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Author Topic: Tuna Trip  (Read 10940 times)

Offline matt345

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Re: Tuna Trip
« Reply #15 on: May 08, 2013, 09:52:09 AM »
Thanks guys for the input!

Offline quadrafire

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Re: Tuna Trip
« Reply #16 on: February 13, 2014, 05:59:19 PM »
Bringing up an old thread.

I have a trip planned this august. Newby here  :hello:   I have made fillets of all fish I have ever caught and have never heard the term Loins. What is a tuna loin? Are all parts of the tuna not edible?
I plan to get a pressure cooker to can some, eat some "sushi like", freeze some to grill. What are some other options?

Offline Hawgdawg

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Re: Tuna Trip
« Reply #17 on: February 13, 2014, 06:14:16 PM »
"You get 6oz. canned for every pound fresh. Plus an added $ 2.25"

Sorry to say, but anyone that does this deal is STUPID!  Tuna are no harder to filet than a salmon and vacuum packed will last as long as it takes to eat them.  As many have mentioned, home canned tuna is good, but there is nothing like a grilled tuna steak, or a pan seared loin rolled in cracked pepper and sea salt.

Please, please, don't trade your fish in for canned stuff that god knows how it was taken care of, etc.  Put your filets on ice and they will keep until you get home to freeze them, remember, this is fresh fish not old store bought stuff and will easily keep with some care.

Good fishing!


 :yeah: :yeah: :yeah: :yeah: Well said!

Offline BigD

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Re: Tuna Trip
« Reply #18 on: February 13, 2014, 06:18:36 PM »
Bringing up an old thread.

I have a trip planned this august. Newby here  :hello:   I have made fillets of all fish I have ever caught and have never heard the term Loins. What is a tuna loin? Are all parts of the tuna not edible?
I plan to get a pressure cooker to can some, eat some "sushi like", freeze some to grill. What are some other options?


Basically when you loin one out you get 4 loins 12"-18" long and about 4" around.

Offline quadrafire

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Re: Tuna Trip
« Reply #19 on: February 13, 2014, 06:23:28 PM »
Bringing up an old thread.

I have a trip planned this august. Newby here  :hello:   I have made fillets of all fish I have ever caught and have never heard the term Loins. What is a tuna loin? Are all parts of the tuna not edible?
I plan to get a pressure cooker to can some, eat some "sushi like", freeze some to grill. What are some other options?


Basically when you loin one out you get 4 loins 12"-18" long and about 4" around.

Hmmmmm......I'll have to google Tuna anatomy, I'm confused to how to process one. Should I trust the "deckhand" to do  the processesing, or do it myself?

Offline quadrafire

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Re: Tuna Trip
« Reply #20 on: February 13, 2014, 06:30:38 PM »
How To Fillet An Albacore Tuna GOOD NEWS TUNA STYLE

I see what you are saying about the 4 loins. OK.......No worries. I was worried I was missing something big here.

Offline BigD

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Re: Tuna Trip
« Reply #21 on: February 13, 2014, 06:33:36 PM »
If you do it yourself make sure they are cold, very cold. Firms em up quite a bit and makes it much easier.

Offline TONTO

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Re: Tuna Trip
« Reply #22 on: February 13, 2014, 07:29:54 PM »
If you do it yourself make sure they are cold, very cold. Firms em up quite a bit and makes it much easier.

 Yes you want the whole fish as cold as you can get it. I like to leave my fish packed on ice over night and deal with the next day to get it chilled completely through. The colder the fish the firmer the flesh. You also donot want to get TUNA loins wet, keep the whole process as clean as possible and trim the loins do not rinse them. Cold and dry, never let TUNA get warm or wet. If not canning right away it is alright to freeze the fish whole then cark and can at a latter date. Fresh loins I wrap like I would elk or deer with saran wrap and freezer paper, vaccume packing works too. I've just always done the freezer paper with my loins,they kkep just as well, just make sure to get all the air out of the saran wrap.

