March 15, 2025

Dorado Recipes

Barbeque Dorado with Huichol Sauce

 

This recipe is easy to prepare and the Huichol sauce is available throughout Mexico.

This recipe is a favorite with our family. Carole Thacker of the La Penita RV Park showed us this recipe. Enjoy!

CaroleGrantThacker1/2 cup mayonnaise

Several drops Huichol sauce

Dorado

Mix mayonnaise, and several drops of Huichol sauce (the Mexican hot sauce) together. Mix it until it is a light orange color. The darker it is the hotter (picante) it is. Do it to your taste. Squeeze in some lime while you are mixing. Spread it generously on your Dorado filet and let it sit while you prepare the barbeque. It is best done over mesquite wood or put some water soaked wood on a gas barbeque to get a smoky flavor. You can buy mesquite chunks where you buy barbeque supplies.

You can cut the filet into cubes and put on skewers or cook whole. If you use skewers you can add peppers and onion and pineapple. Cook it fairly slowly over the smoking wood. Cook until just done through, depending on thickness it could be 5 to 10 minutes. Turn as needed.

Dorado Sushi

by Dorothy Bell

I make sushi to delight friends on the road. There is nothing like absolutely fresh fish on rice to cool you down. It is wonderful for cocktail parties as well as for lunch or dinner.

In Mexico, Sushi seems to be catching on. Even Wal-Mart has sushi bars – although they don’t have all the ingredients for sale. I have found that most sushi ingredients can be purchased easily on the Baja, down the West Coast until Puerto Vallarta and are hit and miss through other parts of Mexico.  I suggest you bring the ingredients with you unless you are sure you can purchase all the things you like.

Sushi Rice

  • 2 cups Japanese-style rice such as Cal Rose
  • 2 1/4 cups water
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • 1/4 cup rice wine vinegar
  • 2 tbsp sugar

Wash the rice and drain. Add water and rice to a pot and cook for 15 minutes stirring every 5.

In the interim heat the rice vinegar, salt and sugar until the sugar is dissolved. Cool.

When the rice is cooked you want to cool it. I find that if you have a large bowl, it cools quickest. Pour the vinegar mixture over the rice and stir by folding a spatula through the rice. Use a big fan to help the cooling process. Don’t stir or otherwise mash the rice. It takes just over an hour to completely cool. (Do NOT use warm rice for sushi. It tastes bad and wrecks the Nori.

This makes about 4 cups of sushi rice.

Dorado Nigiri

Prepare your Dorado the day before. Cut into the longest chunks you can make with a 1 ½ inch x by 2 inch diameter; wrap with cello and freeze overnight. Take out of the freezer just before you make the rice. This allows the Dorado to semi-thaw and aids the cutting uniformity.

Slice the sushi into rectangular pieces 1 ½ inches by 2 inches. I use a wet sharp knife to aid with the cutting.

Wet the palm of your hand with water and place 2 tablespoons of rice into the center. Shape into the trademark rectangular somewhat oval shape. Dab a touch of wasabi on the top and place a slice of Dorado on top.

Serve immediately.

Dorado Rolls

Put a sheet of Nori on a special bamboo mat. If you didn’t bring a bamboo mat you can use a clean dish towel wrapped with cello wrap. This is tricky but will do in a pinch.

Spoon on the rice and spread into a very fine layer making sure you reach the edges.

Lay bits of Dorado (this is where you can use up all the tiny scraps left over) and thinly sliced cucumber lengthwise on the edge of the nori/rice closest to you.

Rollup the mat and press inward to create long cylinder shape roll. Press to ensure the edge closes.

Cut the roll into 6-8 pieces using a wet knife.

Serve immediately.

Spicy Dorado Roll

Same as above except marinate the Dorado for 1 minute in 3 tablespoons of Soya Sauce, 2 Tablespoons of sesame seed oil and 1 teaspoon of ground chili in sesame seed oil. Omit the cucumber.

 

Deep Fried Dorado 

By Dorothy Bell

When I was a young girl in Vancouver British Columbia, we would eat big flat pieces of fish in a container that was eventually made into a cardboard boat . Memories of  fish and chips on English Bay in the West End are very clear and filled with laughter and smiles. It was part of my youth; fish and chips with loads of malt vinegar. They were as much about the beach experience as were blankets, sand and the big huge slide that dipped into the Pacific.

Later in my teenage years I worked for the parents of my best friend at their restaurant The Cockney King. Yup. I love those big filets of fish.

In Mexico I often make fish and chips. My favorite fish is Dorado but I will use almost any fish if push comes to shove.

It is just fine for Shrimp or other battered foods. Everyone asks for the recipe and I have served “just our family” to large groups.

Dorado Fish and Chips

1 cup of white (wheat not corn) flour

3/4 cup of water

2 teaspoons of mustard (for color)

1/2 teaspoon of baking powder

Mix all the ingredients until the batter is the consistency of a very runny pancake batter. Let the batter sit for 5 minutes and stir again.

Preheat the oil. Dip and coat fish that is 1/2 to 1/4 of an inch thick and approximately 3 inched long. Slowly dip the fish into the oil and hold until the end in the oil is floating. Let go and dip more fish.

The fish is done within minutes. Experiment. Use some hot sauce to dip in.

Mix up some ketchup and horseradish!

Enjoy. Dot