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Thread: Ballyhoo Sushi---true

  1. #1
    Crab mustard is good Kahi's Avatar
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    Ballyhoo Sushi---true

    Sayori
    Halfbeak
    Source: Wild
    Mercury Risk: Unknown

    The Japanese halfbeak, or needlefish, is one of the oddest animals ever to grace the sushi counter. With their long slender bodies and what is perhaps the most pronounced underbite in the animal kingdom, this fish looks more like a writing implement than a food source. Even so, the halfbeak is a coveted item, and they are hauled out of the water in large masses to appease sushi patrons from New York to Nagasaki.
    Sayori is found from the Yellow Sea east of Korea to the waters off Eastern Siberia, but historically they have been caught along the southern coasts of Japan. It occurs in large schools and is caught in the late winter and spring.

    Sayori is just beginning to gain recognition in the United States, but it has been a traditional Japanese dish for centuries. In Japan the halfbeak is associated with the onset of spring and is served in a variety of forms, sashimi and nigiri being two of the most popular.

    Very little is known about the health of the Japanese halfbeak fishery. We can take some comfort in the fact that the halfbeak is a small fish, almost never exceeding one foot in length, that matures quickly and breeds in large numbers. Still, without strong scientific data, it is irresponsible to claim that the fishery is sustainable. In fact, it has been all too common for fish like these, with their seasonal resurgences and seemingly limitless bounty, to be exploited into oblivion.

    At this point, sayori is probably a better choice than many other items at the sushi bar. It is generally better to consume fish that eat low on the food chain, grow quickly, and die young rather than fish that eat at the top of the ecosystem, mature slowly, and live for many years. For example, it’s theoretically better to eat sayori than bluefin tuna. That being said, without a solid understanding of management and fishery dynamics, we must exercise temperance—enjoy sayori in moderation.
    Attached Thumbnails Attached Thumbnails Ballyhoo Sushi---true-halfbeak-sushi-sashimi-d-300x199.jpg  


  2. #2
    If Ignorance is bliss, Why aren't more people happy? clt_capt's Avatar
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    There goes bait prices...

  3. #3
    Crab mustard is good Kahi's Avatar
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    update to eating bait...

    Fried Flying Fish anyone???
    Attached Thumbnails Attached Thumbnails Ballyhoo Sushi---true-unknown.jpeg  


  4. #4
    Crab mustard is good Andaman Andy's Avatar
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    I feed em to sails and they seem like like em.

  5. #5
    I think Admin is going to let me have this space Captain Fred Archer's Avatar
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    Popular food in parts of Mexico, too. Strange...they simply were not used as offshore bait until very recently. In Cabo, we were among the very first to use them. The local fishermen there used to call them "vaqueritos" and used to get a big laugh out of our bags of frozen ballies brought in from Florida. Never ate 'em myself, so I have no idea how they taste.

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    Never ate Bally, But I have eaten Butterfish ceviche and that was very good a bit bony but it was tasty.





  7. #7
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    Well, I just don't eat bait...
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  8. #8
    I think Admin is going to let me have this space Captain Fred Archer's Avatar
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    Gottafly,

    You "don't eat bait"? Really? Like, no shrimp? No crab? No calamari? No clams? Other "bait"?

    Hmmm...more for those of us who do partake in a bit 'o bait once in a while, I suppose.

    A little net full of small, 2 inch long live eels dumped into and darting around in a glass of hot sake in Japan, making the glass look like it had Alka Seltzer in it. Chug the whole glass down and feel them elvers go nuts as they go down the hatch and then hit the stomach acid. Yum!

  9. #9
    Now booking for May Striper fishing on the Roanoke River
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    Quote Originally Posted by Captain Fred Archer View Post
    Gottafly,

    You "don't eat bait"? Really? Like, no shrimp? No crab? No calamari? No clams? Other "bait"?

    Hmmm...more for those of us who do partake in a bit 'o bait once in a while, I suppose.

    A little net full of small, 2 inch long live eels dumped into and darting around in a glass of hot sake in Japan, making the glass look like it had Alka Seltzer in it. Chug the whole glass down and feel them elvers go nuts as they go down the hatch and then hit the stomach acid. Yum!

    Capt. Fred, I will admit that I eat Shrimp and Crabs, but here, I don't use crabs as bait. Clams, well I don't use them as bait either. The ones we eat are cherry calms and out chowder Clans are small compared to up north. Squid, nope...you can have all mine. Eels are the nastiest thing I have ever eaten here, live, you have got to be kidding, ain't gonna happen...
    MirrOlure when big fish count!




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  10. #10
    BANNED HOLWACHAGOT's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Captain Fred Archer View Post
    Gottafly,

    You "don't eat bait"? Really? Like, no shrimp? No crab? No calamari? No clams? Other "bait"?

    Hmmm...more for those of us who do partake in a bit 'o bait once in a while, I suppose.

    A little net full of small, 2 inch long live eels dumped into and darting around in a glass of hot sake in Japan, making the glass look like it had Alka Seltzer in it. Chug the whole glass down and feel them elvers go nuts as they go down the hatch and then hit the stomach acid. Yum!
    GOOD LORD CAPTAIN FRED!
    I wish I could have been a fly on the bridge in your younger days...the stories I bet I could tell.
    HOLWACHAGOT

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