Recipes you want to make. Cooking advice that works. Restaurant recommendations you trust.
Preheat oven to 400º F. Heat a saute pan on medium-high heat. Dredge the fish fillets a mixture of the flour and cornstarch. Shake off excess. Add vegetable oil to the pan and add fish fillets. Let ...
If you're a fish lover and regularly turn to salmon, tuna and swordfish for healthy, pescatarian-friendly dinners, then we have another option for you to try: cod fish. White fish doesn't always get ...
Note: Haddock or halibut could be substituted for the cod. This very simple recipe is quite the looker. The potatoes get wonderfully browned and crisp around the edges and the fish always turns out ...
Pat dry fish with paper towels. Season with salt and pepper on both sides. Heat a wide non-stick cooking skillet on high. Lower to medium heat and add olive oil. Gently place fish fillets to cook on ...
On the table, cod and haddock are remarkably similar: both have firm, flaky and mild-tasting white flesh. Cod and haddock work equally well in the recipe below — and, in fact, in most any recipe. Both ...
Executive Chef Greg Collier of the Red Fish Grill makes this variant of a classic New Orleans dish, grilling redfish and gilding it with crabmeat and lemon-butter sauce. Soak the hickory chips to ...
This very simple steamed halibut moves so quickly once you start cooking that you need to have everything ready by the stovetop. The plates should be warm so you're not putting hot fish onto cold ...
Wild Alaskan salmon fillets are pan-seared and finished with a rich lemon butter sauce seasoned with paprika, cayenne, and ...