Animal Crossing Fish Dish Friday - #17
Brought to you by a marine biologist who would lose her head if it weren't attached...
CLICK HERE FOR THE AC FISH EXPLAINED MASTERPOST!
Grilled Sea Bass with Herbs
In ACNH: 1. Purchase the "Cooking DIYs set at Nookling "Be a Chef! DIY Recipes+
2. Cook at a stove with 1 Sea Bass and 5 Clumps of Weeds
In Real Life: from Various
Fish of Choice: You want a fish that has a thick body and skin, so most bass - anything that is called a bass, anyway - is fair game, including freshwater varieties. Also, take off the head and tail if that's not your thing, but it's a good idea to keep the rest intact for this dish.
Other Ingredients:
Olive Oil
Lime / Lime Juice
Salt & Pepper
Your favorite fresh herb(s) - parsley, marjoram, oregano, dill, or basil.
Get the recipe and serve with a hot veggie and potatoes.
I'm fully aware that cooking the entire fish is really not everyone's cup of tea. After all...it's not like you're going to eat much of it, if at all. So, you can just lose it, especially after cooking and letting the actual meat retain all of the benefits. But, let's talk about fish heads, because the anatomy of them are equal parts familiar and foreign to us mammals.
Let's start with the familiar - a fish's head, just like any animal in Craniata (a proposed clade that includes all Chordate animals with a distinct skull made of bone or cartilage - so, aka vertebrates), has eyes, nostrils, a mouth, and ears! Just like us! However, all of these things are highly adapted for life underwater, so they work differently than ours. To save space, let's talk about how the skull itself is built.
Fish skulls are extremely flexible, but there are differences between the groups. For sharks, their jaws aren't solidly attached to their skulls, so they can launch them forwards to capture prey. And no one does it better than the goblin shark. VVV
The rest of their heads are pretty immobile, like ours, with the sole purpose of encapsulating the brain and sensory organs (eyes, etc.).
For a lot of bony fish, though, it's a whole different story. A lot of fish have just about as much dexterity in their skulls as we do in our hands. The sudden opening of their mouths and stretching the associated bones all the way out creates suction that forces prey into their mouths. This is called "hydraulic transport", in which the fish is actually manipulating the water suspending the object of interest, not the object directly. This is some high-tech feeding! So explains why a lot of bony fish lack teeth or have very tiny teeth. They don't really need them!
This video really shows you just how flexible and mobile fish skulls are! Fish have at least 20 moving parts in their skulls. You only have 1 - PATHETIC.
And there you have it. Fascinating stuff, no?
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Action Bass PS1 1999 2000
Action Bass or Akushon Basu is an arcade action fishing game developed by Japanese studio Vingt-et-un Systems Corporation and published by Syscom and Take Two Interactive for the PlayStation 1, and released in 1999 in Japan, and in 2000 in North American and Europe.
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https://rumble.com/v42oti5-bass-fishing-lake-erie-fishing-for-pressured-smallmouth-and-largemouth-bass.html?mref=66lt3&mc=9e0fe
Bass Fishing Lake Erie for Pressured Bass.
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