8/7/10 Report: 1st V21 Billfish!

Blue_Runner

Administrator
Staff member
After getting the motor fixed last week (fuel pump) I decided to trailer it down for the weekend to South Myrtle to take my nephew Ross fishing. It was me, Ross, his dad Robin, Flyfishin and Fly's brother Cory.

Saturday the 5 of us woke at 5:30 am and made our usual stops for coffee/biscuit, ice, bait and headed out. We pulled dead baits in the 79 degree water for kings and spanish at a spot 13 miles off the beach. We picked at the spanish throughout the morning but the kings never showed. Flyfishin threw a casting spoon off the bow and has about as much action doing that as we did pulling the baits.

0807001016b.jpg


Cory behind the wheel and Flyfishin casting up front

0807001016.jpg

0807001016d.jpg


Robin

0807001016c.jpg


At one time we thought we had a king and put Ross on the rod. It felt like a big fish and he did a great job. Come to find out it was a 5 lb spanish that ended up in a shark or cudas mouth. The tension finally lightened and Ross reeled in the head!

Ross on the rod

0807000918.jpg


Flyfishin showing Ross the ropes

0807000919.jpg


The catch!

0807000929.jpg

0807000928.jpg


Here is Ross with another one he caught:

0807001058.jpg

0807001058a.jpg

0807001058b.jpg


So everything was going as planned when at 11:59 am, precisely, I heard the right short do a 1 second BZZZT.....I asked if anybody did that, they said NO....so I quickly popped it into freespool in the rod holder for about 6 - 8 seconds. Rod started bouncing and I tighted it down...FISH ON!! Little did we know if was a SAIL! We quickly figured it out when Cory picked up the rod, started working him and he cleared the water with a huge splash. We worked him in fairly quickly - probably too quickly. Once beside the boat FlyFishing got both hands on the bill as I scrambled to get a pic. The fish seemed calm at first but quickly showed that he was GREEN and became furious about humans touching his bill. He thrashed for a moment then popped loose from Fly's grasp. The line snapped and he was free. I did get one pic of him on the way in with his bill out of the water.

First V21 Sail!

0807001148.jpg


Back at the house it was time for a few pics.

Ross and the catch

0807001548.jpg

0807001541.jpg

0807001542.jpg


Fish bag

0807001545.jpg

0808001236a.jpg


Random shots

0808001252.jpg

0808001246.jpg

0808001245.jpg


My new favorite seating arrangement...sittin on the throw cushion

0808001236.jpg


Cool house

0808001305.jpg
 
LMAO RW! Hindsight is 20/20....easy to see the few things we did wrong now but needless to say the adreneline was pumping HARD. Cory's hands were still shaking 15 minutes later! That fish was huge. All pics were cellphone pics to and the dang shutter speed is S L O W on that thing. If I woud have had a better cam I could have gotten some cool shots. Live and learn!
 
Thanks guys. This will be talked about for a very long time! Wish we had a better pic.

FWB - fried and grilled on the Spanish. I've never smoked fish. What temp? How do you do it?
 
HEHEHE! Not this time. We were too nervous about the release and I was at least partially bummed about not getting a better pic. Nobody believes anything without a pic, ya know?

Now I want some 50's so I can go after the marlin. :sly:
 
Thanks guys. This will be talked about for a very long time! Wish we had a better pic.

FWB - fried and grilled on the Spanish. I've never smoked fish. What temp? How do you do it?

You can buy a smoker and follow the directions and you'll get ho -hum results.....
OR....
You can do it "old man of the sea" way which is (IMHO) Wayyyyyyy better. But you'll need some land away from the house and an understanding wife.
Get yourself an old single door refrigerator.... (No, I'm not kidding.. the older the better... the kind from the 30's and 40's and even 50's that had porcelan insides... not the crummy plastic things that we get nowdays...) Put it at the back of your property. (That's where the understanding wife comes in) DO NOT USE THE PLASTIC INSIDE KIND..the plastic melts under the heat of the steam and ruins everything)
Strip out everything inside... no shelves, no freezer section...no nuttin..
INSTALL A PADLOCK AND HASP ON THE DOOR!!!! This is the lockable type of door and we do not want any children hurt or killed by getting into the refrigerator and pulling the door closed.
Drill 3 holes 1 inch dia from the side into the top area of the refrig. Make 3 thin metal patches that you can screw onto the outside of the refrig to close or open those 3 holes.. These will act like dampers to allow smoke and steam out. Keep them closed and more smoke and steam cooks faster and puts more smoke flavor into the meat.. open the holes more and you'll let out more smoke for a lighter taste. There is no right way.. experiment.
Drill one hole 1 inch dia into the very bottom from either the side or the back into the smoker chamber. (remeber, these older refrigs were filled with fiberglass as insulation between the inner and outer skins, so wear a mask when drilling so you don't inhale the fiberglass dust.)
Now... inside the unit you will want to drill a line of several holes on opposite sides of the unit up near the top...just into the inner skin, don't go through the outer shell....I used to make 5 holes, 1/2" dia., opposite each other about 5" apart. At waist high make another 4 holes, two on either side in a line, one in the front and one in the back on each side... these will become the anchor points for a wire rack for meats that you cannot hang.
Get plain or threaded rod slightly longer than the distance of the holes, flex it slightly and put them into the holes. (You'll now have 5 hanger rods up top and two rods that you can lay a plain wire rack on waist high that you can hang or lay your meat/fish/turkey on while smoking it).
Find an old frying pan.. 10" dia or 12".. either will work fine. The old cast iron pans are great for this.
Get an electric hot plate...not the food warmer kind, but an actual plate that you can cook on... Turn that baby's knob to full and put it into the bottom of your smoker... feed the electric cord out that bottom 1" hole you made.
24 hours before:
Clean your fish...leave the heads on...the jawbone makes an attachment point.
Get one or two 1 quart mason jars, fill them with wood chips.. the more fish being smoked equals more chips needed to smoke them. (any fruit wood will do.. apple, cherry, hickory.. different woods give off different flavors.. so experiment) The chips should be both big and small sizes..but no bigger than an inch. After you fill the jar(s) with the chips fill the jars to the top with water, screw the lids on and let the chips soak overnight.
While they are soaking, put your fish or whatever it is you're going to smoke into your brine/marinade..and let them soak overnight (12 hours) also.
Next day:
Take your fish out of the brine/marinade, let them air dry.
Take your frying pan and put it into the smoker on the hot plate. Cut up coat hangers to make "s" hooks (or use the chromed left over "s" hooks from all the bungie cords that broke over the years) Put the hook thru the fishes mouth and out it's neck and hang it on the rods you put in at the top. Keep at least an inch space from each one.
Pour the wood chips, including any water that wasn't absorbed, into the frying pan
Close the door and plug in the hot plate.
In about 10 - 14 hours, depending on the thickness of the fish, open the smoker (BE CAREFUL....HOT STEAM AND SMOKE WILL COME OUT) Test for doneness...
Enjoy a great meal. Cold beer, smoked whiting, cole slaw, and corn on the cob loaded with butter...OMG...does it get any better?? :beer:

