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Shark

 

Mako in Herb Butter Recipe


SpotX Wild Foods Recipe from Ray Steele
Prep:15 minutes Cook:15 minutes Difficulty:1
Ingrediants:
  • 1 kilogram mako steaks.
  • 4 cloves garlic, peeled.
  • 1 medium onion, chopped.
  • 1 lemon, cut into wedges.
  • 1 cup butter.
  • ¼ teaspoon marjoram.
  • ¼ teaspoon seafood seasoning.
  • Pinch of thyme.
  • Salt, to taste.
  • Freshly-ground black pepper, to taste.
  • Fresh Italian parsley, chopped.
  • Pinch ground oregano.
Directions:
  • Melt butter in saucepan over low heat.
  • Add whole garlic, onions, seasonings and herbs.
  • Remove from heat and allow to steep (one hour).
  • Place mako steaks in a baking dish and pour herb butter over fish.
  • Cook at 180°C for 15 minutes.
  • Serve garnished with parsley and with lemon wedges on the side.

Sharks
Sharks Ever wondered where the name ‘shark and tatties’ originated? The answer is simple: for many years takeaway shops used ‘lemon fish’ or ‘doggie shark’, the common names for spotted dogfish or rig, as the species of choice for their fish and chips.
Shark was easily caught and inexpensive, and incidentally made great fish and chips, battered and served with a squeeze of lemon.

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Fish RecipesGamebird RecipesGame Animal RecipesShellfish Recipes
SnapperBlue MokiCod BlueCod RedCrayFishElephant FishFlounderGemfishGurnardHapuku Bass and BluenoseJohn DoryKahawaiKingfishTroutMao MaoMarlinMulletOctopusPiperPoraeSharkSalmonStingraySquidTarakihiTrevallyTrumpeterTunaWarehouWhitebait

Soused Snapper Recipe

 

SpotX Wild Foods Recipe from Kevin Leech
Prep:24 hours Cook:1 minute Difficulty:1

Ingrediants:

  • 1½ kilograms snapper fillets, skinned and boned.
  • Juice of 5 lemons.
  • 1 cup sweet chilli sauce.
  • 1 red onion.
  • 2 peppers, varying colours.
  • 12 cocktail tomatoes.
  • 1 400-gram can coconut cream.

Directions:

  • Dice fillets into 2cm square pieces.
  • Place in a large bowl with finely-chopped onion; cover with lemon juice.
  • Refrigerate for 12-24 hours, turning occasionally.
  • An hour before serving, drain off the juices.
  • Add chilli sauce to taste, along with coconut cream.
  • Dice peppers and halve tomatoes and add to fish.
  • Add ground pepper and sea salt, to taste.
  • Refrigerate for 1 hour before serving.
  • Garnish with parsley.
 

 

 

Snapper

From a culinary perspective, snapper is probably one of the most versatile species we have in our waters.
It is relatively easy to catch, readily available throughout the North Island and the top half of the South Island, and can be prepared in many ways. It’s as delicious as raw fish as it is smoked and good for almost everything in between.
Snapper has played an important part in our history. Known as ‘tamure’ to the Maori and ‘bream’ to the early European explorers and settlers, the humble snapper was a regular part of their diet, either eaten fresh, or else salted, dried or smoked.

 

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Lemon Crumbed Blue Moki Recipe

 

SpotX Wild Foods Recipe from Grant Dixon
Prep:3 hours Cook:10 minutes Difficulty:1

Ingrediants:

  • Blue moki fillets, boned and skinned.
  • Sea salt and cracked pepper.
  • Juice of 6 lemons.
  • 2 eggs, beaten.
  • Flour.
  • Pre-made breadcrumb mixture.
Directions:
  • Cut moki into bite-sized pieces.
  • Place in a bowl, covering fish with lemon juice.
  • Leave for 3-4 hours.
  • Drain fish and flour.
  • Coat with egg and cover with breadcrumbs.
  • Place in fridge or freezer for a short while to ‘set’ coating.
  • Heat oil in deep frying pan or wok and cook fish, 5-6 pieces at a time.
  • Crumb mixture can be substituted with Fog Dog Cajun beer batter.
  • If battering fish, egg step is not necessary.
 

 

 

 

 

Blue Moki
Blue Moki If you are a member of the Wellington land-based fishing fraternity, blue moki is probably the species held in highest esteem. Blue moki fishing spots are highly regarded and Wellington Surfcasting and Angling Club members guard theirs as though their lives depended on it.
Moki belongs to the Latrididae family and are cousins to the trumpeter. Many of the characteristics are the same. The body is deep and compressed, the flesh firm and the mouth firm with thick lips and small teeth, not unlike a porae.

 


Notoriously good fighters, moki feed in a number of habitats and they like shellfish, crustaceans and small baitfish; they have even been known to browse on some seaweeds. Most WSAC members claim crayfish is the number-one bait for blue moki, which live to around 30 years and can grow to some 90cm in length. Mussel and tuatuas are other good baits.
Moki tend to feed at night around the shoreline, especially where there are lumps of foul ground to give them cover among sandy territory. Maori prize them highly as eating fish and have a special season for them in autumn, when they are caught in good numbers in deeper water off the eastern Bay of Plenty coast.
From a culinary perspective, the flesh holds together well, making it a popular table fish. It is best eaten as fillets, which are removed in the same way you would deal with a snapper or similar shaped fish. Moki can be poached, smoked, steamed, baked and fried.

 

 

 

 

 

Cod and Oysters Recipe

 

SpotX Wild Foods Recipe from Elly Smith
Prep:15 minutes Cook:20 minutes Difficulty:1

Ingrediants:

  • 500 grams of cod fillets.
  • ½ dozen Bluff oysters in juice.
  • 4 tablespoons oyster sauce.
  • ½ cup cream.
  • 1 tablespoon Worcestershire sauce.
  • 1 teaspoon cornflour.
  • 6 olives, diced.
  • Milk.
  • Parsley.

Directions:

  • Cube cod into approximately 2cm pieces.
  • Poach in oyster juice, mixed with a little water until just cooked.
  • Reserve juice.
  • Remove fish to a hot serving dish and place in warming drawer.
  • Add cream to juice in pan.
  • Add Worcestershire sauce, season with salt and pepper and warm.
  • Mix cornflour to create a roux and add a little milk.
  • Simmer to create a smooth, thick sauce.
  • Dice oysters and add, cooking for two minutes.
  • Garnished with chopped olives and sprigs of parsley.
 

 

 

 

 

Blue Cod
Blue Cod Blue cod is to Mainlanders what snapper is to their North Island counterparts.
It is probably the number-one species on their hit lists and this unfortunately has created sustainability issues in the top half of the South Island. Here there are much debated ‘no-take’ and ‘limited-take’ zones in place, along with strict size limits.
Commercially, cod are targeted in ‘pots’ while recreationally, line fishing is the predominant method. If there is a ‘dumb’ fish, it is cod. They have none of the guile or reticence of snapper and will eat just about anything, even bare hooks or ones ‘baited’ with a little bit of shiny cigarette paper. Cod can even be caught on hooks baited with cod.

 

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Curried Cod Recipe

 

SpotX Wild Foods Recipe from Kathy Dunstan
Prep:15 minutes Cook:30 minutes Difficulty:2

Ingrediants:
  • 4 tablespoons butter.
  • ¼ cup plain flour.
  • 2 heaped teaspoons curry powder (medium).
  • 4 tablespoons fruit chutney.
  • 1 cup rice, just cooked.
  • 300-gram tin pineapple pieces (in syrup).
  • 2 hard-boiled eggs, shelled.
  • 2 tablespoons lemon juice.
  • Milk.
  • Sea salt and ground pepper to taste.
Directions:
  • Heat fish in a small amount of milk.
  • Remove skin and any bones, flake, retaining stock.
  • In a saucepan melt butter, stir in flour and curry powder and blend well.
  • Add in pineapple and juice, along with chutney, stock and more milk.
  • Create two cups of ‘sauce’.
  • Slice eggs and add, along with fish, rice, seasoning and lemon juice.
  • Simmer for 5-10 minutes maximum on a very low heat.
  • Serve on toasted pita bread with a green salad.
  • Red cod can be substituted for any smoked fish, especially warehou.
 
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Classic Crayfish Mornay Recipe

 

SpotX Wild Foods Recipe from Grant Dixon
Prep:1 hour Cook:20 minutes Difficulty:3

Ingrediants:
  • 1 800 gram fresh crayfish.
  • 2 lemons.
  • 6 parsley stalks.
  • 1 teaspoon cracked pepper.
  • ½ small cup of salt.
  • 40 grams butter.
  • 200ml mornay sauce.
  • Approximately ½ egg yolk.
  • 2 tablespoons of cream.
  • 1 curly lettuce.
  • 2 tablespoons grated Parmesan.
Directions:
  • Add half a lemon, parsley, pepper and salt to a pot of boiling water.
  • Place crayfish in the boiling water, cover and return to the boil.
  • Simmer for 20 minutes, set aside to cool and rest the meat.
  • Make the mornay sauce as per recipe in this section.
  • Turn the crayfish upside down and carefully cut in half lengthways.
  • Remove tail meat and clean out mustard and intestines.
  • Cut tail meat into 1-2cm cubes.
  • Heat butter in a large frying pan until it starts to froth.
  • Add the meat, season, turning quickly, only cooking for 1 minute.
  • Add the mornay sauce and bring to boil, take off the heat.
  • Combine the egg yolk and cream, whisk and add to the sauce.
  • Lay crayfish shell on an oven tray, cut side up.
  • Place a little sauce on the bottom of the cavity.
  • Arrange meat along the length of the crayfish shell.
  • Cover with more sauce and sprinkle with the Parmesan.
  • Place under an oven grill on medium to high until top starts to brown.
 
 

 

 

 

 

Crayfish
Crayfish

 If there is a species that has been put on a pedestal as the pinnacle of Kiwi kaimoana, it is the spiny red rock lobster – crayfish. Over the years it has earned millions in overseas exchange and has made many of the commercial fishers, lucky enough to hold quota, rich men. Its dollar value sees the species, along with paua, at the head of the poachers’ hit list. In some regions it is estimated the ‘black market’ take is almost as high as the legitimate commercial harvest, both far surpassing the recreational catch. Despite the pressure on the fishery, crayfish still remains available to Joe Public provided they are prepared to put in the effort diving or potting for them. To many people a highlight of their holiday programme is to catch a few ‘bugs’ for the table.
The beauty of crayfish is that it can be prepared in so many different ways; its rich flesh requires little enhancement.
Like all seafood, crayfish benefit from taking a little care from the time they are caught to when they are served up. Once caught, the crayfish should be placed in a cool, damp spot. They will live for several days out of the water if kept cold and wet.

 


Most people prefer to deal with the catch as soon as practical. The first step is to kill the crayfish humanely by drowning it in a bin of cold fresh water. Placing a live crayfish directly into boiling water will result in the legs falling off more easily. 
If you intend ‘cooking’ the crayfish immediately by boiling it, there are some simple steps to take to bring the best out of your catch. It is important to bring the water to a rolling boil before placing the crayfish in it. Do not overload the pot as it takes too long to bring it back on the boil; keeping the lid on the pot helps with this. Time the crayfish once the water starts to boil. The ‘just legal’ crayfish should be boiled for no longer than six minutes, and up to 12 minutes for ‘monster’ four-kilo-plus crayfish.
Once time is up take the crayfish out of the pot and place in a tub of cold water to halt the cooking process, then remove and leave to drain. A good way to do this is to hook the curled-up tails on the rim of a bucket.
Once cooled and the flesh set, the tail can be twisted free of the body and sliced lengthwise with a sharp, sturdy knife to split it. The alimentary canal will be exposed and this should be removed. Similarly the body can be sliced lengthwise in two, exposing the ‘engine room’. The yellow ‘mustard’ can be removed and used to give flavour to any sauce.
To many people, sucking the sweet morsels out of the legs and body is every bit as good as the tail meat. Use a nutcracker or a purposebuilt lobster claw cracking tool to crack the shell.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
 

Moroccan Elephant Fish Recipe

 

SpotX Wild Foods Recipe from Petra Moorby
Prep:45 minutes Cook:10 minutes Difficulty:1

Ingrediants:
  • 600 grams elephant fish fillets.
  • 2 tablespoons chopped coriander.
  • Zest and juice of 1 lemon.
  • 1 teaspoon minced chilli.
  • 2 teaspoons ground cumin.
  • 2 teaspoons crushed garlic.
  • 1 tablespoon fish sauce.
  • Freshly-ground black pepper.
  • Plain white flour.
  • 1 tablespoon olive oil.
Directions:
  • Mix the olive oil with the coriander, lemon juice and zest.
  • Add chilli, cumin, garlic, fish sauce and ground black pepper.
  • Rub over the fish and allow to stand for at least 30 minutes.
  • Place a cup or two of flour in a plastic bag.
  • Add a couple of fillets at a time to the bag and give them a good dusting.
  • Lightly spray or brush a non-stick pan with oil.
  • Cook fish until crisp and golden, about 3-4 minutes on each side.
 
