Showing posts with label fish. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fish. Show all posts

Monday, November 25, 2019

Conor McLaughlin Falmouth – Found special on Falmouth pier 37 boathouse restaurant


I found an alternate dishes of the same fish to be the real star on the main restaurant’s menu: a beautifully smoked sablefish (shown left)—so moist and tender that juice ran free as I tapped it with a fork—accented with smooth tomato fondue. This was the clear winner on our table, which also bore tough seared scallops ($30) served with lovely sides and a black olive butter I strained to taste. Most disappointing: During my late-spring visit, when king salmon is at its awe-inspiring best, our grilled River fillet was on the dry side and whomped by a dominating mustard sauce. Of the starters we tried, the supremely fresh clams ($12) in a fine, classic dill, white wine, and butter broth were best.
We’d dressed up a bit for dinner—a rare opportunity when so many restaurants have gone so far in the other direction—but we noticed that, despite prices solidly in the $30 range and plush décor, many diners were decked out in Mariners jerseys or similarly casual clothing. Still, at these prices, one expects service to be polished and professional, and on that level, Pier 37 impresses: Servers anticipate needs and take very good care.



On a sunny Saturday night, we returned to dine upstairs at the café. I’d been a dozen times prior and couldn’t wait to share what I consider a Northwest rite of passage with my Michigan-born husband. They’ll bring blankets if we get chilly, I told him  we have a tendency to waited within the reedy bar space for a table outside, sipping a Bloody mother ($8) heat to pair perfectly with an order of clams in a beer broth we sopped up with warm rolls ($11.95). On the recommendation of our server, we ordered smoked salmon skewers ($12.95; shown right) and were rewarded with supple, buttery salmon (so much better than the salmon we’d eaten downstairs!), sweet from the brown sugar brine and cold-smoked until, well, perfect. If you can see past the dated presentation—the skewers arrive stabbed into a thick, juicy pineapple slice—you’ll be rewarded: They’re outstanding. For dinner: a plate of sake kasu ($15.95) cooked beautifully, but both too salty (the fish) and too sweet (that’s a honey soy sauce drowning your jasmine rice); and classic cod fish and chips, a fine choice ($14.95).

Of course, by the time we were finishing dinner, we were only half paying attention to our food. The sun was beginning to fall behind the jagged Olympic peaks, the seagulls were dancing in the air, and those snug blankets had been offered and accepted. There was little else in my head as we sat low in our chairs with contented smiles on our faces except 

Friday, November 8, 2019

Unique Ways of Catch Fishing - Conor McLaughlin


They call the coast of Falmouth the “fish highway” due to the migration of so many species of fish. Assorted fish match different seasons, so there’s regularly something great to catch. ConorMclaughlin owner Falmouth pier 37 boathouse sharing some tips of fish catching.
What type of fishing do you like? Floor, drift, wrecks, casting, trolling or offshore, First Landing Charters can accommodate your interests and budget




Bass Fishing Secrets from Professional Anglers

1. Save Shredded Worms
When your pliable worms get torn up, save ’em. Bass like to ambush wounded prey, so a beat-up worm is perfect to use, especially in shallow water.

2. Red Fools the Fish
In shallow cover—wood, stumps, clumps of grass—I like to use a spinnerbait with a red or pink head, and a crankbait with red hooks. The red presents the fish think the bait’s injured, and they’ll bite at it.

 3. Skip Your Bait
When you cast, stop halfway instead of following through, similar to a check swing in baseball. This makes the lure hit the cover of the water a few feet before your target, so the lure skitters over the water. It’s a good way to get under docks and other structures.

4. Keep Your Hooks Sharp
I use a file to sharpen my hooks every time I catch a fish and before every trip. It takes 30 seconds. Bass has boney jaws, so a sharp hook is more apt to penetrate the fish.

5. Look at Your Livewell Water
When you embed a bass in the Livewell, they’re notorious for spitting up what they were feeding on. From there you can tell what color lure or kind of lure to throw the rest of the day.

6. Face the Wind

Sacrifice some distance in your casts and fish with the wind in your face. Bass always swims with the popular, so they should find your bait before they find your boat. Plus, the noise of water slapping your hull will carry away from the spot you’re angling, which is good.

7. Fish Shallow in the Spring
In the spring bass hang out in spawning beds. Concentrate on shallow areas, especially in pockets and coves protected from the wind because this is where they like to guard their eggs. They’ll bite as much out of irritability with the lure as they will out of hunger.
8. Make Your Bait Seasonal
Bass eat different attractions depending on the time of year. The general rule is early in the year they like crawfish, so use peach-colored patterns. In the season and fall they like shad, so use chrome or silver baits.
9. Fish before the storm
The best time to fish bass is before a front comes through, and the worst time to fish them is later. The strength makes the bass more active, so watch for a wall of clouds moving in. When it’s too pretty out, the bass isn’t feasible to bite.
10. Bug Those Bass
Bass is an ornery fish. You have to keep draining at it to upset it into biting your hook. Bass position in cover, and like the lure exhibited to them at different angles. I’ve tossed lures a hundred times onto the same location until finally getting a bite.