Spanish Mackerel - Sydney Fish Market
Open Sun - Thurs 7am - 10pm | Fri & Sat 7am - 12am (individual retail trading hours apply)

Species

Spanish Mackerel

Scomberomorus commerson | Mackerels

Description

Available wild-caught, it is a marine fish found in open waters and near reefs and islands around most of Australia except the southern coast from Esperance (WA) to Geelong (VIC). It’s the most popular commercial Mackerel in Australia and is mostly caught off Queensland, the NT and WA, with some from northern NSW.

It looks similar to Grey Mackerel, especially when young, due to the dark vertical bars along the sides.

Price

Medium priced.

Relations

Mackerels (Blue, Frigate, Grey, School, Shark, Spotted), Bonito, Tunas.

To Buy

Sold mainly as cutlets and steaks. In cutlets and steaks look for bright off-white, firm, lustrous, moist flesh without any dark brown markings or oozing water and with a pleasant fresh sea smell.

To Store

Make sure whole fish is scaled, gutted and cleaned thoroughly. Wrap whole fish, fillets and cutlets in plastic wrap or place in an airtight container. Refrigerate for up to 2 days (it is best eaten as fresh as possible) or freeze for up to 3 months below -18ºC.

To Cook

Average yield is 40%. Has a strong, distinctly ‘fishy’ flavour, medium to very high oiliness and medium-dry, firm flesh. The thin skin can be eaten, but it’s usually sold skinned and has few bones, which are easily removed. Score thick fillets at the thickest part of the flesh to allow even heat penetration.

Cooking Methods

Pan-fry, bake, grill, barbecue, smoke, pickle.

Goes Well With

Strong flavours, bay, basil, citrus, curry, garlic, mustard, onion, oregano, pepper, red wine, tomatoes, vinegar.

Imports

Imported frozen, in fillets, cutlets, trunks and canned from Fiji, India, Myanmar, Thailand and the Philippines.

Other Names

Mackerel, Macko, Narrow-bar, Narrow-barred Spanish Mackerel, Snook, Spaniard

Family

Scombridae (Mackerels)

Season

Available year round with peaks from September to October

Size and Weight

The largest Mackerel, commonly 2-15kg and 55-125cm, but can grow to 50kg and at least 200cm

Alternatives

Other Mackerels, Bonito, Striped Marlin, Swordfish, Tunas