 

 

 

 

 

Elephant Fish
Elephant Fish While it might not win any beauty pageants, the elephant fish is recognised in southern parts of New Zealand as a good eating specimen.

 


It features a large, fleshy, cartilaginous trunk that protrudes from the snout – and together with large winglike pectoral fins – combines to give the fish a rather grotesque deformed appearance rather like Quasimodo. The snout has a useful purpose, being used to root out crabs and shellfish from muddy or sandy bottoms. When handling the fish you need to be aware of the large, sharp folding spine that forms part of the dorsal fin.
Elephant fish are closely related to sharks, having a backbone of gristle rather than a skeleton. It is not surprising that the flesh tastes a bit like lemon fish (rig or dogfish) and is popular for fish and chips, as the firm flesh holds together well and you get two boneless fillets when you prepare it for the table. It is sold in the fish shops as silverfish and silver trumpeter.
Elephant fish is caught commercially by trawlers, but between October and late summer it comes within reach of surfcasters and boaties fishing inshore, sheltered waters such as Wellington Harbour.

 

 

 
 

Citrus Flounder Recipe

 

SpotX Wild Foods Recipe from Gillian Maire
Prep:5 minutes Cook:14 minutes Difficulty:1

Ingrediants:

  • 1 tablespoon of olive oil.
  • 4 flounder or sole fillets.
  • Juice and zest of 1 orange.
  • Juice of 1 lemon.
  • 2 tablespoons chopped fresh chives.
  • ½ teaspoon salt.
  • A pinch of white pepper.

Directions:

  • Heat oil in a large frying pan over a medium heat.
  • Place fish in the pan and sprinkle with orange and lemon juices.
  • Cook for 5-7 minutes, until fish flakes easily when tested with fork.
  • Sprinkle with orange zest, chives, salt and pepper.
 

 

 

 

 

Flounder
Flounder The name ‘flatfish’ covers a number of species in general terms, including yellow-bellied flounder, dabs and soles. Call them what you like; they are all good eating fish, with the yellow-bellied flounder being the culinary pick of the bunch.
These species can be found all over New Zealand in a variety of environments on the open mud and sandy bottoms; way out wide to the surf line inshore, as well as the sandbanks and mudflats of our harbours. They are trawled, netted and speared, the last done mostly on still nights in the shallows.

 

 

Divers gathering scallops and oysters regularly come across flounder and soles hunkering down on the ocean floor where they attempt to hide by covering themselves in silt and sand. It is only their oval outline that gives them away and when disturbed they have an amazing turn of speed over a short distance.
Fly casting and light-tackle anglers with a great deal of patience have turned catching flounder into something of an art form, using small crab-imitation flies or vegetables such as peas and corn to catch dinner. They report the flounder give a good account of themselves on the light gear.
As table fare, flounder are high up there in the top 10 of the most popular eating fish. They have a delicate flavour, not unlike john dory, and can be prepared simply by taking out the gut and cooking whole. Freshly caught flounder fried in clarified butter or a lemon-infused olive oil, with a little salt and pepper, takes a great deal of beating. Cooked flounder roe, which is not removed in the gutting process, is something of a delicacy.
There is a bit of a learning curve with successfully negotiating a flounder fillet. Cooked properly, the flesh can be easily picked off one side before flipping the whole fish over and demolishing the other side, steering clear of the small bones on the outer extremities of the backbone.
Larger flounder can be filleted using a sharp, flexible knife. Make the first cut from the back of the head on the diagonal past the gills and pectoral fin. Keeping the blade tight against the backbone, work down towards and over the spine, progressing back toward the tail, as you would for most other fish such as snapper. Leave the skin on as this crisps-up well and holds a great deal of flavour.

 

 

 
 

Gemfish in Chermoula Marinade Recipe

 

 

SpotX Wild Foods Recipe from Henry Scott
Prep:12 hours Cook:4 minutes Difficulty:1

Ingrediants:
  • 1 tablespoon of olive oil.
  • 4 flounder or sole fillets.
  • Juice and zest of 1 orange.
  • Juice of 1 lemon.
  • 2 tablespoons chopped fresh chives.
  • ½ teaspoon salt.
  • A pinch of white pepper.
Directions:
  • Heat oil in a large frying pan over a medium heat.
  • Place fish in the pan and sprinkle with orange and lemon juices.
  • Cook for 5-7 minutes, until fish flakes easily when tested with fork.
  • Sprinkle with orange zest, chives, salt and pepper.
 
 

 

 

 

 

Gemfish
Gemfish When you are fishing in deep water for more desirable species such as hapuku and bass, those tentative bites you sometimes feel are quite often gemfish. Having hauled these fish out of the depths, you might be quite disappointed, but gemfish can make for a tasty meal if prepared properly.

 


Often wrongly identified as hake, gemfish are good eating if looked after and treated with the same respect you would hapuku and the like. They have an oily flesh that makes them particularly good as fodder for the smoker. Some say smoked gemfish is as good as it gets.
It is also a good species for cooking in a number of conventional ways and can be fried, steamed, baked and barbecued. Gemfish’s strong flavour and firm texture makes it ideal for Asian and Mediterranean-style dishes as it can withstand strong, bold flavours.
It is filleted the same way you would a kingfish or a trumpeter. The stomach cavity contains an off-putting yellow, bile-like liquid, which it pays to keep away from the flesh.

 

 

 
 

Quick Seafood Medley Recipe


SpotX Wild Foods Recipe from Janet Thorne
Prep:15 minutes Cook:10 minutes Difficulty:2
Ingrediants:
  • 500 grams gurnard fillets, cubed to 3cm.
  • 12 scallops, halved.
  • 150 grams cooked and peeled prawns.
  • 1 small bunch bok choy.
  • 1 cup steamed rice.
  • 1 clove garlic, crushed.
  • 1 small red onion, chopped.
  • ½ -¾ cup dry white wine.
  • 1 medium red capsicum, chopped finely.
  • 1 cup frozen peas.
  • 1 fresh chilli, chopped finely.
  • 1 tsp olive oil.
Directions:
  • Heat oil in pan and sauté onion and garlic for 2 minutes.
  • Add chilli, tomato and wine, simmer for 5 minutes.
  • Stir in capsicum, rice, peas, fish, scallops and prawns.
  • Cover and cook for 5 minutes until fish is soft, flakey and scallops white.
  • Stir through bok choy until wilted and mix well with all ingredients.

Gurnard
Gurnard ‘Carrots’, ‘grunters’, or just plain old gurnard, this species was one of the piscatorial under-achievers in the culinary world for many years.
They are a magic fish, resplendent with their colourful ‘wings’, but their succulent fillets have not, until recent times, always been fully appreciated.
As the more popular species such as blue cod and snapper became more expensive and difficult to catch, gurnard came increasingly to the fore. The flesh is firm and flavoursome and has become popular, along with tarakihi, in the fish and chip shops around the nation, not to mention on our own tables.

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Balinese Bass Recipe


SpotX Wild Foods Recipe from Simon Mullens
Prep:4 hours Cook:10 minutes Difficulty:1
Ingrediants:
  • 4 large fillets of bass.
  • 300ml cream.
  • ½ onion.
  • 1 cup fresh chives, chopped.
  • 1 cup fresh coriander, chopped.
  • 2 teaspoons lemon zest.
  • ½ cup tomatoes, diced.
  • 50ml white wine.
  • Pinch cayenne pepper.
  • Salt and pepper, to taste.
  • Rice bran oil.
  • Hoisin sauce.
Directions:
  • Fry the fish and remove from pan.
  • Deglaze pan with wine, pour in cream and reduce by half.
  • Stir in remaining ingredients until warmed through.
  • Be careful not to overheat.
  • Serve fish topped off with Hoisin sauce, to taste.

Hapuku (groper) bass and Bluenose
Hapuku (groper) bass and Bluenose These three popular recreational species are quite often incorrectly lumped together, under the heading ‘hapuku’.
When the angler in your household says he is heading out ‘’puka fishing’ he generally means he is targeting all three species. They all live, as a rule, in water 100 metres-plus deep with bass and bluenose in particular being cellar dwellers.
All three have similar eating qualities. Their flesh is firm and white, and as a group of species they are much sought after in the eating stakes.

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John Dory in White Wine Sauce Recipe


SpotX Wild Foods Recipe from Ken Crossman
Prep:10 minutes Cook:15 minutes Difficulty:1
Ingrediants:
  • 8 john dory fillets.
  • 8 chopped shallots.
  • 30 grams butter.
  • 1 cup white wine.
  • ¾ cup water.
  • ½ rind lemon, sliced in fine strips.
  • 1 teaspoon arrowroot.
  • 3 tablespoons cream.
  • Salt and pepper.
Directions:
  • Heat oven to 180°C.
  • Butter an ovenproof baking dish.
  • Sprinkle shallots over bottom of dish.
  • Lay fish out in baking dish.
  • Season and dot with knobs of butter.
  • Pour in white wine and water.
  • Top with lemon rind and remaining shallots.
  • Cover with foil and cook for 12 minutes.
  • Remove fish to a serving plate and cover with foil to keep warm.
  • Strain contents of oven dish into a saucepan.
  • Boil and stir, reducing by half.
  • Mix arrowroot with a tablespoon of water.
  • Add to sauce, heat, stir and thicken.
  • Add cream and seasoning.
  • Heat through and spoon over fish fillets.

John Dory
John Dory Ask most anglers to list their ‘top five’ table fish and it is a safe bet the majority will include john dory.
While it might not win too many beauty contests with its angular, extendable jaw, the john dory is popular with those who do the cooking and those doing the fish eating in any angling household.
It has a fine flesh that is both firm and flavoursome. Filleting and skinning it can be something of a mission, but the effort is well worthwhile. John dory is not a scavenger like snapper; it is a hunter. It relies on stealth and concealment, waiting for dinner to swim its way before extending its jaws and ‘sucking’ its prey in.

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Infused Kahawai Parcels Recipe


SpotX Wild Foods Recipe from Jade Chalmers
Prep:10 minutes Cook:10 minutes Difficulty:1
Ingrediants:
  • 4 fresh kahawai fillets.
  • 50 grams butter.
  • 2 teaspoons chicken soup mix.
  • 4 teaspoons soy sauce.
  • 1 lemon.
  • 4 silverbeet leaves, washed.
Directions:
  • Lay out four good-sized sheets of tinfoil; place a silverbeet leaf on each.
  • Place a kahawai fillet on each leaf.
  • Season each fillet with soup mix and soy sauce.
  • Quarter the lemon and the butter and place on each fillet.
  • Wrap up the parcels.
  • Cook on a hot barbecue plate for 3 minutes on each side.
  • Unwrap the sensational steamy delight.
  • Serve on rice.

Kahawai

Kahawai

Known in more recent times as ‘the people’s fish’, kahawai is a species that European New Zealanders, until recently, treated with some disdain.

“I don’t eat bait!” was for many years a common call as the kahawai was kept for just that – as a lure to catch more popular recreational species. But like gurnard and trevally, kahawai is seen more commonly on our tables and is less often destined for the bait freezer. 

