Name of Common Fish Served on Tourist Bars, Malecon, etc.

In the US, restaurant staff either feign ignorance or says Cod. What is it actually in Penasco, or does it depend on where you go?

Side-note, really want to go to the place where the Chef clamps down the full filet and rotates it.

Thanks!
 
The names of the two most common fish served at the bars on the Malecon and elsewhere in Penasco are known as "Pescado Mierda and Pescado Basura".

Funny thing that a sleepy quaint little sea side village on the shores of Mexico's marvelous Sea of Cortez can only regularly depend on "trash fish" to supply the needs of it's local eateries. This is mostly due to the stingy nature of the eateries and the fact that most of the quality fish caught here are shipped out and sold somewhere far from Rocky Point.

What is served depends on where you go and how it is prepared. Drunks at bars aren't too particular about what is on the menu as long as it's spicy and salty especially with a stupid name like buffalo wings del mar or pescado al disco. After eating such they can justify another round to wash the foul tasting crap down with.

As Broken states above Trigger Fish and the various local flat fish species collectively known as Flounder are common. The typical deep fried whole fish with head on, not scaled and guts still in is usually the Bay Bass locally called Cabrilla. After being hauled in with a trawl for shrimp or left dangling from a long line or a gill net for a day or two they are naturally long dead quite bloated and ripe with age.

The tradition in Mexico is to hide or mask that smell and taste of decay with a nice heavy dusting of hot chili powder, garlic powder and salt then deep fry them in some kind of foul reddish brown cooking oil that normally would have been tossed due to the natural rancid taste after days or weeks of use. A whole fish cooked like this is great entertainment for tourists and drunks at bars. The head with white sunken eye balls, the crappy scales that cover every bite, the endless tiny bones piercing your tongue and gums and whatever is still in the gut is of course right there on your plate. After picking through it for awhile they are usually just tossed in the trash or fed to the dogs and cats out back.

Another local dee-lite is the tasty dish known as ceviche. It can be served up with a variety of critters from Trigger Fish and Sierra's to shrimp and octopus.

Many people like to convince themselves that the meat has been "cooked" in the ceviche preparation process. How can anything be cooked in a raw liquid bath of lemon or lime juice with some garlic cloves drifting around in it? If lemon and lime juice can "cook" something then how can the Fruit Fly maggots that infest the fallen fruit in my yard exist on them??

All I can say on that subject is be sure to have a fresh roll of butt wipe and a gallon of fresh water handy to wash down your funky butt on the way back home when Senior Montezuma gets his final revenge.

Some places and I can only name a few do actually serve fresh fish, I really have no idea if it is local caught or not as Sam's Club is just up the street.

Capone's does have local Grouper, JJ's has fresh flat fish, the rest of them leaves me doubtful. Want some really good fresh local caught fish go to Jessie's on the way to the Malecon and cook it yourself.

Just saying,

JJ
 

Mexico Joe

Cholla Bay 4 Life
The names of the two most common fish served at the bars on the Malecon and elsewhere in Penasco are known as "Pescado Mierda and Pescado Basura".

Funny thing that a sleepy quaint little sea side village on the shores of Mexico's marvelous Sea of Cortez can only regularly depend on "trash fish" to supply the needs of it's local eateries. This is mostly due to the stingy nature of the eateries and the fact that most of the quality fish caught here are shipped out and sold somewhere far from Rocky Point.

What is served depends on where you go and how it is prepared. Drunks at bars aren't too particular about what is on the menu as long as it's spicy and salty especially with a stupid name like buffalo wings del mar or pescado al disco. After eating such they can justify another round to wash the foul tasting crap down with.

As Broken states above Trigger Fish and the various local flat fish species collectively known as Flounder are common. The typical deep fried whole fish with head on, not scaled and guts still in is usually the Bay Bass locally called Cabrilla. After being hauled in with a trawl for shrimp or left dangling from a long line or a gill net for a day or two they are naturally long dead quite bloated and ripe with age.

