I’ve never understood why so many dive magazines
carry fish recipes. We’re supposed to be writing about diving
and besides, that grouper on your plate means there’s
one less on the reef to reproduce and create subjects for
your camera on your next visit. Lionfish, however, are
another thing, so I’m breaking my “no recipe rule” in the
name of environmental protection.
Alexandra Lynch, owner of August Moon Café in
Lyford Cay, has lionfish on her menu. She told the Nassau
Guardian that lionfish can be cooked like any other fish
- - grilled, seared, fried, steamed, or boiled. “”However, its
flavor is extremely delicate so it’s best lightly cooked and
not curried or stewed.”Here are a couple of her favorite
methods that you can try at your own lionfish cookout.
Fried, Bahamian Style: Prepare lionfish meat by
lightly washing and patting dry. Prepare a Bahamian-style
marinade of lime juice, sour orange juice, garlic, goat
pepper, salt and pepper; marinate the lionfish as per your
time allowance but for no more than 24 hours. Heat oil in
a pan. Coat fish in flour and cornstarch mix. Fry fish until
lightly golden. Serve with lime wedges and a favorite dip.
Seared Lionfish, Greek Style: Prepare lionfish fillet
by lightly washing and patting dry. Prepare a marinade of
garlic, lemon juice, olive oil, freshly ground pepper, kosher
salt and oregano. Marinate as per your time allowance but
no more than 24 hours. Heat a cast-iron pan to smoking
hot (no additional oil is needed). Place fillet on hot pan.
Sear until brown, flip and cook on the other side. Serve
with lemon.