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Marinated Kingfish Steaks Recipe


SpotX Wild Foods Recipe from Grant Dixon
Prep:20 minutes Cook:10 minutes Difficulty:2


Ingrediants:
  • 4 kingfish steaks or fillet pieces.
  • 2 tablespoons virgin olive oil.
  • ½ cup of soy sauce.
  • ½ cup sweet chilli sauce.
  • 2 teaspoons minced or grated fresh ginger.
  • 1 clove garlic, grated or 1 teaspoon minced garlic.
  • ½ cup of fresh coriander, finely chopped.
  • Ground salt and pepper.
Directions:
  • Mix soy and sweet chilli sauce, ginger and coriander in a bowl.
  • Lie kingfish steaks in a marinating dish.
  • Cover thoroughly with marinade and sit for 15-20 minutes.
  • Drain off most of the marinade.
  • Cook quickly on a hotplate or pan for approximately 2-3 minutes a side.
  • Turn once only, allowing the surface to caramelise.
  • Mix remaining marinade with a little white wine in a pot.
  • Reduce over medium heat until mixture thickens.
  • Serve over steaks.
  • For a stronger flavour, fish sauce can replace sweet chilli sauce.

Kingfish
Kingfish In more recent times kingfish has almost become a ‘recreationalonly species’. The Total Allowable Commercial Catch is spread widely, making it more of a by-catch than a species the fishing industry targets specifically.
Recreationally, catching a big kingfish, 30kg or above, is the holy grail of sportfishing. The species is held in high regard by recreational anglers with many choosing to tag and return, or simply release, the bigger fish once they have been landed.
Kingfish is held in less regard for its eating qualities, but this is probably an unfair assessment. Prepared correctly, kingfish can be smoked, steamed, poached, baked, fried, barbecued or used as sashimi and sushi.

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Nutty Trout Recipe


SpotX Wild Foods Guide: Recipe from Peter Richards
Prep:20 minutes Cook:20 minutes Difficulty:2
Ingrediants:
  • 1 trout, gilled and gutted.
  • 2 cups macadamia nuts, chopped finely in blender.
  • 2 cups pitted prunes, chopped finely.
  • 2 tablespoons Madeira sherry.
  • 2 cups fresh breadcrumbs.
  • 1 medium-sized lemon, zested then squeezed.
  • 1 tablespoon chopped Italian parsley.
  • 1 teaspoon dill, chopped.
  • 1 teaspoon olive oil.
  • Sea salt and ground pepper.
Directions:
  • Mix prunes, sherry and breadcrumbs together.
  • Mix in parsley and dill, along with seasoning.
  • Rub zest over fish and in gut, then force mixture firmly into gut cavity.
  • Secure by sewing with butcher’s string or with toothpicks.
  • Bake uncovered in oven dish at 200°C, 15 minutes per 500 grams trout.
  • Prior to serving drizzle with lemon juice and garnish with dill.
  • Standard prunes can be substituted with lemon/orange-flavoured ones.

Trout
Trout The various species of trout were introduced, but unlike rabbits, stoats, wallabies, possums, goats and the like, trout has not turned around and bitten us in the backside.
Our pristine waters have proven an ideal environment for several species of trout, which have acclimatised well.
And unlike England, trout and trout fishing is available to all Kiwis prepared to buy a license, rather than just a privileged few. Trout are available throughout New Zealand and countless visitors have been attracted to our shores in pursuit of them; following in the footsteps of noted writer and angler Zane Grey, who fished here and wrote about his experiences in the late 1920s.

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Billy Ho’s Flamed Maomao Recipe


SpotX Wild Foods Recipe from Bill Hohepa
Prep:5 minutes Cook:15 minutes Difficulty:1
Ingrediants:
  • 8 maomao fillets, skinned and boned.
  • ¼ cup brandy or rum.
  • 1 cup cream.
  • Salt and pepper.
  • Plain flour.
Directions:
  • Salt both sides of each fillet, then lightly flour the fillets.
  • Heat a heavy frying pan until almost smoking hot. .
  • Place each fillet into the pan and lightly brown each side. .
  • Pour the brandy or rum into the pan and flame the fillets.  .
  • When the flames die down, turn the heat to low and add the cream.
  • Simmer for about 12 minutes.
  • The brandy and the cream should combine.
  • Reduce to create a thick sauce. .
  • Serve the fish over a bed of rice.
  • Use the brandy ‘caramel’ in the pan as a topping for the fish. .

Mao Mao
Mao Mao Bill Hohepa described maomao as the muttonbird (sooty shearwater) of the underwater world. Anyone who has tried to strayline down a berley trail over foul ground will appreciate Bill’s sentiments.

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Marlin on a Muffin Recipe


SpotX Wild Foods Recipe from Grant Dixon
Prep:10 minutes Cook:10 minutes Difficulty:2
  Ingrediants:
  • Smoked marlin.
  • 6 eggs.
  • 60 grams double cream.
  • 2 tablespoons mayonnaise.
  • 1 tablespoon freshly-chopped chives.
  • 60 grams butter.
  • Pinch curry powder.
  • Sea salt and black pepper.
  • 4 plain English muffins.
Directions:
  • Combine eggs, cream, curry powder, mayonnaise, chives in a bowl.
  • Melt butter in a saucepan over a low heat.
  • Add mixture until it sets, but retains its creamy texture.
  • Split muffins and lightly toast.
  • Finely break up marlin with a fork.
  • Spread evenly over the toasted muffins.
  • Top with egg mixture, garnish with parsley and serve.
  • Great for breakfasts or a light lunch.
  • Muffins can be substituted with bread (fresh or toasted) or bagels.
  • Marlin can be replaced with thinly-sliced smoked salmon.

Marlin
Marlin Smoking is the most practical way of sharing your prized striped marlin catch with friends and family.
Its dark, oily flesh is perfect for brining and smoking and is considered the best eating of the three marlin species, followed by black marlin, with blue marlin a long way further back.

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Baked Mullet Recipe

 

SpotX Wild Foods Recipe from Shannon Miles
Prep:15 minutes Cook:30 minutes Difficulty:1

Ingrediants:

  • 1 fresh grey mullet, cleaned and scaled.
  • 25 grams butter.
  • Two onions, thinly sliced.
  • 225 grams tomatoes, peeled, seeded and sliced.
  • 100ml dry white wine.
  • Salt and pepper.
  • 1 teaspoon dried tarragon.

Directions:

  • Use the butter to grease a shallow ovenproof baking dish.
  • Also butter a sheet of greaseproof paper.
  • Set the oven at 190°C.
  • Spread onion rings over the base of the dish.
  • Top with the sliced tomatoes.
  • Lay the fish on top of the vegetables and pour the wine over.
  • Sprinkle with salt, pepper and tarragon.
  • Arrange the lemon slices on top of the fish.
  • Cover loosely with the buttered greaseproof paper.
  • Bake for 30 minutes.
 

 

 

 

 

Grey Mullet
Grey Mullet While many people think that grey mullet is best used as bait, for snapper in particular, it tantalises human taste buds as smoked fish.
Mullet is popular smoked; the oily flesh that makes it ideal as a cut-bait also ensures it is a favourite among those who like their fish cured rather than cooked.

 

 


Split, gutted and gilled, mullet has a strong taste that is complimented by the smoking process. While smoked mullet roe is considered a delicacy, anglers value the gut, head and frames as bait or the basis of a good berley. Mullet is most common in the northern parts of New Zealand, where it is netted or beach-seined around our harbours and surf lines.
While most people consider it’s at its best as smoked fish, it can be prepared conventionally. The flesh is pinkish-grey and medium firm, with a high fat content.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Curried Octopus in Coconut Recipe

 

SpotX Wild Foods Recipe from John Eichelsheim
Prep:5 minutes Cook:30 minutes Difficulty:1

Ingrediants:

  • 1 whole, fresh octopus.
  • 1 can coconut cream.
  • Salt and black pepper, to taste.
  • 1 small onion, chopped.
  • Curry powder/paste to taste.

Directions:

  • Clean the octopus, removing the ink sac from the head.
  • Rinse in cold running water, or seawater if available.
  • Place the whole octopus in a pot over medium heat.
  • The water in which it was rinsed will provide the cooking moisture.
  • Simmer until tender; remove from heat and discard cooking liquid.
  • Allow to cool sufficiently to cut the tentacles into bite-sized pieces.
  • Heat the coconut cream in a saucepan with the seasonings and onion.
  • Add the octopus pieces and reheat.
  • Serve with boiled taro, kumara, potato or rice.
 

 

 

 

 

Octopus
Octopus Octopus is not an uncommon catch for recreational anglers.
Octopus is seldom kept, however, and even less often cooked and eaten. But octopus is delicious eating – in many people’s opinion at least as good as squid. If you intend to keep an octopus for the table, kill it quickly and humanely. One method is to ‘turn it inside-out’, which involves doing exactly what the description says, but this does take a little practice as it can be tricky.
Polynesian people bite an octopus between the eyes, which kills it. You can achieve the same result by pushing a knife into the animal’s brain between the eyes. A dead octopus, like all seafood, should be iced down immediately. It keeps well frozen whole.
There are many good recipes for octopus, which is particularly popular as food in the Mediterranean and the Pacific. The recipes that follow reflect this.

 
 

Piper Stir-fry Recipe


SpotX Wild Foods Recipe from PJ Falls
Prep:10 minutes Cook:30 minutes Difficulty:1
  Ingrediants:
  • 1 kilogram piper fillets.
  • 1 small onion, diced.
  • 1 tablespoon barbecue tomato sauce.
  • 1 tablespoon Worcestershire sauce.
  • 1 tablespoon soy sauce.
  • 1½ cups fish stock.
  • ½ cup rice bran oil.
  • Salt and pepper, to taste.
Directions:
  • Cut piper into 3-cm long pieces.
  • Heat the oil in a wok.
  • Add fish.
  • Stir lightly until brown.
  • Add onion, and stir until light brown.
  • Add the other ingredients and stir lightly; mix in fish stock.
  • Cover and simmer for 30-45 minutes.

Piper
Piper While most people regard fresh piper (garfish) as one of the ‘ultimate’ snapper and kingfish baits, those in the know also appreciate this ‘upside-down-marlin’ for its table qualities.
The easiest way to catch these little guys is to drag a bait-net in the surf line or along a beach or mudflat, but the job can be made much more challenging by using a rod and reel!
Fine line in the two-kilo range is perfect. Attach a float, a small length of trace and a size 20 or 22 sprat hook and you are ready to go. A great bait is a coarse dough made from flour and a little water and rolled with cotton wool to keep it together. Otherwise, slightly wet a small piece of bread, which can then be balled up around the hook. Other baits include processed cheese, pipi or squid, the secret being to keep it small – no larger than an average- sized pea.

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Thai Porae Patties Recipe


SpotX Wild Foods Recipe from Simon Jowett
Prep:10 minutes Cook:25 minutes Difficulty:2
Ingrediants:
  • 250 grams filleted and boned porae.
  • 1 garlic clove, chopped.
  • ½ cm piece of ginger, grated.
  • ¼ large red capsicum, diced.
  • Sweet chilli sauce.
  • 50ml coconut cream.
  • Salt.
  • 1 egg.
  • 3 spring onions.
  • Coriander leaves.
  • Plain flour.
  • Olive oil and a knob of butter.
  • 1 cucumber.
Directions:
  • Preheat oven to 220°C.
  • To a food processor add garlic, ginger and capsicum.
  • Then the 2 tablespoons of sweet chilli sauce.
  • Process.
  • Add fish, coconut cream and salt; process briefly.
  • Put mixture into a bowl.
  • Add chopped spring onion and coriander leaves.
  • Mix thoroughly.
  • Heat olive oil and a knob of butter in a frying pan until shimmering.
  • Form patties, flour lightly and cook on both sides until golden.
  • Cook for a further 2- 3 minutes in the oven.
  • Drain well on paper towels.
  • Serve on a bed of cucumber slices and sprinkle over the chilli sauce.

Porae
Porae While porae are not the most sought-after fish, they have a white, moist flesh that has good Omega 3 levels and is suited to most cooking methods. They are closely related to tarakihi and moki.
Porae like the warmer climes and are generally found from the Bay of Plenty northwards. They are more prolific on the east coast than the west. Porae feed along weed lines and over foul ground close to sandy bottoms, where they forage for food down to 60 metres or so.
Their main diet is crabs and other invertebrates. They are an inquisitive fish. A common practice among spear fishers is to grab a handful of sand off the bottom before heading for the surface for another breath. On diving back down again they will quite often encounter a porae fossicking in the scoop mark looking for its dinner.
For the sport fisher they are a worthy opponent: they grow to quite a good size and more than one angler, seeing them coming up on the end of their line, initially thinks he has caught a good snapper.
Porae are filleted in the same way you would a snapper, although the flesh is not quite as white or firm.

