed. Brush all over with melted butter. Sprinkle with paprika. Pour the milk around thefish (this keeps the fish moist during baking).Bake for 20-25 minutes until fish flakes easily with a fork, brushing with melted butter about halfway through cooking. Serves 2. It tasted great, but I had some trouble with the technique. Wrapping the fillets around the stuffing resulted in kind of a mess, and I ended up just topping a bunch of flounder fillets with the crab-shrimp stuffing, which was very good. I topped the fillets with that and some dots of butter and the paprika. The crab stuffing is excellent. I'm just not sure about the wrapping fish with fish with more fish. Using toothpicks resulted in fish pieces popping apart. Maybe that's just the size of the pieces I got or something. Thanks for sharing your idea, Jill. (Oh, and I served it with green beans and a wild rice mixture.) Pat |
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