Texas Smoked Flounder

  4.0 – 4 reviews  

This smoked flounder is living proof that smoked fish is the best food to eat on a hot summer day. During those all-day grilling sessions, this dish is fantastic as a main course or a snack. Not only do we smoke fish down here, but we also fried it! In addition, aren’t you sick of flipping hamburgers like everyone else in suburbia?

Prep Time: 15 mins
Cook Time: 30 mins
Total Time: 45 mins
Servings: 2
Yield: 1 whole smoked flounder

Ingredients

  1. 1 whole flounder
  2. 1 lemon, halved
  3. ground black pepper to taste
  4. 2 tablespoons chopped fresh dill
  5. 1 tablespoon olive oil
  6. 1 cup wood chips, soaked

Instructions

  1. Preheat a smoker for high heat, about 350 degrees F (175 degrees C). If you do not have a smoker, prepare a grill for indirect heat. If you have a gas grill, stop here and find another recipe!
  2. Clean and scale a fresh flounder. I leave the head on for dramatic appearance, but most people panic at the sight. Use a sharp knife to make 3 or 4 diagonal slits on the body that are big enough for lemon slices. Slice half of the lemon into thin slices. Rub a light coating of olive oil over fish, then squeeze the other half of lemon over it, and rub in some black pepper. Rub or press 1 tablespoon of dill into slits on the body, and insert lemon slices firmly. Place flounder on a large piece of aluminum foil, and fold the sides up high around fish. There should be enough foil to seal into a packet, although you want it open for now.
  3. Place fish onto the grill or smoker, and throw a couple of handfuls of soaked wood chips onto the coals. Close the lid and smoke thoroughly for about 10 minutes. Once fish has been flavored by smoke, you can seal up the foil and move to direct heat if you like, but I prefer to smoke it until done. When fish is done, flesh should flake easily with a fork.
  4. Remove fish from the grill using the foil as a handle, and garnish with remaining fresh dill.
  5. I prefer apple or other light wood chips for fish but oak, mesquite, or hickory will also work.
  6. You can prep four or five fish, seal them up, and hold them in the ice box until needed.
  7. This can be adapted for trout, but the flounder cooks quick. It might take a couple tries for a novice smoker to time it right, but the effort is worth it.

Reviews

Danielle Thompson
Sounds like a good recipe, but the fish in the picture is not a flounder.
Jesse Patterson
Made as written except that I used trout as the recipe submitter mentioned in the description. I too chose to let the fish smoke the entire time instead of sealing the foil. The lemon and dill work nicely with the smoke flavor and this is one I would make again.
Joseph Martinez
I nlove smoked flounder
Robert Cooley
it was great!!!!

 

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