Fish Tacos Recipe
This post may contain Amazon or other affiliate links. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.
Recipes for Fish Tacos are swimming all over the internets. There is a reason for that. They are good eats.
Yes, I said “good,” blasphemy in the foodie/food writing world I know. But they are good. Of course, I could throw in some flashy words I dredge up from the thesaurus, like zippy, tantalizing, delectable, or, dare I say, titillating. Or I could say they remind me of a time I went swimming as a young child and swallowed a whole gallon of murky sea water leaving the inside of my mouth shriveled, with a briny taste for hours.
Or not.
I could just leave it at “good.” There’s nothing wrong with “good.” “Good” is good. “Good” is solid.
“Good” looks awfully strange after you type it several times.
Back to the Fish Tacos, the really good Fish Tacos.
I’ve had several variations: fried, grilled, broiled, with flour tortillas or corn, accented with the simplest of toppings, to a more elaborate, zingy (there’s a good word) assortment of flavorful accents. And I like them all. I do not discriminate.
Below I share with you what we do here at home. And if you prepare all the trimmings ahead of time, fish tacos can be fairly quick to finish and ready to hit the table in no time. Adorn them with your favorite taco garnishes or try a few new ones like a cilantro pesto, or jicama. I’d really recommend giving the crunchy jicama a go. It really adds a good texture to a taco.
It’s your taco. Build it like you want it. Just make sure to make it good. Real good. 😉
So, tell me, what’s your favorite taco toppings?
Fish Tacos Recipe
Fish Tacos
Delicious fish tacos made with tilapia lightly breaded and pan fried.
Ingredients
- 1 1/2 pounds tilapia fillets (or other mild fish; if buying tilapia try to find it U.S. farmed)
- salt and pepper for seasoning fillets
- 1 cup all-purpose flour
- cooking oil for pan frying
- 8 corn tortillas
- optional toppings- salsa, julienned jicama, cilantro, diced tomato, diced onion, shredded cabbage
Instructions
- Pat dry fish fillets (approximately 1 1/2 lbs) with paper towels. Season both sides with salt and pepper. Place fillets in large zip-top bag with 1 cup of flour. Shake until fillets are coated on all sides.
- Pour 1/4 cup of high temp cooking oil in large skillet (I used cast iron) and heat over medium/medium high. Watch closely and when the slightest hint of smoke is seen coming off the oil, turn the heat down a bit. Take fillets out of the bag and give them a good shake to remove excess flour (you just want a light dusting). Gently place fillets in the pan. After a few seconds shake the pan to keep them sticking. Cook 2-3 minutes, gently flip and shake the pan again to loosen fillets. Cook 2-3 more minutes, remove fillets from pan and set aside.
- In same pan over low heat, warm tortillas for a minute on each side, or follow package instructions for warming.
- Assemble tacos as desired.
I have yet to master cooking fish properly. We rarely eat it, so I haven’t had much practice. This recipe sounds like something I could manage 🙂
I’m with Amber I love beans in my tacos!
This recipe sounds so good, that it’s not even funny. And it’s right on time, too. I’ve been thinking about trying to find a good fish taco recipe because the one that I last tried was just “alright”. But your recipe… now that’s a different story.
Thank you for sharing this with everyone. Fantastic post, for sure!
Fish tacos are definitely GOOD! I crave them all the time!
These look wonderful!
Fish tacos are GRRRREAT. I hate that we have to worry about using words like good or delish. Say it loud and say it proud. These look good good good. 🙂
Agreed — I love fish tacos! Just wish my husband liked seafood more.
At last! A fish taco like the ones I had in southern California restaurants. Perfection. Thank you.
Fish Tacos are amazing!! And GOOD!
These do look really good. Actually, I am embarrassed to say, I am totally unaware of my use of the word good, and probably totally over-use it! Oops. The tacos however are really…erum… amazeballs 😉