Bluegill - Big Bluegill

Do you love big bluegill?

 I know we all love bluegill, they are fun to catch, and fun to eat. When we clean them we have to decide whether we are going to fillet or clean them whole to prepair them for the grease. I for one fillet almost everything I catch because my wife and kids dont   like bones , I like them this  way but I also like eating the whole fish,by whole fish I mean I remove the dorsal fin, the tail , and the lateral fins. I am surprised by the people that object to me removing the tail and fins, they say the eat them like potato chips, to me there is no meat on the tail and fins and they just take up skillet space. So I wonder what the % of Fineaters are there out there, Fin Eaters, stand up and be counted.

Views: 790

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

When you clean 100 or more at a time, am not gonna take the time to scale and gut that many fish, just to much trouble. ( even if I did like the crispy tails )

To each his own, but I bet I can scale/gut 100 fish in about the same time as most people fillet them!

I've become quite proficient using poultry shears on bluegill.  After you get the scales off snip off the fins, snip off the head, and snip down past the anus.  A quick rinse, and you're done.  I've found that my disposal can handle the heads, but the fins get stuck. 

Tom, do you cook them with the scales on and guts still in?

Here is a new "mouse trap" scaler from Mr. Twister.  I have one for testing from the manufacturer.  What I like most is the scales do not go flying all over the place and the knife easily cuts off the head.   Have always used my cleaning table out behind the garage to clean fish, but gave this gizmo a shot in the kitchen.  For a small number of fish cleaning in an air conditioned kitchen is much more preferable than than 100 degree temps outside. For a big pile of fish I would still do the cleaning outside.  The EZ-Scaler works fine on small scale fish. Haven't tried it on a red or something with large tough scales.  But, I'm guessing it may too light duty for big scale fish.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yFCFiKXwSn8

Nothing wrong with a crispy tail now and then. My problem is the wife will not eat a fish unless fillet. So I don't get to fry the fish with the bones in them. They are good either way.

For myself, I leave the tail on.  It gives me something to hold onto as I slide them into the hot oil and while I peel them back to get to that meat.

I've been known to eat a tail or two.  I do remove the fins on the smaller fish though.  Nick Holt
Count me in...I am a fin and tail eater. LOL
I'm often a fin eater, so are my kids.
Thanks everyone for taking part in my unscientific survey, I didn't mean to ruffle any feathers  along the way,so if I did "  I'm Sorry" .   I believe now that there are more Fin Eaters out there than I origionally estimated, As Frank Zappa would say " Do what you want to ,Do what you will, just dont mess up you neighbors thrill , So Fin Eaters  of America, stand up and eat those Fins with Pride , I just might join you sometime, and to the Filleters , keep those electric fillet knifes humming . I know we all love catching and eating bluegill  so  Good Luck on your next trip and BONE  APPITE.         LOFR
For those whose feathers are ruffled, maybe you should do a survey on the % who eat the feathers off the chicken.

RSS

Latest Activity

John Sheehan commented on John Sheehan's photo
Thumbnail

ULBASS

"Crawler pieces, Colorado spinner  and 2" paddle tails caught small Perch and 7-8.5"…"
16 hours ago
John Sheehan posted photos
17 hours ago
Jeffrey D. Abney posted photos
yesterday
Jeffrey D. Abney posted a status
"Calm this morning on the lake, finally able to cast to the channel on Wyboo creek. Caught some nicer gills near bottom"
yesterday
Jeffrey D. Abney posted photos
Friday
Jeffrey D. Abney posted a status
"On a family vacation to Lake Marion, South Carolina…heat wave continues but giving some extended family kids their first taste of fishing….."
Friday
Jeffrey D. Abney commented on John Sheehan's photo
Friday
Bruce Tomaselli commented on John Sheehan's photo
Friday
John Sheehan posted photos
Friday
Jeffrey D. Abney commented on Jeffrey D. Abney's photo
Thumbnail

Under a Dock….6/21/2025

"Appreciate it John…..fish was very shallow roaming looking for herring fry……."
Tuesday
Jeffrey D. Abney commented on Jeffrey D. Abney's photo
Thumbnail

Under a Dock….6/21/2025

"Thanks Bruce…..these fish grow well on the available forage, crabs, shrimp, herring, shad…"
Tuesday
John Sheehan commented on Jeffrey D. Abney's photo
Tuesday
Bruce Tomaselli commented on Jeffrey D. Abney's photo
Thumbnail

Under a Dock….6/21/2025

"Biggest perch I've ever seen."
Tuesday
Jeffrey D. Abney commented on Jeffrey D. Abney's photo
Thumbnail

Under a Dock….6/21/2025

"And this one is producing a lot of eggs for the future.."
Jun 23
Jeffrey D. Abney commented on Jeffrey D. Abney's photo
Thumbnail

Another Male With the Copper Mask…..6/22/2025

"Thanks Dick….I’m always amazed at our local populations of Coppernose….."
Jun 23
Jeffrey D. Abney commented on Jeffrey D. Abney's photo
Jun 23
dick tabbert commented on Jeffrey D. Abney's photo
Thumbnail

Under a Dock….6/21/2025

"looks like some good genetics there."
Jun 23
dick tabbert commented on Jeffrey D. Abney's photo
Jun 23
dick tabbert commented on Jeffrey D. Abney's photo
Jun 23
Jeffrey D. Abney commented on Jeffrey D. Abney's photo
Thumbnail

Beautiful Grape Faced Male Coppernose…..6/22/2025

"Thanks Bruce…..we are blessed to have such a huge population of Coppernose in northeast…"
Jun 23

© 2025   Created by Bluegill.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service