 

Mako in Herb Butter Recipe


SpotX Wild Foods Recipe from Ray Steele
Prep:15 minutes Cook:15 minutes Difficulty:1
Ingrediants:
  • 1 kilogram mako steaks.
  • 4 cloves garlic, peeled.
  • 1 medium onion, chopped.
  • 1 lemon, cut into wedges.
  • 1 cup butter.
  • ¼ teaspoon marjoram.
  • ¼ teaspoon seafood seasoning.
  • Pinch of thyme.
  • Salt, to taste.
  • Freshly-ground black pepper, to taste.
  • Fresh Italian parsley, chopped.
  • Pinch ground oregano.
Directions:
  • Melt butter in saucepan over low heat.
  • Add whole garlic, onions, seasonings and herbs.
  • Remove from heat and allow to steep (one hour).
  • Place mako steaks in a baking dish and pour herb butter over fish.
  • Cook at 180°C for 15 minutes.
  • Serve garnished with parsley and with lemon wedges on the side.
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Shikkered Salmon Recipe


SpotX Wild Foods Recipe from Brad Kyle
Prep:Overnight Cook:30 minutes Difficulty:2
Ingrediants:
  • 2-3 kg salmon, gutted and gilled.
  • 1 cup medium sherry.
  • 1 cup milk.
  • Salt and pepper.
  • 1 cup fresh white breadcrumbs.
  • Extra salt and pepper.
  • ½ small onion, chopped.
  • 1 tablespoon parsley, chopped.
  • 1 pinch mixed herbs.
  • 2 tablespoons melted butter.
  • 2 tablespoons hot water.
Directions:
  • Clean, wash and dry salmon.
  • Place in a large ovenproof dish.
  • Pour the sherry over the salmon, cover and refrigerate overnight.
  • To create a stuffing combine:.
  • Breadcrumbs, salt, pepper, onion, parlsey, herbs, butter and water.
  • Fill the gut cavity with stuffing and secure by stitching or with skewers.
  • Add milk to the sherry and pour over the salmon.
  • Season and bake in a moderate oven 180°C for 20-30 minutes.
  • Serve hot or cold.

Salmon
Salmon Most of the cooking ‘rules’ that apply to trout can be adapted for salmon and vice-versa.
While in recent years the runs of this fish up the rivers of the South Island have not been as prolific as in the past, salmon are still well worth targeting.
Regular fishers on the likes of Canterbury’s Waimakariri, Rakaia and Rangitata Rivers all have their favourite way of preparing salmon, including bottling, canning and smoking to ensure a store of this delicacy over the winter months, as well as recipes involving fresh fillets.
Many New Zealanders keenly anticipate the limited salmon season: if you have been fortunate enough to taste wild salmon, you will appreciate why.
For those who don’t count a salmon angler among their family or circle of friends, the good news is that it is farmed in New Zealand and can be purchased fresh over the counter at most supermarkets and seafood outlets.

 

Stingray Casserole Recipe


SpotX Wild Foods Recipe from Tricia Stubbings
Prep:15 minutes Cook:30 minutes Difficulty:2
  Ingrediants:
  • 500 grams stingray fillet cut into 2cm cubes.
  • 1 cup sliced mushrooms.
  • 3 celery stalks, diced.
  • 4 tablespoons grated onion.
  • ½ cup minced green pepper.
  • ½ cup cracker crumbs.
  • 6 tablespoons butter.
  • 2 cup milk.
  • 4 tablespoons grated cheddar cheese.
  • 4 tablespoons flour.
  • Pinch of basil.
  • ½ teaspoon salt.
  • ¼ teaspoon freshly-ground black pepper.
  • 1 pinch nutmeg.
Directions:
  • Melt 2 tablespoons of butter in a saucepan.
  • Add mushrooms, celery, onion, green pepper and basil.
  • Sauté for about 10 minutes or until celery is tender.
  • While mushrooms are sautéeing make sauce.
  • Melt 4 tablespoons of butter or margarine into a second saucepan.
  • Stirring constantly, gradually add the flour.
  • Add salt, pepper and nutmeg and slowly pour in milk.
  • Cook and stir for about 6 minutes until sauce is thick and smooth.
  • Add stingray to mushroom mixture and cook for about 5 minutes.
  • Combine stingray and mushrooms with white sauce and stir well.
  • Pour mixture into a casserole dish.
  • Cover with cracker crumbs and top with grated cheddar cheese.
  • Bake for 20 minutes at 180°C until casserole is golden brown.

Stingray
Stingray The stingray has earned its bad reputation from the sharp and often poisonous sting on its tail. But in thousands of underwater encounters, the animal has never threatened me. Here in New Zealand we know three species of stingray: the short-tailed ray, the long-tailed ray and the eagle ray. Stingrays have a unique body design, as they fly through the water rather like birds in the sky. Rays are cartilaginous fishes like sharks and do not have swim bladders to adjust their buoyancy. As a result their archenemy, the orca, doesn’t find it easy to locate them using sonar. Furthermore, rays are adept at burrowing into the sand, with only a casual flick of their wings.
Even though they have bad eyesight, stingrays are reasonably intelligent and grow quite old. The short-tailed ray holds the size record, with individuals recorded weighing over 500kg and wingspans of 3.5m. I’ve seen only one such monster and I had to back off before I realised what it was.

 

 

Kiwifruit Squid Recipe


SpotX Wild Foods Recipe from Grant Dixon
Prep:12 hours Cook:10 minutes Difficulty:1
Ingrediants:
  • 4 squid mantles.
  • 2 kiwifruit, skinned.
  • 3 cloves garlic, crushed.
  • 2 chillis, deseeded and chopped.
  • 2 tablespoons olive oil.
Directions:
  • Slice squid into rings.
  • Mash kiwifruit and combine with cloves, garlic and chillies.
  • Mix with squid rings.
  • Marinate in a lidded container overnight, turning occasionally.
  • Heat barbecue plate over a medium flame.
  • Add oil and squid, cooking quickly (3-4 minutes maximum).
  • Serve with fresh loose-leaf salad.

Squid
Squid As we become more familiar with Asian cuisine, the status of squid, or calamari, has grown from being good only as bait to a respected and enjoyed table fish.
When fishing it is not uncommon for anglers to experience a series of light taps on their lines; attacks on the bait that prove difficult to turn into hook ups. Many blame the attention of smaller fish for their bad fortune, but more often than not it will be squid attacking the offering. Change the conventional hooks or soft bait for a squid jig and see what happens!

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Popeye’s Tarakihi Recipe


SpotX Wild Foods Recipe from Barry Robson
Prep:20 minutes Cook:20 minutes Difficulty:2
Ingrediants:
  • 2 tablespoons butter.
  • Spinach washed, stalked and chopped.
  • 500 grams tarakihi fillets (or other white fish).
  • 2 tablespoons butter, extra.
  • 2 tablespoons plain flour.
  • 1¼ cups milk.
  • ½ cup grated tasty cheese.
  • 1 teaspoon lemon juice.
  • 2 tablespoons grated tasty cheese, extra.
Directions:
  • Melt 2 tablespoons of butter in large pan.
  • Add garlic, to taste, and shredded spinach.
  • Stir over heat or microwave until tender. .
  • Spread spinach into shallow ovenproof dish. .
  • Poach/microwave fish until just cooked, chop and spread over spinach. .
  • Melt extra butter in saucepan, add flour.
  • Stir over heat further minute or microwave on high 1 minute. .
  • Remove from heat, stir in milk and return to heat.
  • Stir until mixture thickens, or microwave on high for 3 minutes.  .
  • Stir in cheese and add lemon juice and spread over fish. .
  • Sprinkle grated tasty cheese on top. .
  • Bake in moderate oven180°C for about 20 minutes.
  • Alternatively microwave for about 5 minutes, or until hot.

Tarakihi
Tarakihi Tarakihi is a common species found right around New Zealand. They are a popular eating fish, being readily available to recreational and commercial fishers alike.
Tarakihi are silver-grey in colour, with a distinctive black band running down their bodies from behind the head. When the Three Kings Islands opened up to sportfishing, those looking for their dinner between targeting marlin ‘discovered’ an XOS tarakihi, named ‘king’ tarakihi, which has similar great eating qualities and grows to 5-6kg in size. King tarakihi are also caught in the Eastern Bay of Plenty and elsewhere.
Tarakihi are not unlike snapper in that at various times of the year they can be found schooling out over the deep mud or alternatively over deeper reef structure. Known for their longevity, many adults are 10-20 years old, with some even reaching 50 years of age.
When on the bite, tarakihi are voracious feeders. Some anglers affectionately refer to them as ‘Tic Tics’, on account of their repeated peck-like bite. They are commonly caught on ledger rigs tied using small 1/0 re-curved hooks or on commercially-tied rigs such as the Black Magic ‘Tarakihi Terrors’.
Tarakihi has a firm flesh and is easily filleted in the same way you would a snapper. The inside of the gut cavity has a black lining instead of the pearlescent one found in many other species, but don’t let that put you off as the meat is light in appearance and sweet. Tarakihi is a species that lends itself to a variety of approaches from the person in charge of the galley.

 

 

Mark’s Trevally Kokoda Recipe

 

SpotX Wild Foods Recipe from Mark Kitteridge
Prep:24 hours Cook:1 minute Difficulty:1

Ingrediants:

  • 750 grams trevally fillets, skinned and boned.
  • ¾ cup lime/lemon juice.
  • ½ teaspoon salt.
  • ¼ cup white vinegar.
  • 1 red chilli, deseeded and finely chopped.
  • ¼ cup chives, finely chopped.
  • 2 spring onions, finely chopped.
  • ½ capsicum, chopped.
  • Telegraph cucumber (about 6cm), sliced.
  • 12 cherry tomatoes, halved.
  • 210-gram can coconut cream.
  • ½ teaspoon sugar.
  • Ground black pepper, to taste.
  • Coriander or parsley to garnish.

Directions:

  • Slice trevally into 2-cm cubes.
  • Place in a lidded container with lemon/lime juice, white vinegar and salt.
  • Toss well and leave to marinate for a minimum of 3 hours.
  • Overnight is better.
  • Stir occasionally.
  • In a separate bowl add:.
  • Chilli, chives, spring onions, capsicum, cucumber, tomatoes,.
  • Coconut cream, black pepper and sugar. Mix well.
  • Drain fish in a colander under running cold water until run-off is clear.
  • Place fish in the coconut cream mixture.
  • Return to refrigerator for an hour.
  • Stir occasionally.
  • Garnish with sprigs of parsley or chopped coriander before serving.
 

 

 

 

 

Trevally
Trevally Like kahawai, trevally was for many years considered only good as bait. The flesh is relatively dark and quite oily, making it ideal for smoking. Filleted, the fish has a strong flavour that works well in pasta and other dishes where sauces might overpower the more delicate taste of other species. Trevally is also excellent grilled or barbecued as steaks, fillets or cooked whole. Where possible, leave the skin on – it helps keep the fish together and the fat under the skin keeps the flesh moist.
Trevally makes brilliant raw or marinated fish and is great in sushi or as sashimi. Trevally is best eaten fresh, as it does not freeze well.
Trevally can be caught seasonally around most of the New Zealand coast and quite often the schools of these fish can be seen gorging in krill on the surface. While this makes them relatively easy to find and catch for recreational fishers, unfortunately a commercial seine boat can hoover up whole schools in a single sweep.
Trevally are easy to fillet and are dealt with in the same way as you would a snapper. Removing the skin can be a little more difficult and requires a sharp knife run flat and firm between the skin and the flesh to remove in one piece. Because of its lack of ‘real’ scales, some people cook their trevally fillets with the skin on.

 
 

Trumpeter Poached in Coconut Milk Recipe

 

SpotX Wild Foods Recipe from Andre Filou
Prep:15 minutes Cook:40 minutes Difficulty:2

Ingrediants:

  • 4 cups coconut milk.
  • 2 tablespoons minced ginger.
  • 2 chillies, deseeded and chopped.
  • 1 tablespoon chopped coriander.
  • 1 onion, finely chopped.
  • 2 stems lemon grass, sliced.
  • 1 tablespoon grated lime or lemon zest.
  • 2 cups fish stock.
  • 5 tablespoons fish stock.
  • 5 tablespoons lime or lemon juice.
  • 4x 250 gram trumpeter pieces, skin on.
  • Coriander leaves, to garnish.

