
Who cares about the cold—or school, for that matter—when you can go ice fishing? Hopefully Ms. Moon isn't reading this or she might not allow Riley to make up his weekly 2nd grade spelling test. Last Friday morning, while his classmates were puzzling over the etymological differences between principal and principle, he was exercising his own devotion to life's First Principles by dropping a baited hook through a hole in the ice.

We kicked off our mid-winter break a couple days early to visit my folks in Colorado. Family friend Bill showed up on Friday with his gas-powered auger, which augured well for the fishing.

We've had some good fishing together, Bill and I. One time he took me into a scenic stretch of national forest with a pitch-perfect meander of purling creek. A spring flood had turned the creek into a monster a few weeks earlier that wiped out two barrier dams downstream, allowing stocked, non-native fish to escape upstream onto public land. Our mission that day: catch and dispatch as many stocker rainbows up to 18 inches as we could fit in Bill's ginormous creel. Big dry flies and constant action. On our way out we spooked a herd of elk. Just a magic day in the mountains.



Here's some vid action of the day, and the recipe below.
Bourbon & Pecan-Encrusted Trout


6 oz pecans, chopped
2 tbsp butter
1/4 cup bourbon
1/2 cup coffee
6 tbsp brown sugar

2. Combine butter, bourbon, coffee, and brown sugar in sauce pan and bring to boil, stirring. Reduce heat to simmer and whisk for 10 minutes until syrupy.
3. Lay trout fillets skin-side down on greased baking pan. Brush on sauce, then cover with pecans. Drizzle more sauce over pecan-encrusted fish to taste.
4. Cover with foil and bake for 10 minutes. Remove foil and bake a few minutes longer, careful not to overcook and dry out fillets. Serve with wild rice and a good Chardonnay, or just continue working on that open bottle of bourbon.

You can't learn everything in school. If your son can't spell a word, he can look it up in the dictionary. That's what they're for, right? But I'm sure he'll remember this adventure when he's old and grey.
ReplyDeleteGreat trout recipe can't wait looks great you look like your doing a good job Daddy.
ReplyDeleteYou might just be the best father ever.
ReplyDeleteI'm glad to see some parents are teaching their kids about food systems.
Very bad parent! Just kidding, that is great parenting. Some lessons can't come from book learnin'.
ReplyDeleteYou're on the list for best parent in the world. The recipe looks great - I do something similar with salmon, pecans, butter and real maple syrup. Delicious@
ReplyDeleteWhy couldn't you have been my dad? LOL
ReplyDeleteThanks everyone for your comments. I'll keep them on file in case CPS is notified. Riley was back in school today, ready to deliver his presentation on "Ants of the Amazon," so ice fishing is just a good memory now.
ReplyDeleteOh man, talk about fun. That is brilliant parenting, not bad. Some things just cannot be learned at school.
ReplyDeleteWow, that reminds me so much of when I lived in Canada! Such a lovely combination of flavors for the trout!
ReplyDeleteBeautiful pictures of you are your kids!!
That is great. I think you get the parent of the year award. I grew up in Colorado ice fishing every winter. I miss it terribly!
ReplyDeleteExcellent...as a Canadian I can say yay for ice fishing. The trout looks super yummy.
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