The tradition in Mexico is to hide or mask that smell and taste of decay with a nice heavy dusting of hot chili powder, garlic powder and salt then deep fry them in some kind of foul reddish brown cooking oil that normally would have been tossed due to the natural rancid taste after days or weeks of use. A whole fish cooked like this is great entertainment for tourists and drunks at bars. The head with white sunken eye balls, the crappy scales that cover every bite, the endless tiny bones piercing your tongue and gums and whatever is still in the gut is of course right there on your plate. After picking through it for awhile they are usually just tossed in the trash or fed to the dogs and cats out back.

Another local dee-lite is the tasty dish known as ceviche. It can be served up with a variety of critters from Trigger Fish and Sierra's to shrimp and octopus.

Many people like to convince themselves that the meat has been "cooked" in the ceviche preparation process. How can anything be cooked in a raw liquid bath of lemon or lime juice with some garlic cloves drifting around in it? If lemon and lime juice can "cook" something then how can the Fruit Fly maggots that infest the fallen fruit in my yard exist on them??

All I can say on that subject is be sure to have a fresh roll of butt wipe and a gallon of fresh water handy to wash down your funky butt on the way back home when Senior Montezuma gets his final revenge.

Some places and I can only name a few do actually serve fresh fish, I really have no idea if it is local caught or not as Sam's Club is just up the street.

Capone's does have local Grouper, JJ's has fresh flat fish, the rest of them leaves me doubtful. Want some really good fresh local caught fish go to Jessie's on the way to the Malecon and cook it yourself.

Just saying,

JJ
Where are they getting fresh flat fish in July?!
 

Mexico Joe

Cholla Bay 4 Life
The names of the two most common fish served at the bars on the Malecon and elsewhere in Penasco are known as "Pescado Mierda and Pescado Basura".

Funny thing that a sleepy quaint little sea side village on the shores of Mexico's marvelous Sea of Cortez can only regularly depend on "trash fish" to supply the needs of it's local eateries. This is mostly due to the stingy nature of the eateries and the fact that most of the quality fish caught here are shipped out and sold somewhere far from Rocky Point.

What is served depends on where you go and how it is prepared. Drunks at bars aren't too particular about what is on the menu as long as it's spicy and salty especially with a stupid name like buffalo wings del mar or pescado al disco. After eating such they can justify another round to wash the foul tasting crap down with.

As Broken states above Trigger Fish and the various local flat fish species collectively known as Flounder are common. The typical deep fried whole fish with head on, not scaled and guts still in is usually the Bay Bass locally called Cabrilla. After being hauled in with a trawl for shrimp or left dangling from a long line or a gill net for a day or two they are naturally long dead quite bloated and ripe with age.

The tradition in Mexico is to hide or mask that smell and taste of decay with a nice heavy dusting of hot chili powder, garlic powder and salt then deep fry them in some kind of foul reddish brown cooking oil that normally would have been tossed due to the natural rancid taste after days or weeks of use. A whole fish cooked like this is great entertainment for tourists and drunks at bars. The head with white sunken eye balls, the crappy scales that cover every bite, the endless tiny bones piercing your tongue and gums and whatever is still in the gut is of course right there on your plate. After picking through it for awhile they are usually just tossed in the trash or fed to the dogs and cats out back.

Another local dee-lite is the tasty dish known as ceviche. It can be served up with a variety of critters from Trigger Fish and Sierra's to shrimp and octopus.

Many people like to convince themselves that the meat has been "cooked" in the ceviche preparation process. How can anything be cooked in a raw liquid bath of lemon or lime juice with some garlic cloves drifting around in it? If lemon and lime juice can "cook" something then how can the Fruit Fly maggots that infest the fallen fruit in my yard exist on them??

All I can say on that subject is be sure to have a fresh roll of butt wipe and a gallon of fresh water handy to wash down your funky butt on the way back home when Senior Montezuma gets his final revenge.

Some places and I can only name a few do actually serve fresh fish, I really have no idea if it is local caught or not as Sam's Club is just up the street.

Capone's does have local Grouper, JJ's has fresh flat fish, the rest of them leaves me doubtful. Want some really good fresh local caught fish go to Jessie's on the way to the Malecon and cook it yourself.

Just saying,

JJ
Last time I was at 3 Boys in March in the Malecon they had a good selection of whole fish. Yellowtail, Corvina, Grouper, Snapper and a few flatties... Seemed fresh to me. But in the summer time... I dare to think about where all of the FRESH shrimp and fish come from. The best part is... I bet if you polled 100 people and asked them if they thought the shrimp they were eating in July was FRESH out of the ocean 92 would say yes...
 