Directions:

  • Bring the coconut milk to the boil in a saucepan.
  • Boil for 3 minutes.
  • Add the ginger, chilli, coriander roots, lemon grass, onion and zest.
  • Bring back to the boil.
  • Add the fish stock and fish sauce and simmer for 15 minutes.
  • Pass through a fine strainer and add the lime/lemon juice.
  • Heat the sauce in a frying pan.
  • When it comes to the boil add the fish.
  • Reduce the heat and simmer very gently for 10-15 minutes.
  • Transfer the fish to a platter.
  • Serve with some of the liquid and sprinkling of coriander.
 
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Trumpeter
Trumpeter Trumpeter, a relative of the blue moki, is widely spread geographically.
While they are rarely caught north of the Bay of Plenty, they become more prolific the further south you travel.
Some of the best grounds can be found off the South Island’s eastern seaboard, from the Kaikoura Coast right down around the corner to Fiordland and including Foveaux Strait and Stewart Island. The larger specimens like deep water, preferably around structure, and tend to move offshore in the winter months. They are renowned for their fighting ability and take jigs as readily as they do cut baits. The latter, combined with flasher rigs, is a consistent performer.
Unfortunately for trumpeter, they are generally found in good-sized schools, making them an easy target for commercial fishers. They can be quite territorial, which means they are quickly cleaned out of a popular fishing spot.
The good news is that trumpeter is a great eating fish and it hangs out with other top-ten culinary contenders – blue cod, tarakihi and groper. It has a firm flesh which makes it ideal for a number of dishes, especially fish casseroles, as it holds together well.
There are no secrets to filleting trumpeter. It is done in the same way you would fillet a snapper or ‘pup’ groper. It is a fish that ‘ages’ well, gaining in flavour intensity by being refrigerated for a couple of days in a well-drained container.

 
 

Zambucca Tuna Nibbles Recipe


SpotX Wild Foods Recipe from Steve Haddock
Prep:10 minutes Cook:3 minutes Difficulty:1
Ingrediants:
  • Tuna loin (albacore or yellowfin).
  • Soy sauce.
  • Virgin olive oil (try lemon-infused olive oil).
  • Salt and pepper to taste.
  • Lemon wedges.
Directions:
  • Cut tuna loin into approximately 5cm strips, going with grain.
  • Heat hotplate to medium-hot heat.
  • Mix soy sauce and olive oil in ratio of approximately 4:1.
  • Dip tuna strips into mixture (can marinate 15-20 minutes).
  • Place on hotplate until just cooked through.
  • Serve off the plate as nibbles with pre-dinner rum and cokes.
  • Add salt and pepper and a squeeze of lemon to taste.

Tuna
Tuna Many nations put a huge price on the meat of a number of tuna species, especially big-eye, yellowfin and bluefin tunas.
A single fish can fetch tens of thousands of dollars, particularly at Asian fish markets, if it’s handled correctly to ensure it arrives quickly and in prime condition.
The regard in which some tuna species are held has resulted in over-fishing throughout the Pacific, and in recent years yellowfin tuna especially have failed to reach New Zealand territorial waters in any numbers. A yellowfin or big-eye tuna is a prized catch, not only as a sportfish, but also for its eating qualities.

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Blackened Warehou Recipe

 

SpotX Wild Foods Recipe from Pete Lamb
Prep:10 minutes Cook:10 minutes Difficulty:

ngrediants:

  • 4 warehou fillets (approximately 200 grams each).
  • 100 grams butter, melted.
  • 2 tablespoons cajun spices.
  • 2 tablespoons oil.

Directions:

  • Generously brush fillets with melted butter.
  • Sprinkle cajun spices thickly over fillets.
  • In a hot pan or barbecue plate, heat oil and cook fillets for 2-3 minutes.
  • Fish is cooked when it flakes easily.
  • The fish should be ‘charred’ on each side.
  • Add extra butter if necessary to get desired effect.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Warehou
Warehou Warehou, often nicknamed ‘Hou’ by Wellington anglers who seem to have a colloquial name for every species in their waters, are widely distributed around the coastline of the South Island as well as the southern North Island.
They are a popular target species, for both recreational and commercial fishers, for their eating qualities. They have a firm flesh that is easy to fillet and skin.
Warehou inhabit the rocky shoreline and deepwater reefs down to around 120 metres. They tend to move in large shoals, making them quite vulnerable to commercial methods such as netting and trawling. Occasionally the fish will be found breaking the surface well out to sea and away from any obvious structure.
Recreational anglers catch them on bait or jigs. Black Magic Snapper Snatcher sabikis and the like also do the business.

 
 

Chive and Lemon Whitebait Fritters Recipe


SpotX Wild Foods Recipe from Cascade Whitebait
Prep:15 minutes Cook:10 minutes Difficulty:1
Ingrediants:
  • ½ cup flour.
  • 1 teaspoon baking powder.
  • 1 egg.
  • ¼ cup chopped chives.
  • ½ cup milk.
  • 2 tablespoons lemon juice.
  • 1 teaspoon grated lemon rind.
  • 250 grams whitebait.
  • Salt and pepper.
  • 25 grams butter.
Directions:
  • Mix together flour and baking powder. Make a well in the centre.
  • Beat egg and chives slowly into flour mix.
  • Add milk and mix to a smooth batter.
  • Add lemon juice, lemon rind, whitebait, salt and pepper.
  • Mix together gently.
  • Heat a frying pan, then add butter.
  • Fry ¼ cup of mixture at a time, turning to brown both sides.
  • Place on kitchen paper to drain.

Whitebait
Whitebait One of New Zealand’s true delicacies, whitebait’s subtle taste is hard to put into words, but the price it demands in the shops, topping $100 a kilo at times, is testimony to its popularity among gourmets.
There are some seven species of native fish whose larval phases are loosely called whitebait. During late winter and early spring, the dates determined by geographical location, whitebaiters head for the rivers, streams and coastal river mouths armed with a variety of nets to trap ‘bait.

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Jim’s Goose Roast Recipe


SpotX Wild Foods Recipe from Jim Hart
Prep:Overnight Cook:2 hours Difficulty:1
Ingrediants:
  • 1 goose, plucked, gutted and washed.
  • ½ cup salt.
  • 3 tablespoons baking soda.
  • ½ bucket of water.
  • 2 cups fresh breadcrumbs.
  • 2 onions, diced.
  • 50 grams butter.
  • Pinch of sage.
  • Pinch of thyme.
  • Garlic salt.
  • Ground pepper and salt.
  • Olive oil.
  • Butter.
Directions:
  • Mix ½ cup salt and baking soda in the bucket of water.
  • Soak goose in brine overnight.
  • Remove, dry well and lightly season the gut cavity with salt and pepper.
  • In a saucepan sauté onions in butter until translucent.
  • Remove from the heat and add breadcrumbs, herbs and garlic salt.
  • Mix thoroughly and stuff cavity, securing with string and skewers.
  • Brush goose all over with olive oil.
  • Sprinkle with ground pepper and garlic salt.
  • Place goose in a covered roasting dish with 3cm of water.
  • Cook at 200°C for 90 minutes, do not remove cover during steam roast.
  • Now remove the cover, baste the bird and brown for further 30 minutes.
  • Dripping will make an excellent gravy.

Canadian Geese
Canadian Geese Canada geese were introduced from North America in 1876 for recreational hunting, but did not get established until 1905 when 50 birds were brought into the country and liberated in a number of different regions. The birds flourished in the South Island but had died out in the North Island by the 1930s.
In 1970 another attempt was made to establish the geese in the North Island and this was successful. Now they can be found in the Far North, Waikato, Taupo, Rotorua, Taranaki, northern Hawkes Bay, Manawatu and around Lake Wairarapa.

The geese mainly eat pasture and graze on crops, which has made them the enemy of farmers. It is said that one bird will eat and/or foul the equivalent pasture used to raise two sheep. If you wish to hunt Canada geese you will be welcomed with open arms onto most sheep stations around the country.

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Thai Curry Duck Recipe


SpotX Wild Foods Recipe from David Robinson
Prep:2 hours Cook:½ hour Difficulty:3
  Ingrediants:
  • 1 medium-size duck, plucked, gutted and washed.
  • 2 large potatoes, cubed.
  • Butter.
  • 230 grams mushrooms, quartered.
  • 120 grams small shallots, sliced in halves.
  • 2 cloves garlic, chopped.
  • Ground black pepper.
  • 100 grams Thai red curry paste.
  • 1 litre coconut milk.
  • 28 grams liquid honey.
  • 28 grams oyster sauce.
  • ¼ cup finely-chopped fresh sweet basil.
  • 1 tablespoon of olive oil.
Directions:
  • Place duck in a pot of salted water and simmer for 2 hours.
  • Remove duck from pot, strip all meat off the carcass.
  • Cut into bite-size pieces, removing as much fat and skin as possible.
  • Boil the potatoes to 80% done, drain and set aside.
  • In a wok, sauté mushrooms, shallots and garlic, add pepper, set aside.
  • In the wok add olive oil and curry paste.
  • Fry at medium heat, add additional oil if required.
  • Before the curry starts to burn add 2 tablespoons of the coconut milk.
  • Thicken a bit and keep stirring until the red oils slowly separate.
  • Stir in the honey, then oyster sauce.
  • Once it starts to thicken again, add all but 2 tablespoons of the milk.
  • Add the mushrooms, shallots and potatoes.
  • Bring it to a low simmer for 10 minutes with the lid off.
  • Five minutes before serving add sweet basil, duck and rest of the milk.
  • Mix well and cover. Serve on rice accompanied by a cold beer.

Duck
Duck Hunting duck is one of those Kiwi activities steeped in tradition, especially in rural communities.
The first weekend in May is eagerly awaited and has greater status than some religious holidays. In anticipation of opening day considerable preparation will have gone into the maimai, the traditional duck hunter’s lair, and preparing ponds, which are sometimes pre-fed.
Prior to the big event, gun clubs hold shooters’ ‘eye-openers’. A number of clubs and pubs host hunters’ evenings to determine the most realistic duck caller, camouflage and the like. Shotguns are given that extra bit of attention and the faithful gundog gets caught up in all the hype too. The scene is being set for what is a special annual occasion for some 80,000 people around the country.
Like all sports, bird shooting has become more sophisticated as time goes by. The traditional side-by-side shotgun has largely given way to ‘under and overs’. Now semi-automatic guns with magazines capable of up to five rounds are the order of the day. Lead shot over our waterways has been banned to appease the green element – a vocal minority. Decoys are moulded from plastic and can be made to move on the water or to simulate flight, with wings that flap.
Even the species have changed. Areas that were once the domain of the grey duck have been taken over by the mallard, which in turn has been superseded in many regions by the larger, domineering paradise shelduck. But at the end of the day you still have to put shot in the air in the right place to intercept dinner – and that has not changed.
The rewards are worth it. Wild duck is excellent fare and can be prepared in a variety of ways. Traditionally the birds have been hung for a day or two then plucked and drawn, before being roasted or casseroled. More commonly today they are breasted out and presented in a variety of ways, including manufactured into salamis and sausages; recipes for some of which are outlined below.

 

Traditional Mutton Bird Recipe


SpotX Wild Foods Recipe from Pete Wiri
Prep:10 minutes Cook:3 hours Difficulty:1
Ingrediants:
  • 1 mutton bird.
  • Water.
  • Lemon juice.
Directions:
  • Wash bird thoroughly in hot water.
  • Place in a pot and cover with water.
  • Bring to the boil.
  • Empty the pot of water and fat.
  • Replace with mutton bird and fresh water.
  • Bring to the boil again.
  • Repeat this process 2-3 times.
  • Then boil for 1½ hours.
  • Remove from water and allow to cool, storing the bird in the fridge.
  • When preparing to serve, rub lemon juice into skin.
  • Lay the bird on a tray with a pan underneath to catch the dripping.
  • Cook under a grill until the skin is crisp.

Muttonbirds
Muttonbirds The muttonbird (shearwater chicks – usually but not exclusively sooty shearwaters) is a native of New Zealand: the Maori call it titi and it has been a prized delicacy for many generations.
The small offshore islands around Rakiura (Stewart Island) and Bluff are known to be the home of the best muttonbirds. They can also be found on some offshore islands in the North Island, but not in any appreciable numbers. North Island Maori also harvested the young of other shearwater species, although the practice has become rare since seabirds are now protected.

