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You are here: Home / Archives for fried nabeta

We split up, friend went shallow for oio, I went after opelu. Kayak fishing during a rain storm.

November 11, 2024 By Scott 2 Comments

I had been under the weather and missed a few light wind days. I needed a calm, safe day to ease back into offshore kayak fishing. Guy, who I last fished with more than 1.5 yrs ago, and hadn’t kayaked since, wanted an easy day to make sure his equipment and body still worked. There looked like some rain but light wind on the Windward side on a rare day our schedules aligned so we made the plan that he would stay inshore and troll for papio, and dunk for oio. I would head out to the bait spot and try to catch opelu and other bottom dwellers on the damashi rig.

We drove through heavy rain and ponding water but our destination just had moderate showers. The wind was light as we launched but half a mile out, I began to get hit with increasingly stronger onshore wind and chop, 15mph with higher gusts. It was a slow slog to push through all that, taking much longer than normal. 2 miles from shore, I lost radio contact with Guy probably due to all the showers and mist.

Fish bite well on overcast, rainy days and I had high expectations. I turned on my old GoPro Session 4 I had mounted to the bow of the kayak, to share a view of what it looks like when I’m trying to catch opelu on the damashi rig. Sure enough, the opelu were in the mid-water column and hit all 3 of my hooks. If I could stay on top of the school and drop on them, they’d bite. You’ll be able to see the action on the video below.

The fish like foul weather but me, not so much. I was socked in and couldn’t see land, and the swirling currents kept spinning me around. I had to use my fish finder’s compass to figure out which direction I was drifting. It was so choppy and swirly I almost got sick, and had to do all I could to clear my head.

I really wanted to stay and bottom fish with the damashi but I had live opelu after all, so I put one out with a sliding weight and paddled around the area for a bit. Eventually that line got tangled with my damashi line since I was spinning around so much. When I checked the bait, it had been pulled off. I gave up on live baiting and focused on catching stuff on the bottom. I dropped the camera rig on good marks but didn’t hook anything. Was really hoping to capture some interesting footage.

Occasionally Guy and I were able to hear each other for a garbled sentence or two so we both knew the other was ok. I think my old vhf radio was at fault and probably doesn’t have the range it did when it was new. It sounded like the papio trolling was slow inshore.

I was leaving the bait area at 2pm and ran across some really good marks. So I dropped the damashi down again and a strong fish busted off a branch line but a nice lai (leather jacket) came up. I hate handling lai because its dorsal and anal fins have venom, but figured Guy could eat it and use the skin to make lures, so I snipped the offending spines and kept it.

The next couple of drops yielded opelu so I tried to catch as many as I could (see the video) but eventually other fish like lizardfish and the yellow barbelled goat fish hit the damashi baits. Even nabeta were in the feeding frenzy.

I ended up with 18 opelu for the day, my best so far.

Oio #1
Oio #2

I started to head in and got in radio range of Guy. He said he was anchoring in shallow water and using some freezer burnt tako (octopus strips), and caught a small oio. As I got closer to him he landed an even bigger oio that fought like a white papio, with a lot of head shakes. Nice!!

Guy said the shallow inshore waters were eerily still with steam coming off the surface. Such a contrast from the conditions I experienced. Here’s the video.

Guy’s family wanted raw fish dishes, so he sashimi’d the lai, made lomi out of the oio (2.5lb and 4lb) and made a simple poke (inamona, salt, dried shrimp) out of the opelu.

He’s drying the lai skin to make lures.

Another friend’s wife Mayumi is from Japan and would eat fish everyday if she could. They don’t buy whole, local fish so I wanted to see what she thought of opelu and nabeta.

She deep fried the nabeta enough to eat the skin and scales but not the bones. She said the opelu tasted very similar to the saba (mackerel) she eats in Japan and really appreciated both fish.

I vacuum sealed the smaller opelu and froze them for bait. In hindsight I wish I had caught more since so many people enjoy eating opelu.

Cooking: Dried opelu jerky, and deep fried nabeta & opelu

November 6, 2023 By Scott Leave a Comment

On my last kayak trip, I witnessed some incredible bait ball action but only brought home 3 twelve inch opelu and 1 medium sized nabeta. My neighbor Brian really appreciates fresh, local fish and was excited to make the most out of the unused opelu, and improve on his nabeta deep-fry recipe.

Brian:

Opelu Jerky:

Fillet, quarter the fish in lengthwise strips, marinade for 45 mins in 1/4 cup shoyu, 1/8 cup mirin, 1-2 tbsp chili pepper water, then dry in dehydrator overnight (6-8 hours at 150 degrees).

I would have liked to cold smoke it for maybe 20-30 mins before the dehydration, but my cold smoker hadn’t arrived yet. Next time!

The opelu jerky turned out pretty good, I think I could have left it in the dehydrator longer (had to pull it earlier than I wanted because I had to for work early the next morning).  The salt level was good, in the past I’ve definitely made ahi/aku jerky too darn salty, so this one was just right for me.  Also, I’m going to try roasting one of them in my outdoor toaster (specifically for fish) when I eat the next one and I have a feeling that it’s going to be good.  It’s a great high protein snack.

Deep-fried Nabeta:

This time I changed up how I usually do my fried nabeta.  The past couple times I’ve been a little bummed about not being able to eat all the bones after frying the nabeta with the flesh on or if I fry extra long, the flesh is more like crackers.  So this time I filleted the Nabeta (more difficult than the Opelu due to flesh consistency, I needed to sharpen or get a better filleting knife). 

Then I dredged both bones and fillet.

Fried the fillet first just for a min or two and the meat was ONO, super juicy, tender and flavorful. 

Then I fried up the opelu bones and the nabeta bones and honestly I liked the opelu bones better than the nabeta.  The bones were easier to munch on, being a slightly smaller diameter than the nabeta’s.  I was able to eat the whole spine bone no problem with the proper frying time. 

Kayak damashi action

May 18, 2020 By Scott Leave a Comment

On an epic light wind day last week, Frank and Kelly SUP trolled for papio past the break on the east side and I went deeper on the kayak to try for opelu and hungry predators. The water was so glassy inside that the papio bite was tentative for the SUP crew but they scraped up a few 1 to 3lb omilu to take home.

I couldn’t find any opelu and nothing ate the frozen opelu I put down so I tried to salvage the trip by catching good eating fish on the Ahi USA damashi tipped with CHL Minnows and ika strips. Over the reefy transition to sand, baby kaku and nunu came up. Then 8 inch baby opakapaka began to mob the Minnow.

Finally I struck nabeta gold and even brought up a lai. The CHL Minnow outfished the strip of ika and didn’t attract hagi so I stopped using the ika.

On a calm day with minimal current and wave action, it was so peaceful to bounce the damashi on the bottom and feel the electric action of the rod tip.

I shared the nabeta with friends who hadn’t tasted the fish before, and gave the lai to Frank for grinds and lai skin. Good fun fishing in the deep.

-scott

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