Page 2 of 2

Re: EDIT: Stuffed Flounder

Posted: Thu Sep 22, 2016 11:13 am
by Yaklash
Flounder season is on us...or at least approaching, so as I have for a few years now, I am bumping this to the top.

Re: EDIT: Stuffed Flounder

Posted: Sat Oct 01, 2016 5:57 pm
by habanerojooz
Earlier this week, I made a similar version of this stuffed flounder dish using a Paul Prudhomme recipe. It was very similar to the OP's original recipe, but the stuffing additives and dry spices gave it more of a cajun flavor. Aside from those differences, the other ingredients and cooking steps were similar.

I also de-boned the flounder after watching the technique demonstrated on Youtube. It was easy and it made a nice pocket for the stuffing.

Stuffed flounder is delicious. Everybody should make this at least once (or more) this flounder season. :D

Re: EDIT: Stuffed Flounder

Posted: Wed Oct 05, 2016 1:18 pm
by Yaklash
habanerojooz wrote:Earlier this week, I made a similar version of this stuffed flounder dish using a Paul Prudhomme recipe. It was very similar to the OP's original recipe, but the stuffing additives and dry spices gave it more of a cajun flavor. Aside from those differences, the other ingredients and cooking steps were similar.

I also de-boned the flounder after watching the technique demonstrated on Youtube. It was easy and it made a nice pocket for the stuffing.

Stuffed flounder is delicious. Everybody should make this at least once (or more) this flounder season. :D
I give credit for this recipe to a restauranteur friend of mine. He taught me the basics, similar to what I would guess many kitchens use. Prudhomme certainly has a better bouquet of spices than I do :lol: . It's like chicken soup, or most anything really. I make a good chicken soup, but would slap my mother to the side to get the last bowl of my sister Anne's chicken noodle soup. Hand made egg noodles are but one thing that set it apart. Her many special measures. She starts with homemade vegetable stock, uses dark meat only, and I can't get her to tell me what else she does. Her response is usually, "you'll just have to keep coming over to eat it until you figure it out." Don't even get me started about my other sister and her tres leches.

Re: EDIT: Stuffed Flounder

Posted: Thu Jul 20, 2017 8:08 am
by Yaklash
Bump

Re: EDIT: Stuffed Flounder

Posted: Wed May 27, 2020 6:22 am
by Maulwalker
If there was ever a post in the history of the Internet that deserves a bump, it is this one.

Every year or so, I google "texaskayakfisherman stuffed flounder" in order to pull up this post. This year, I actually had the sense to write it down in our recipe book.

Over the years I've made some variant of this recipe who knows how many times. Yacklash, thank you for posting it way back when.

As a kid, Stove Top stuffing was one of our go-to sides, so I've always been partial to it. If you want to skip the scratch part of the stuffing on this recipe, peel your shrimp and set aside the shells. Boil the shells to make a broth, strain it and use that water as you follow the instructions on the box. Chop up the shrimp, mix them into the stuffing and stuff it in the flounder. It's quick and easy for those of us with fewer culinary skills. I've since progressed to the scratch recipe, but you can't go wrong with this either.