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English Pheasant Recipe


SpotX Wild Foods Recipe from Annette Henderson
Prep:2-3 hours Cook:30 minutes Difficulty:2
Ingrediants:
  • 2 pheasant breasts, cut into bite-size pieces.
  • 1 can cream of mushroom soup.
  • 1 can cream of chicken soup.
  • ½ jar salsa, medium.
  • ½ cup sour cream.
  • 250 grams shredded cheddar cheese.
  • 1 large onion, finely chopped.
  • 1 packet tortillas, cut into strips.
Directions:
  • In a large bowl, mix together all of the ingredients except the tortillas.
  • In a large casserole dish, layer the mixture.
  • One layer of tortilla strips.
  • Then a layer of mixture.
  • Then a layer of tortillas.
  • And repeat.
  • Bake for 30 minutes at 180°C.

Pheasants
Pheasants Pheasants were introduced into New Zealand as a game bird for recreational hunters back in 1842; however, they did not really establish themselves until 1865 when successful breeding by the Canterbury Acclimatisation Society prompted the importation of more birds. Numbers increased and spread until the 1900s, when predators and competition for food from smaller imported birds was blamed for a drop in pheasant numbers. Breeding by the Acclimatisation Societies throughout New Zealand, combined with the breaking-in of farmland and careful husbandry by the now Fish & Game Councils, has since seen the birds flourish.

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Pukeko Patties Recipe


SpotX Wild Foods Recipe from Mark Airey
Prep:12 hours Cook:20 minutes Difficulty:1
Ingrediants:
  • 4 pukeko breasts.
  • 200 grams of streaky bacon, remove rind.
  • 2 onions, diced.
  • 3 tablespoons cheap sherry.
  • 1 egg.
  • Freshly-ground black pepper to taste.
  • Garlic salt.
  • 1 cup breadcrumbs.
Directions:
  • Mince pukeko breasts and bacon together.
  • Add onion, egg, garlic and seasoning.
  • Thoroughly mix, using your hands in a bowl.
  • Add and mix enough sherry to get a nice moist consistency.
  • Cover bowl and allow to stand in the fridge for at least 12 hours.
  • Remove mince from the bowl and form into patties.
  • Heat barbecue plate or frying pan to a medium heat.
  • Cook for 10 minutes each side or until cooked through.

Pukeko
Pukeko Pukeko is the Maori name for this colourful and cheeky bird. It means ‘swamp hen’, as the same bird is known in Australia. It is believed to have settled here 1,000 years ago, although there is only fossil proof of its existence here going back 400 years or so.
Pukeko are omnivorous; they are ferocious hunters and live in family packs in swamps and wetlands. Both loved and hated, they can destroy a vegetable garden in a night, tear out newly planted seedlings, kill ducklings and eat the eggs of anything they can find. On the other hand, they are very pretty and cheeky with the flashing white tail feathers and their bright-orange beaks and legs. In New Zealand, Pukeko are a protected native game bird, which means they can only be hunted under license from Fish and Game during the duck-shooting season. Bag limits and seasons vary between regions, so please check your local game bird regulations before setting out on a hunt.
Hunting pukeko with dogs and two or three hunters in a drive through a swamp or wetland can be great sport, as they often flush without warning and fly surprisingly fast.
There is an easy trick to breasting a pukeko that takes less than a minute. It involves taking a dead pukeko, lying it face down on the ground with its legs stretched out towards you. Place a foot on each leg, so your boot covers the whole leg, bend down and take hold of the bird at the base of each wing as close to the body as possible, then stand up, pulling until the breast pulls away with the wings. Tuck these into your bag or belt and leave the rest of the carcass to the harrier hawks. Once mastered, this technique can be achieved as you walk with little disruption to the time spent hunting.
Pukeko breasts are great sliced into strips and barbecued, baked, casseroled or made into game soup. There is no reason to hunt them if you don’t intend to eat them.

 

BBQ Quail Recipe


SpotX Wild Foods Recipe from Jan Ambler
Prep:20 minutes Cook:30 minutes Difficulty:1
Ingrediants:
  • 4 quails.
  • ¾ cup olive oil.
  • 2 tablespoons minced garlic.
  • 2 tablespoons dried thyme.
Directions:
  • Position the bird breast side up on a cutting board.
  • Insert a butcher knife, and cut along one side of the backbone.
  • Place the blade on the other side of the backbone and cut again.
  • Remove the backbone completely from the carcass.
  • Press down on the bird to flatten it.
  • Turn it over and trim away the rib bones.
  • In a large, deep casserole dish, spread four quail so that they lay open.
  • Mix the oil, garlic and thyme into a mixture.
  • Fully cover the quails with the mixture.
  • Cover and refrigerate for 2 hours.
  • Fire up the barbecue and cook the quail over medium flame.
  • Turn after about 12 minutes, cook for 14 minutes.
  • Once the quail is nearly cooked through sprinkle with barbecue sauce.

Quail
Quail We have two species of quail in New Zealand, the bobwhite quail and the California quail, with the latter the most common.
California quail were introduced to Nelson in 1865 and after a stuttering start they flourished and spread throughout New Zealand. Populations of quail became so large that thousands of birds were canned and exported to England. They are powerful short-distance fliers that can glide for long stretches. They are more common in drier areas and prefer scrub, pine trees and riverbed vegetation.

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Swan Breast with Peaches Recipe


SpotX Wild Foods Recipe from Dave Emery
Prep:20 minutes Cook:1 hour Difficulty:3
  Ingrediants:
  • 3 breasts of swan.
  • 1 tablespoon olive oil.
  • 3 medium-size firm mushrooms.
  • 2 tablespoons grated orange rind.
  • 1 teaspoon chicken stock.
  • ¼ cup orange juice.
  • ¾ cup puréed fresh peaches.
  • ½ cup cream, whipped.
  • ½ teaspoon finely-chopped fresh garlic.
  • 1 teaspoon tomato paste.
  • 1 cup strong chicken stock.
  • 1 tablespoon light honey.
  • 1 teaspoon guava or red currant jelly.
  • 4 fresh peaches, quartered.
Directions:
  • In deep pot, heat oil and 1 tablespoon butter, let it melt and foam.
  • Add mushrooms and stir over high heat for 2 minutes.
  • Remove mushrooms with slotted spoon and set aside.
  • Lightly brown swan breasts on both sides and remove from pan.
  • Reduce heat to low and add 1 tablespoon butter and melt it.
  • Add garlic and orange rind, stir over low heat for 2 minutes.
  • Add tomato paste and chicken stock, blend.
  • Add and stir in orange juice and honey.
  • Stir over moderate heat until mixture boils.
  • Add peach purée and jelly then bring to the boil.
  • Place breasts in pot and coat with sauce.
  • Cook over low heat about 20 minutes or until done.
  • Arrange breasts on heat-proof serving platter or gratin dish.
  • Whisk whipped cream into sauce, add mushrooms and peaches.
  • Spoon sauce mixture over breasts and brown lightly under a grill.

Swan
Swan There are seven species of swans in the world, all pure white, except for the Australian black swan and the South American black-necked swan. The black swan is an Australian bird that flew to New Zealand around 1860 at the same time as acclimatization societies were releasing it as a game bird, resulting in an explosion of swan numbers.
The population peaked in the 1960s at around 100,000 birds; the bulk of the national population are resident at Lake Ellesmere in Canterbury, with numbers estimated in excess of 60,000. This number dropped dramatically to 10,000 following the Wahine storm in 1968. A combination of habitat change and silting from neighbouring farms has seen the population stabilise at this number. The main concentrations of the birds are now to be found on coastal lakes and lagoons around the South Island, and in the North Island, in the Wairarapa, Hawkes Bay, as well as on inland lakes in the Waikato and Rotorua. The Kaipara Harbour in the north also has a large population of swans with a good spread throughout Northland’s lakes.

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Turkey Strips Recipe


SpotX Wild Foods Recipe from Mark Draper
Prep:Overnight Cook:20 minutes Difficulty:1
Ingrediants:
  • 2 turkey breasts.
  • 1 egg.
  • 1 cup of milk.
  • Crushed garlic.
  • 2 cups flour.
  • All-purpose Morrocan spice, to taste.
  • Salt and pepper.
  • Olive oil.
Directions:
  • Slice breast across the grain into 1cm-thick strips.
  • In a bowl mix an egg, milk and garlic.
  • Add turkey strips, cover and refrigerate overnight.
  • When you are ready to cook, remove from the marinade.
  • Combine flour, salt, pepper and spice to taste in a bag.
  • Place turkey strips in the bag and shake to coat.
  • Put 2-3ml of oil into a frying pan and heat until shimmering.
  • Wet fry strips until brown on both sides and pink in the middle.
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Turkey
Turkey Turkeys were introduced to New Zealand in the 1890s and have since evolved into semi-domestic animals. Most farms around New Zealand have a mob of turkeys that roam wild within their own preset boundaries. While turkeys can fly, they prefer to travel by foot and can be quite tough as a result; especially when compared with the shop-bought turkey most of us are used to.

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Chamois 'n' Pork Crockpot Recipe


SpotX Wild Foods Recipe from Derek Meyer
Prep:24 hour Cook:10 hour Difficulty:1
Ingrediants:
  • Chamois meat, cubed.
  • Cheap sherry.
  • 1 medium onion, chopped.
  • 100 grams chopped streaky-bacon rashers.
  • 100 grams mixed green and black olives.
  • 1 clove garlic, crushed.
  • Pinch chopped rosemary.
  • Pinch chopped parsley.
  • Pinch chopped thyme.
  • 300ml white wine.
  • Flour.
  • Oil.
  • Freshly-ground black pepper and ground salt.
Directions:
  • Place chamois in a bowl and cover with sherry.
  • Cover bowl and refrigerate for 24 hours.
  • Remove meat from marinade and pat dry with paper towels.
  • Sauté in moderately hot oil, browning on all sides.
  • Place in a crockpot.
  • Fry onion and bacon in a pan until half cooked.
  • Add to crockpot.
  • Add garlic, liquids and herbs, then pour into crockpot.
  • Cook on high for 8 hours, or until tender.

Chamois
Chamois A native to central and southern Europe and a member of the antelope family, chamois were introduced into New Zealand in 1907.
Released in the Mount Cook area they adapted to their new habitat with ease, and without natural predators their population exploded. Many animals are shot from helicopters and on foot by recreational hunters in an effort to control their numbers.
There are no chamois in the North Island; their natural habitat is the steep, inaccessible, southern-alpine mountain ranges. With the increase in numbers, resident herds have been found in the lowlands of the West Coast and in the forests behind Kaikoura.

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Venison Back Steak in Mustard Recipe


SpotX Wild Foods Recipe from Steve Smith
Prep:20 minutes Cook:25 minutes Difficulty:1
Ingrediants:
  • 1 whole backstrap.
  • Wholegrain mustard.
  • Ground black pepper.
  • Sea salt.
Directions:
  • Dry backstrap and roll in wholegrain mustard.
  • Season with salt and pepper, brown on hotplate or barbeque on all sides.
  • Bake in moderate oven, 25-30 minutes per 500 grams for medium-rare.
  • Stand at room temperature for 5 minutes.
  • Slice into medallions and serve immediately.

Deer
Deer Like most of our game, deer were introduced to New Zealand as both a source of food and sport.
Fortunes have been made and lost in the venison trade, with both live and dead animals, as prices fluctuated wildly over the years. Deer have conversely been described as a pest and a godsend, depending whether you are a greenie or a hunter.

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Goat Leg Marinade Recipe


SpotX Wild Foods Recipe from Mark Domett
Prep:24 hours Cook:4 hours Difficulty:1
Ingrediants:
  • Goat leg.
  • 3 tablespoons of oil.
  • 3 tablespoons of soy sauce.
  • 2 tablespoons of red wine.
  • 1 bay leaf.
  • Light sprinkle of chilli powder.
  • Pinch of garlic salt.
  • Ground pepper and salt to taste.
  • Thyme.
  • Parsley.
Directions:
  • Bone-out leg.
  • Lay leg in a baking dish.
  • Mix marinade thoroughly in a bowl.
  • Pour over the leg of goat.
  • Cover and marinate in the fridge for 24 hours.
  • Heat oven to 150°C.
  • Place leg in an oven bag.
  • Cook for 3-4 hours.
  • Serve with roast kumara, potatoes, onion and pumpkin.