[What happens inside the smoker:... as the hot plate gets hot it turns the water into steam that starts cooking the fish.... as the chips get hot they start to smolder and give off smoke that adds flavor to the fish. They do not burn because of the steam in the unit.. but they will be black and reduced in size when you finally open the unit]

The marinade or brine that you soak your meat or fish in is especially important.. I have my own recipe that was given to me, but you can literally find hundreds of different recipes on the internet. A good source for a few are:
http://bbq.about.com/od/brinerecipes/Brine_Recipes_Brines_for_every_kind_of_meat_fish_or_poultry.htm

If you want to use my recipe it is as follows:
For each gal of filtered water add:
1 cup of salt (Kosher, not iodine)
1 cup of sugar (fine white)
4 bay leaves (Crushed, big pieces)
2 tablespoons of Old Bay seasoning
Mix well
Submerge fish in the brine/marinade solution and refrigerate it overnight. In the morning remove fish from the brine and rinse them under cold water, then let them air dry for about an hour.. (you should see a sheen on the skin and it should feel slightly sticky)
They are now ready for you to smoke.
 
Last edited:
Thanks RB!

Destroyer - man that sounds really cool. First time I've heard of the old fridge smoker. I love doing things like that. I made a smoker out of a couple of cardboard boxes one time on a camping trip. It worked great for the first couple hours.....until I let a hot coal get near the edge :cen:

I appreciate you writing that up and explaining it to me. That will definitely work and sounds delicious. :beer:
 
Thanks RB!

Destroyer - man that sounds really cool. First time I've heard of the old fridge smoker. I love doing things like that. I made a smoker out of a couple of cardboard boxes one time on a camping trip. It worked great for the first couple hours.....until I let a hot coal get near the edge :cen:

I appreciate you writing that up and explaining it to me. That will definitely work and sounds delicious. :beer:

When I lived at the shore there was an old salt that told/showed me how to make one... The whole idea of the refrigerator rather than just a metal box is the insulation in the refrigerator keeps the heat in, so the thing works really great. I've done turkeys, hams, chickens and fish... all come out tasting fantastic. Glad you like the idea. :)
 
It's definately not cold smoking.. the temp in there is well over 200. All the water turns to steam, and that happens at 212 deg. F. Truthfully, I've never been finicky or anything about how much temp or whatever. I know it works. The electric hot plate doesn't run out of fuel, so by my way of thinking my main concern was to keep as much of the steam inside for cooking as possilbe.. I didn't have to worry about drafts and such since there were no flames. So I kept doing it that way. I figure if it ain't broke I'm not fixing it. I used to smoke whiting 12 hours... sometimes less, and Striper and Blues for about 14 hours, depending on their size.

I liked that one link where the guy had that refrigerator smoker. He made some nice shelves in it.. I don't like the chiminey vent, to my way of thinking it's lets way too much steam and smoke out... Of course they are using fire boxes and such, and have lots of steam and smoke, so maybe they can afford to open the draft... I used to run my smoker with the holes 3/4 or more closed...
I never did cheeses... never thought to try them actually... Oh well.. I guess that's what they made Whole Foods for. :head:
 
Yeah the homemade wooden one has no insulation so the hot plate probably wouldn't be enough heat. I do quite a bit of smoking over wood coals (hickory and oak) on a metal smoker my dad made and also a dry stacked concrete block smoker I made. I normally smoke b/t 200 - 225 degrees. It is a lot of fun on a cold winter day. Flyfishin's dad is getting ready to build a nice concrete block smoker outside his 30 x 40 shop. I will have to post some pics of it. On opening day of deer season Fly's dad is going to fire up the smoker and the plan is for us all to meet back up after the morning hunt to chow down and shoot the bull before heading back out that afternoon. Gonna be fun!
 
LOL Willy. That bag has seen a lot of fish and hasn't met one yet it couldn't hold....until that day. Note we were going to release the sail anyway so it didn't matter. I was surprised that 43lb yellowfin fit in the bag but it did. I would like to have one a little longer and wider. I figured out on the fishing trip before last that when empty the fish bag makes a nice lounge cushion to sit on the deck on the way in or out. I bought the bag used for $75 so it has definitely paid for itself and continues to do so.
 
Back
Top