Offline LongTatLaw

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Re: Tuna Trip
« Reply #23 on: February 13, 2014, 07:53:30 PM »
If you like canned tuna...canning is a great option. i forced Michelle Nelson into a 1 for 1 exchange on about 40 whole tuna this fall..came out great...buttttt....WSU is right...

now that I know what I know...I wouldnt can a one...id loin em...and they would all get the 20 second each side sear job...rare steaks with soy and wasabi...

but thats me!

dave

Offline clindsayrun

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Re: Tuna Trip
« Reply #24 on: February 13, 2014, 08:17:04 PM »
We paid like $4 per fish to have the deck hand filet them on the ride back in. You get four loins off each fish. We kept 8 or 10 whole to filet out ourselves and see if we were getting all the meat off the fish. We should have paid the deck hand to filet those ones was well. Totally worth it! That kid tore through those fish, and he was getting every scrap of good meat. It's actually nice to get to the dock and grab your bags of filets and hit the road or head back to the hotel.
At home we cut the loins in half, vacuum sealed them into meal sized portions and into the deep freeze. Awesome! Kept for a long time, and even thawed some out and canned it. Worked out just fine.
Can't wait to go again. I think we'll go out every other year or so.

Offline hollymaster

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Re: Tuna Trip
« Reply #25 on: February 13, 2014, 08:41:57 PM »
And you can smoke some too!  :drool:

Offline lokidog

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Re: Tuna Trip
« Reply #26 on: February 15, 2014, 05:20:57 PM »
If you do it yourself make sure they are cold, very cold. Firms em up quite a bit and makes it much easier.

I actually prefer to filet immediately and then cool it off.  It cools much more quickly and has less chance to get soft in the center.  Albacore are probably not quite as critical as a 60 pound yellowfin though....   8)  Unfortunately, this is not practical on the cattle boat type of outing as they will want to split the fish evenly no matter how many you caught or if the other half of the gang was sick and not even fishing.   :bash:

Offline Boss .300 winmag

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Re: Tuna Trip
« Reply #27 on: February 15, 2014, 05:34:49 PM »
Which charters are the pod ones?  :dunno:
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Offline Come Get Some

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Re: Tuna Trip
« Reply #28 on: February 15, 2014, 05:47:06 PM »
We fish out of Westport and Illwaco for tuna. I run a 6 man charter on a 33' Bounty with twin deisel engines. Epic Fishing Adventures.We put a slurry in our fish box consisting of 800 quarts of salt ice. We add 3-4, 5 gallon buckets of salt water from the ocean, then we add solar salt. It brings the temp. to below freezing. Just like making ice cream. When caught we immediately bleed the tuna, Gut and gill them and sink them in the slurry. They are kept almost to the freezing point. When we get back to the dock, we fillet the tuna for a small fee of course or I can show you how to do it. Very easy to do. I do believe it the funnest thing you can do on the ocean with your clothes on. I fish a couple different rods for live bait. I have 8' One piece rods with Takota 600 reels. OR for the people who really like the sport of fighting a fish we use 10' Spinning reels with Okuma Baitrunner reels. Loads of fun. Some say that alone is worth the price of the charter. We fish live anchovies once we get bit on the troll;. Sometimes we never start the engine and fill the boat.

Offline lokidog

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Re: Tuna Trip
« Reply #29 on: February 15, 2014, 09:00:28 PM »
We fish out of Westport and Illwaco for tuna. I run a 6 man charter on a 33' Bounty with twin deisel engines. Epic Fishing Adventures.We put a slurry in our fish box consisting of 800 quarts of salt ice. We add 3-4, 5 gallon buckets of salt water from the ocean, then we add solar salt. It brings the temp. to below freezing. Just like making ice cream. When caught we immediately bleed the tuna, Gut and gill them and sink them in the slurry. They are kept almost to the freezing point. When we get back to the dock, we fillet the tuna for a small fee of course or I can show you how to do it. Very easy to do. I do believe it the funnest thing you can do on the ocean with your clothes on. I fish a couple different rods for live bait. I have 8' One piece rods with Takota 600 reels. OR for the people who really like the sport of fighting a fish we use 10' Spinning reels with Okuma Baitrunner reels. Loads of fun. Some say that alone is worth the price of the charter. We fish live anchovies once we get bit on the troll;. Sometimes we never start the engine and fill the boat.

 :tup:  Pound for pound tuna are one of the best fighting fish IMO.  Hooked one (yellowfin) that was about 5 foot long on a spinning rod with 20lb test,  :yike:  I don't think it noticed I was even there.   :chuckle:

 


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