Goat
Goat Liberated in 1773 by Captain Cook in Queen Charlotte Sound, goats have long been a source of meat for Kiwis.
Goats are incredibly adaptable and can be found in all habitats from one end of the country to the other. With the boom and subsequent collapse of goat farming, a large proportion of wild goats today are domestic escapees or herds that have simply been given their freedom.
Breeds vary radically throughout the country and some great trophy heads can be hunted from local herds. Officially a pest, goats make for great hunting and the lean, tasty meat is underrated – in Asia it is favoured over lamb, mutton and pork. As with all game, young animals shot in spring tend to produce the best meat; older billy goats have a coarser, stronger-tasting flesh better suited to curries.
Like most animals, goats should be gutted as soon as they have been killed, checking the liver and gut organs for cysts and ensuring that they are a nice healthy colour. Take care to remove the scent glands from under the tail without cutting, and do not get goat urine on the meat. Remove the skin, hocks and head then hang for at least a day or two in a cool place to allow the meat to set. Butchering is no different to cutting up a deer or a lamb – try not to cut the meat, and separate the muscle groups; the back straps and the haunches are the best cuts.

 

Mum’s Hawaiian Rabbit Recipe


SpotX Wild Foods Recipe from Margaret Dixon
Prep:30 minutes Cook:30 minutes Difficulty:2
Ingrediants:
  • 2 rabbits, skinned, drawn and jointed.
  • 1 cup flour, seasoned to taste.
  • 1 onion, coarsely chopped.
  • 1 teaspoon crushed garlic.
  • 2 carrots, peeled and cut in slivers.
  • 3 stalks celery, sliced.
  • 1 pepper, any colour, sliced and diced.
  • 2 tablespoons vinegar.
  • 1 cup white wine.
  • 1 tablespoon brown sugar.
  • 1 teaspoon soy sauce.
  • 340 grams pineapple pieces in syrup.
  • 1 tablespoon cornflour.
  • Sea salt and ground pepper to suit.
  • 2 tablespoons olive oil.
Directions:
  • Place meat in plastic bag with seasoned flour and coat.
  • In a heavy pan brown the rabbit, remove to one side and drain pieces.
  • In the same oil sauté carrot, celery, pepper, garlic and onion.
  • Add soy sauce, sugar, pineapple and juice, vinegar and seasonings.
  • Add white wine.
  • Stir well.
  • Place browned rabbit into a casserole dish or crockpot.
  • Cover with mixture, topping up with a little white wine.
  • If casseroling, do so on a low heat 160° C for two hours.
  • When ready meat should start to come away from the bone.
  • If using a crockpot, put on high for an hour.
  • Followed by 6-7 hours on low heat.

Rabbit
Rabbit Captain James Cook first released rabbits in New Zealand in 1777 as a source of meat and fur. With limited habitat they spread slowly until farmers started to clear the land. As the extent of suitable habitat expanded, so did the rabbit population, and by 1890 they were present throughout most of the country.
The male and female rabbit are similar in appearance with the female having a narrower head. Females are called does, males are known as bucks and baby rabbits are kittens.
Rabbits are nocturnal; they spend most of their day underground in the safety of their burrow, coming out in the evening to feed through the night. When rabbits are observed out and about during the day, it often indicates a high population.
Unlike pheasant and hare, rabbits need to be gutted in the field as soon as they have been killed so as not to taint the meat. Check the liver for cysts – it should be an even blood-red colour. If there are cysts or white spots on the liver discard the rabbit. Take special care not to get rabbit urine on the meat. Young does (under eight months old) provide the best meat. Avoid lactating does. After skinning, check for and remove the scent glands from under the front legs at the natural seam where the legs join the body. They are small waxy-looking lumps – do not cut.
Generally the rabbit is butchered into seven pieces: legs, back straps and the carcass for stock. The legs are easy to remove – the front legs are not attached by bone and are removed by following the natural seam with a sharp knife. The hind legs need to be cut all the way around the base of the muscle, then folded over and dislocated from the hip joint. To remove the back strap, run a sharp knife down beside the spine to the hip joint then out. Simply grab the end of the back strap and it will peel straight off the rib cage.
A young, tender rabbit is now ready to cook, but if you are not so keen on the gamey taste you can remove the bones and soak the meat in a pot of salty water overnight to blanch it. Then simmer for two hours until a fork can pierce the meat. Do not overcook. At this stage you can cook the meat as you would chicken and can replace most chicken recipes with rabbit meat, remembering that wild rabbit meat is very lean and will dry out quickly.

 

Stuffed Possum Recipe


SpotX Wild Foods Recipe from Bert Christensen
Prep:14 hours Cook:3 hours Difficulty:1
Ingrediants:
  • 1 possum, whole.
  • 1 litre cold water.
  • 1 tablespoon salt.
  • 5 beef oxo cubes.
  • 2 bay leaves.
  • 3 celery stalks, chopped.
  • 2 onions, sliced.
  • 1 bag packaged stuffing.
Directions:
  • Soak possum in cold, salt water for 10 hours.
  • Rinse meat in cold water and refrigerate 2-4 hours.
  • Preheat oven to 180°C.
  • Prepare stuffing according to package directions.
  • Stuff possum cavity with prepared packaged stuffing.
  • Close cavity tightly.
  • Place stuffed possum in roasting pan.
  • Add water, oxo cubes, bay leaves, celery and onion.
  • After 2 hours turn meat.
  • Reduce heat to 150°C.
  • Cook for 1 more hour.
  • Test roast.
  • If not done reduce heat and cook until done.

Possum
Possum Possums were introduced into New Zealand from Australia in 1837 to establish a fur trade. With the abundance of food and the lack of predators they quickly spread throughout the country. For a while a booming fur trade, that killed 20 million possums a year at its height, helped control the numbers. But with the shrinking of the fur market the possum population exploded and the species became enemy number-one of the Conservation Department, who use cyanide and 1080 poison to control possum numbers.
Two varieties of brush-tailed possums were introduced: the darker Tasmanian blacks were highly prized for their quality fur, but the more common grey possum has thrived here.

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Mum’s Hawaiian Rabbit Recipe


SpotX Wild Foods Recipe from Margaret Dixon
Prep:30 minutes Cook:30 minutes Difficulty:2
Ingrediants:
  • 2 rabbits, skinned, drawn and jointed.
  • 1 cup flour, seasoned to taste.
  • 1 onion, coarsely chopped.
  • 1 teaspoon crushed garlic.
  • 2 carrots, peeled and cut in slivers.
  • 3 stalks celery, sliced.
  • 1 pepper, any colour, sliced and diced.
  • 2 tablespoons vinegar.
  • 1 cup white wine.
  • 1 tablespoon brown sugar.
  • 1 teaspoon soy sauce.
  • 340 grams pineapple pieces in syrup.
  • 1 tablespoon cornflour.
  • Sea salt and ground pepper to suit.
  • 2 tablespoons olive oil.
Directions:
  • Place meat in plastic bag with seasoned flour and coat.
  • In a heavy pan brown the rabbit, remove to one side and drain pieces.
  • In the same oil sauté carrot, celery, pepper, garlic and onion.
  • Add soy sauce, sugar, pineapple and juice, vinegar and seasonings.
  • Add white wine.
  • Stir well.
  • Place browned rabbit into a casserole dish or crockpot.
  • Cover with mixture, topping up with a little white wine.
  • If casseroling, do so on a low heat 160° C for two hours.
  • When ready meat should start to come away from the bone.
  • If using a crockpot, put on high for an hour.
  • Followed by 6-7 hours on low heat.

Rabbit
Rabbit Captain James Cook first released rabbits in New Zealand in 1777 as a source of meat and fur. With limited habitat they spread slowly until farmers started to clear the land. As the extent of suitable habitat expanded, so did the rabbit population, and by 1890 they were present throughout most of the country.
The male and female rabbit are similar in appearance with the female having a narrower head. Females are called does, males are known as bucks and baby rabbits are kittens.
Rabbits are nocturnal; they spend most of their day underground in the safety of their burrow, coming out in the evening to feed through the night. When rabbits are observed out and about during the day, it often indicates a high population.
Unlike pheasant and hare, rabbits need to be gutted in the field as soon as they have been killed so as not to taint the meat. Check the liver for cysts – it should be an even blood-red colour. If there are cysts or white spots on the liver discard the rabbit. Take special care not to get rabbit urine on the meat. Young does (under eight months old) provide the best meat. Avoid lactating does. After skinning, check for and remove the scent glands from under the front legs at the natural seam where the legs join the body. They are small waxy-looking lumps – do not cut.
Generally the rabbit is butchered into seven pieces: legs, back straps and the carcass for stock. The legs are easy to remove – the front legs are not attached by bone and are removed by following the natural seam with a sharp knife. The hind legs need to be cut all the way around the base of the muscle, then folded over and dislocated from the hip joint. To remove the back strap, run a sharp knife down beside the spine to the hip joint then out. Simply grab the end of the back strap and it will peel straight off the rib cage.
A young, tender rabbit is now ready to cook, but if you are not so keen on the gamey taste you can remove the bones and soak the meat in a pot of salty water overnight to blanch it. Then simmer for two hours until a fork can pierce the meat. Do not overcook. At this stage you can cook the meat as you would chicken and can replace most chicken recipes with rabbit meat, remembering that wild rabbit meat is very lean and will dry out quickly.

 

Barry’s Crockpot Tahr Recipe


SpotX Wild Foods Recipe from Barry Robson
Prep:Overnight Cook:10 hours Difficulty:1
Ingrediants:
  • Hind leg of tahr.
  • ½ cup salt.
  • 2 teaspoons ground coriander.
  • 1 teaspoon turmeric.
  • 1 teaspoon chilli.
  • 1 teaspoon salt.
  • Olive oil.
  • Water.
Directions:
  • Place meat in a bucket of water with half a cup of salt.
  • Soak overnight to blanch, tenderise and reduce the gamey taste.
  • Coat crockpot bowl with olive oil.
  • Set to low.
  • Wash and dry the leg of tahr with paper towels.
  • Mix coriander, tumeric, chilli, salt and a little water into a paste.
  • Pour the paste over the meat.
  • Spread paste all over the meat using a spoon.
  • Put the lid of the crockpot on and leave undisturbed for 5 hours.
  • After 5 hours turn the meat over.
  • Coat with curry paste and liquid in bottom of pot.
  • Allow to cook for another 5 hours or until meat is falling off the bone.
  • Serve with rice or mashed potatoes and vegetables.

Tahr
Tahr Considered endangered in their native land, New Zealand is the only place in the world where tahr can be freely hunted. They are rarely found outside their native habitat, with small herds in England, South Africa, New Mexico, California, and Ontario.
Tahr were introduced in 1904 as a gift to the New Zealand government by the then Duke of Bedford. Small numbers were released into the Mt Cook area, where they quickly became established, and it did not take long for numbers to explode. By 1937 they were declared a pest and their population has been managed ever since.
Unlike chamois, the spread of tahr is limited to the central Southern Alps between the Arthurs Pass and Haast Pass. Releases in the North Island were unsuccessful, as tahr seem to prefer the high, mountainous habitat above 1250 metres. An agreement between the Department of Conservation and recreational shooters has created a management plan that restricts the total population to below 100,000. Tahr are culled from helicopters, poisoned with 1080 and targeted by recreational hunters. Valued as a trophy, the bull tahr with 14-inch horns and a full winter coat is a magnificent sight to see in its natural habitat. Throughout the year the bulls travel in mobs, separated from the nannies and kids, except in April through to June when they come together and the bull pairs off with a nanny to mate. Related to goats, they make good eating; although, the bulls can be very strong in smell and taste. As with all game, a young animal is better for the table – avoid lactating nannies. Hang meat for at least two days in a cool place for the meat to set before freezing or cooking.

 

Thai Wallaby Meat Balls Recipe


SpotX Wild Foods Recipe from Greg Mills
Prep:30 minutes Cook:15 minutes Difficulty:1
Ingrediants:
  • 500 grams minced wallaby meat.
  • 1 egg.
  • ½ capsicum.
  • Spring onions.
  • Fresh coriander.
  • Garlic salt.
  • Lemon grass.
  • Olive oil.
Directions:
  • Finely chop capsicum, spring onion, coriander, garlic and lemon grass.
  • Combine with 500 grams wallaby mince.
  • Add an egg to help bind.
  • Roll into balls and gently fry.
  • Serve on bed of rice with sweet chilli sauce.

