Kokanee Quinn

Cooking with Kokanee Quinn: Mastering Spicy Grilled Perch

Cooking with Kokanee Quinn: Mastering Spicy Grilled Perch

Let’s be honest: the World Wide Web is a chaotic place. One minute you’re looking up the weather, and the next you’re deep in a rabbit hole watching videos of sea otters holding hands. But occasionally, the internet gods smile upon us.

That’s exactly what happened to Kokanee Quinn, who was casually trawling the digital depths for a fish recipe that actually had some personality. She didn’t want the standard, uninspired squeeze-of-lemon routine. No, she wanted something with a kick.

Enter the holy grail of freshwater cooking: Spicy Grilled Perch with Charred Scallion.

This recipe via Walleye Direct takes flaky perch and gives it a serious attitude adjustment courtesy of sriracha, ginger, and honey. Paired with smoky scallions, it’s the kind of meal that makes you want to delete your social media apps because nothing else online will ever top it.

Here is how Kokanee Quinn found out how to bring this internet treasure to the backyard grill.

The Details

  • Servings: 4–6 hungry humans
  • Prep Time: 10 minutes (plenty of time to open a cold beverage)
  • Cooking Time: 30 minutes

The Ingredients

  • 1 pound perch fillets (skin-on or skinless, your call)
  • 1 large bunch of scallions
  • Juice of 1 small lemon
  • 2 cloves garlic, minced
  • 1 tsp fresh ginger, minced
  • 1 tbsp dark soy sauce
  • 1 tbsp sriracha chili sauce (adjust if you’re a heat hero)
  • A dash of red chili flakes
  • 2 tbsp honey
  • ¼ tsp kosher salt (plus a little extra for seasoning)
  • Vegetable oil (for the grill and the greens)

The Execution

Step 1: The Flavor Bath

In a small bowl, whisk together the lemon juice, garlic, ginger, soy sauce, sriracha, chili flakes, honey, and that $1/4$ teaspoon of salt.

Pat your perch fillets bone-dry with paper towels and lay them out on a large plate. Give them a light whisper of extra salt, then brush that glorious spicy sauce all over the flesh side. (If your fillets have skin, leave the skin side naked for now). Set the fish aside to daydream about its future glory, and make sure to save the leftover sauce.

Step 2: Prep the Greenery

Trim the roots and any sad, dried-out ends off your scallions. Toss them lightly in a splash of vegetable oil. Simple. Clean. Ready for the fire.

Step 3: Fire Up the Rig

Crank your grill to 450°F for direct-heat cooking.

Tip from the Web: Clean your grates like your dinner depends on it—because it does. Fish loves to cling to a dirty grill. Once the grates are spotless, brush them with vegetable oil.

No grill? No problem. Throw some oil in a skillet over medium-high heat on the stove and sear it up.

Step 4: The Main Event

Lay your fish flesh-side down on the hot grill (or skin-side up, depending on which side you want looking pretty on the plate). Toss the scallions right next to them.

Close the lid and walk away for about 5 minutes. You’ll know it’s time to flip-and-remove when the fish easily releases itself from the grates and the scallions are looking beautifully charred.

The Finish line

Carefully rescue your fish with a spatula and transfer to a platter. Hit those charred scallions with a pinch of salt. Finally, brush the remaining spicy sauce and a tiny drizzle of oil over the hot fillets.

Serve immediately with your favorite sides, and raise a glass to Kokanee Quinn’s excellent internet browsing skills.

Topics Kokanee QuinnRecipes