Friday, March 4, 2011

Grilled Tilapia

Grilled Tilapia with kimchi on plate.
Grilled tilapia or inihaw/binanging tilapia usually takes center table for most of men's "conferences". This has been another "everyone's favorite" since time immemorial. Aside from the fact that it's easier to prepare, it also takes shorter time on grill before it reaches the plate. And again, a sizzling dip will provide the boost on its meat juice.

When grilling tilapia, scales were scaled off the skin. They are left intact so as to protect the meat from being directly torched by coal fire. Thus, bitter taste is avoided. You can allow the scale to burn outside, yet meat juice are kept inside. You even see it flow down your fingers when you take a bite of them.

Of course, tilapia need to be cleaned thoroughly. Internal organs and gills must be removed. This, again, will spare your grilled tilapia from the wrath of bitterness. We're talking about grilled tilapia. So when placed on grills, constant air is needed to keep the coal on fire, and to keep smoke from swallowing them. Smoke kills the natural scent of tilapia. The same thing goes with other grilled foods. And for intrinsic taste, salt or ready-mix seasoning can be rubbed around it.

A sizzling dip provides boost on its meat juice.
A medium sized tilapia can be bought at P50.00 - P80.00 per kilo. Large ones are usually pegged at P120.00 and above. And if you want numbers, then you can try the small ones, of course at lower price.

Moniker And Character

Tilapia (pronounced /tɨˈlɑːpiə/ ti-LAH-pee-ə) is the common name for nearly a hundred speciesof cichlid fish from the tilapiine cichlid tribe. Tilapia inhabit a variety of fresh water habitats including shallow streams, ponds, rivers and lakes. Historically they have been of major importance in artisan fishing in Africa and the Levant and are of increasing importance inaquaculture (see tilapia in aquaculture). Tilapia can become problematic invasive species in new warm-water habitats, whether deliberately or accidentally introduced but generally not in temperate climates due to their inability to survive in cool waters, generally below 60 °F (16 °C).

The common name tilapia is based on the name of the cichlid genus Tilapia, which is itself a latinization of thiape, the Tswana word for "fish". Scottish zoologist Andrew Smith named the genus in 1840.

Tilapia go by many names. The moniker "St. Peter's fish" comes from the story in the Christian Bible about the apostle Peter catching a fish that carried a coin in its mouth, though the passage does not name the fish.[3] While the name also applies to Zeus faber, a marine fish not found in the area, a few tilapia species (Sarotherodon galilaeus galilaeus and others) are found in the Sea of Galilee, where the author of the Gospel of Matthew accounts the event took place. These species have been the target of small-scale artisanal fisheries in the area for thousands of years. In some Asiancountries including the Philippines, large tilapia go bypla-pla while the smaller types are just tilapia.








No comments:

Post a Comment