Wallabies
Wallabies Of the twelve species of wallaby introduced into New Zealand in the mid to late 1800s, six became established. All but the red-necked wallaby can now be found on Kawau Island off the coast, north of Auckland.
For some reason the wallaby has been restricted to three quite defined areas: Kawau Island, Rotorua and the Hunter Hills in Waimate, South Canterbury, where they are classified as a pest.
The Kawau Island wallabies tend to be quite small – not much bigger than a hare.
Rotorua has the dama wallaby, which is a bit bigger and can grow up to 7.5kg. They are found in large numbers in the forests around the Lakes Okataina, Tarawera and Rotoiti.
The South Island wallabies are by far the biggest in New Zealand, growing up to 86cm tall and 25kg in weight. They are known as the Bennett or red-necked wallaby. Like all game, wallaby meat is best if left to hang in a cool place for a couple of days. Wallaby has a delicate flavour, rather like rabbit, and is generally not as gamey as goat or hare.
The common cuts are the hindquarters and the backstraps – the rest of the meat is probably best used in sausages. A very lean meat, wallaby is easy to overcook. Serve it medium-rare and leave to stand for five minutes before carving across the grain.

 

Marinated Roast Pork Recipe


(SpotX Wild Foods Recipe from Barbara Simmons)
Prep:30 minutes Cook:3 hours Difficulty:1
Ingrediants:
  • 1 wild pork roast.
  • 2 cups of red wine (or port, or a mixture).
  • 2 spring onions, minced.
  • 1 stalk of celery, finely chopped.
  • 1 carrot, finely chopped.
  • 2 cloves of garlic, minced.
  • 2 sprigs of thyme or 1 teaspoon dried thyme.
  • ¼ cup olive oil.
  • 2 teaspoons juniper berries.
  • Salt and pepper to taste.
  • 2 tablespoons red currant jelly or jam.
  • Orange juice or lemon juice.
Directions:
  • In a large bowl, mix all ingredients.
  • Rub into pork and marinade for a couple of hours in the fridge.
  • Cook the pork at 180°C in the marinade, basting regularly.
  • Allow 25 minutes per 500 grams, plus an extra 30 minutes.
  • Check with a skewer to see if pork is cooked.
  • Juice should run clear when speared.
  • Take meat from oven and let stand for 5 minutes.
  • Strain the marinade, reduce it and add cream to thicken.
  • Serve it as a sauce.

Wild Pig
Wild Pig Those who have hunted wild pigs using dogs will appreciate the significance of that first bark after the pack has got a whiff of the prey.
All the senses are heightened as the hunter determines the direction of the initial chase and hopefully where the bail is about to take place. He has confidence his holders will do the job until he crashes through the scrub, heading for his dogs, to administer the coup de grace with a sticking knife designed to dispatch the quarry humanely.
Captain Cook introduced pigs to New Zealand on his 1773 voyage to New Zealand. He hoped they would spread and provide food for sailors on subsequent journeys. Spread they did, and like so much of the flora and fauna introduced to New Zealand, such as rabbits and gorse, they established themselves in plague proportions.
To the Maori, the ‘Captain Cookers’, the black and purest strain of wild pig, became a valued food source. Similarly, the early European colonists were also grateful to harvest them for sustenance and the wild stock soon interbred with domestic animals.
Because of its diet, wild pig meat is darker and has a more distinctive flavour than domestic pork. The taste is ‘shaped’ by the pig’s environment. Meat from a pig feeding on fern and roots in the pine forest is quite different from its counterpart grazing on grass.
Once you have caught your porker, there are two initial ways of dealing with it. One is to singe it, the other to skin it. The latter takes more skill, but when the pork hits the table the effort will have been worthwhile; if the skin is left on it will tend to shrink the meat, making it tougher. Unlike domestic pork, the skin from wild pork does not form ‘crackle’.
When roasting wild pork, do so in a large oven bag to help retain the moisture and flavour. Slow cooking is best and barbecuing wild pork can be tricky to get right. Wild pork, because of its strong, gamey flavour, is ideal with sauces and goes well with fruit-based bastes.

KinaMusselsOystersPauaPipi's, Tuatua and CocklesScallops
 

Kina Fritters Recipe


SpotX Wild Foods Recipe from Polly Were
Prep:5 minutes Cook:5 minutes Difficulty:1
Ingrediants:
  • 1 cup kina roe.
  • 100 grams plain flour.
  • 1 egg.
  • Sea salt and ground pepper, to taste.
  • ½ cup milk.
  • 1 teaspoon baking powder.
  • Lemon wedges.
  • Parsley, chopped.
Directions:
  • Mix together flour, baking powder and salt and pepper.
  • Add beaten egg and milk to create a smooth batter-like mixture.
  • Stir in kina roe and leave to stand for an hour.
  • Pour enough olive oil for shallow frying into a pan set on medium heat.
  • Place dollops of mixture in hot oil to create fritters.
  • Serve with a squeeze of lemon and pinch of parsley.

Kina
Kina While an opened kina does not look particularly appetising, to many people the orange/yellow roe it contains is a true delicacy.
Kina – commonly referred to as ‘sea eggs’ – can be found along the rocky foreshore throughout the country, just below the inter-tidal zone. Found in relatively shallow water and being stationary, it is not difficult to catch. A word of warning though – the animal is protected by an array of sharp spines which can inflict a nasty puncture wound to any skin they encounter, possibly resulting in infection.

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Bruce’s Mussel Fritters Recipe


SpotX Wild Foods Recipe from Bruce Haslam
Prep:15 minutes Cook:15 minutes Difficulty:1
Ingrediants:
  • 12 mussels, uncooked.
  • 1 onion.
  • 1 egg.
  • Flour.
  • Salt and pepper, to taste.
Directions:
  • Remove raw mussels from their shells and retain the mussel water.
  • Layer the ingredients in a blender in the order below:.
  • Half the onion, diced.
  • A third of the mussels.
  • Sprinkle flour over mussels.
  • Other half of the onion, diced.
  • The second third of the mussels.
  • Sprinkle flour over mussels.
  • Add egg.
  • Add final third of the mussels.
  • Sprinkle flour and seasoning over the mussels.
  • Pulse in blender until all ingredients are finely blended.
  • Add small amount of mussel water; blend till moist and smooth.
  • Heat olive oil in a frying pan.
  • Place tablespoons of mixture in the frying pan.
  • Cook until golden brown on both sides.

Mussels
Mussels Green-lipped mussels are firm favourites on many Kiwi families’ tables. In numerous places around our coastline they are easy to get, and with New Zealand’s aquaculture industry bedding-in mussel farms around the country they are inexpensive to obtain from a ‘supermarket reef’ near you, even if you live far inland. Being filter feeders mussels are normally found where there is reasonable water movement, attached to rocky outcrops and underwater structures. In some harbours they will attach themselves to low-lying foul and even mud bottoms in the centre of channels; however, these generally do not taste as good as the ones plucked off the rocks due to the higher amount of sediment they are exposed to. Be careful taking mussels off wharf pilings and mooring poles.

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Oysters Kilpatrick Recipe


SpotX Wild Foods Recipe from Callum McCullum
Prep:10 minutes Cook:10 minutes Difficulty:1
Ingrediants:
  • 12 oysters in the half-shell.
  • 1 clove garlic, crushed.
  • 3 rashers bacon, chopped.
  • ½ cup grated cheese.
  • ½ teaspoon cayenne pepper.
  • Black pepper, ground.
  • 3 teaspoons Worcestershire sauce.
  • 3 teaspoons tomato sauce.
Directions:
  • Mix all the ingredients together.
  • Spoon over oysters in the shell.
  • Bake in a hot oven, 200°C for 8-10 minutes.

Oysters
Oysters For centuries oysters were the food of the ‘common man’. Throughout Europe and England history tells us they were everyday fare, fed to cats, and not considered the delicacy they are today.
A recently published history of commercial fishing in New Zealand records oysters being dredged in Wellington and shipped alive as deck cargo to the markets in Australia. The oysters were kept under tarpaulins with fresh seawater regularly pumped over them. While the Wellington beds were soon depleted, Nelson and Bluff beds were fished for the local and export markets.

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Sam’s Simple Paua Recipe


SpotX Wild Foods Recipe from Sam Mossman
Prep:15 minutes Cook:10 minutes Difficulty:1
Ingrediants:
  • 2-3 paua, shucked and thinly sliced.
  • Garlic butter.
  • 2 tablespoons honey.
  • 1 tablespoon grated or crushed ginger.
  • 2 tablespoons soy sauce.
  • Sea salt and ground back pepper, to taste.
Directions:
  • Add the following to a hot barbecue plate or frying pan:.
  • Garlic butter, ginger, honey, soy and salt and pepper, to taste.
  • Now add the paua.
  • Keep stirring as the paua cooks for approximately 6-8 minutes.
  • Great as an appetiser or snack with a cold lager.

Paua
Paua It is little wonder that black marketers seek out paua; such is its pulling power.
Referred to as ‘back gold’ by the poachers, paua fetches a good price on both the legitimate and black markets, with much of the ill-gotten gain smuggled out of the country. Unfortunately its popularity and shrinking stocks put it outside the reach of the average household, unless you are lucky enough to be close to a coast where there are good paua populations at hand.
The common black-foot paua has to be 125mm in length. The average size and abundance improves the further south you travel. A rarity in the Far North for all but a few in the know, in the South Island paua is common tucker enjoyed by many.

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Tractorman’s Tuatua Fritters Recipe


SpotX Wild Foods Recipe from Ian Neary
Prep:20 minutes Cook:10 minutes Difficulty:1
Ingrediants:
  • 3 cups freshly steamed tuatuas, loosely chopped.
  • 1 teaspoon baking powder.
  • ½ cup standard flour.
  • 2 farm eggs.
  • ½ cup white wine.
  • Freshly-ground sea salt and black pepper, to taste.
  • 1 clove garlic, crushed.
  • 1 stick ginger, finely chopped.
  • 1 handful chopped parsley.
  • 1 handful chopped coriander.
  • 1 spring onion, finely chopped.
  • 1 onion, finely chopped.
Directions:
  • Place all the ingredients in the bowl with salt and pepper, to taste.
  • Create a lumpy batter.
  • Cook fritters on a lightly-oiled hotplate or pan.
  • Serve with a dash of lemon juice.

Tuatua and Pipis
Tuatua and Pipis There is no reason for anyone to go hungry in this country, especially if you live by the sea.
In most areas of coastline you will find open beaches, sand banks and estuarine flats that, with a little scratching around at the bottom of tide, will turn up shellfish of some description. Shellfish were standard fare for Maori all over New Zealand; middens (rubbish pits) discovered well inland by archaeologists turned up shells that indicate a lively shellfish trade between coastal and inland groups.

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Scallops with Dipping Sauce Recipe


SpotX Wild Foods Recipe from Margret Jamieson
Prep:30 minutes Cook:45 minutes Difficulty:1

Ingrediants:
  • 10 bacon strips.
  • 10 large scallops.
  • 1 cup whipping cream.
  • 2 tablespoons Dijon mustard.
  • 2 tablespoons maple syrup.
  • Pinch of salt.
Directions:
  • Place bacon in an ungreased baking dish.
  • Bake at 200°C for 7-10 minutes or until lightly browned.
  • Drain on paper towels.
  • Wrap each strip of bacon around a scallop.
  • Secure with toothpicks.
  • In a saucepan, bring cream to a boil. Reduce heat for about 8 minutes.
  • Stir in the mustard, syrup and salt.
  • Bring to a boil and boil for 2 minutes.
  • Meanwhile, place the scallops on a greased baking sheet.
  • Bake at 200°C for 6-10 minutes or until firm and opaque.
  • Serve with the cream sauce.

Scallops
Scallops If there is one shellfish that has almost universal appeal it is scallops.
Scallop meat’s delicate but distinct taste lends it to a variety of dishes, and they are available throughout New Zealand from Stewart Island to North Cape.
Scallops are not hard to find. The season is August to February in most areas; although, this does vary from region to region so check with your local Ministry of Fisheries office (0800 4 RULES).

Scallops can be gathered from the shoreline in some harbours and after a decent blow they are occasionally found pushed up onto open-coast beaches. Individual catch limits vary from 20 to 50 according to the region they are gathered in, but universally they must measure 100mm across the shell. Anyone gathering scallops washed up on the shore must also adhere to daily bag limits.

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