Mexico Joe

Cholla Bay 4 Life
and I agree that 98% of the adulterated fish that you're eating in RP is Triggerfish.

Is Opal Eye edible??????? Because last October snorkeling on Pinto Point in Cholla Bay there were a million and some of them were definitely fatties. I bet I saw a few 2 lbers that you would have gotten some meat off of.

I did a search and there's apparently people that eat them in CA but others that say NO WAY JOSE. JOS B loves them though... jury still out.
 
Hey Joe..........

I used to catch them fairly often when surf casting into crashing waves off the rocks in Corona Del Mar Kommiepornia back in the 60's.

I would use canned green peas for bait on very tiny snelled hooks with those little crimp-on lead weights, just enough to make a toss into the receding wave. I was targeting Surf Perch, tasty little beggars. The Opal Eyes would tear into those peas then make a dash under the rocks where the only option was to snap off the ten pound line and re-rig. Only once did I keep one to take home and fry up. As soon as the meat started cooking it stank up my mom's kitchen so bad she started screaming at me to get that crappy fish out of there.....like pronto. Once in awhile I would get a good sized Garabaldi, beautiful things with the adult males so intensely orange they seemed artificial. They were protected then as I'm sure they are now as Kommiepornia's state fish. I kept a big one for the fry pan as well. Cooked up pretty nice with flakey white meat but as tough as shoe leather. My dog wouldn't touch it.

I might add that Opal Eyes are famous shit eaters. They learn to hang out where boats dump poop in harbors, dive spots and anchored sport boats. A really gross event is to watch a big school of them whilst on Scuba under a boat when the head is flushed and see them go into a feeding frenzy.

I'm sure that the only "people" that eat them in Kali are turd worlders who eat ANYTHING especially if it's free for the taking.

I sometimes snag them while trolling, especially along Cholla Mountain up to Pelican Point but always toss them back. When you get that new boat in the salt water take home a Lizard Fish and let me know your opinion on them! I've heard they are popular with the push cart vendors on the back streets of RP. They batter them up with a thick coating of corn masa so that they look like a big corn dog then deep fry them in ATF transmission fluid.

Dee Lite Full!

JJ
 

Mexico Joe

Cholla Bay 4 Life
Hey Joe..........

I used to catch them fairly often when surf casting into crashing waves off the rocks in Corona Del Mar Kommiepornia back in the 60's.

I would use canned green peas for bait on very tiny snelled hooks with those little crimp-on lead weights, just enough to make a toss into the receding wave. I was targeting Surf Perch, tasty little beggars. The Opal Eyes would tear into those peas then make a dash under the rocks where the only option was to snap off the ten pound line and re-rig. Only once did I keep one to take home and fry up. As soon as the meat started cooking it stank up my mom's kitchen so bad she started screaming at me to get that crappy fish out of there.....like pronto. Once in awhile I would get a good sized Garabaldi, beautiful things with the adult males so intensely orange they seemed artificial. They were protected then as I'm sure they are now as Kommiepornia's state fish. I kept a big one for the fry pan as well. Cooked up pretty nice with flakey white meat but as tough as shoe leather. My dog wouldn't touch it.

I might add that Opal Eyes are famous shit eaters. They learn to hang out where boats dump poop in harbors, dive spots and anchored sport boats. A really gross event is to watch a big school of them whilst on Scuba under a boat when the head is flushed and see them go into a feeding frenzy.

I'm sure that the only "people" that eat them in Kali are turd worlders who eat ANYTHING especially if it's free for the taking.

I sometimes snag them while trolling, especially along Cholla Mountain up to Pelican Point but always toss them back. When you get that new boat in the salt water take home a Lizard Fish and let me know your opinion on them! I've heard they are popular with the push cart vendors on the back streets of RP. They batter them up with a thick coating of corn masa so that they look like a big corn dog then deep fry them in ATF transmission fluid.

Dee Lite Full!

JJ
Ha! Shit. I'm looking for the traditional fish. No LOT LIZARDS for me...
 
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