The Best Recipe Ever For Your Northern Ontario Pike (2024)

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This is the best recipe to use to cook your fresh caught northern pike

The Best Recipe Ever For Your Northern Ontario Pike (1)

The Best Recipe Ever For Your Northern Ontario Pike (2)

By Gord Pyzer Gord Pyzer is the fishing editor of Outdoor Canada magazine and field editor of In-Fisherman magazine.

April 12, 2023

When most folks say they don't like eating fish, they usually mean one of two things: they either don't enjoy the strong fishy taste that results from the fillets being dehydrated and burned while sitting at the bottom of the freezer for too many months, or they hate picking through a plethora of bones. Especially the pesky "Y" bones found in the filets of northern pike.

If this sounds familiar, rejoice, because I bring you good tidings of great joy.

With the winter ice fishing now upon us, there is nothing I enjoy more than targeting northern pike through a hole in the ice in Northern Ontario. Pike are perhaps the most ubiquitous fish in the northern half of the province, being found in abundance just about everywhere.

And while they're wonderful table fare any time of the year, they're at their peak of freshness when caught in the icy cold water of winter, filleted as soon as you get home and eaten shortly thereafter.

The Best Recipe Ever For Your Northern Ontario Pike (3)

Small and medium-size northern pike like this one, landed by Dave Reddick in Northeastern Ontario’s Kesagami Lake, are the perfect size for keeping and enjoying the Cajun Your Catch recipe shared by Gord Pyzer in the blog. (Photo credit: Gord Pyzer)

I tell this to all the friends I take ice fishing, and while they confess to savouring the experience of catching and releasing trophy size pike in Northern Ontario, they're often skeptical when I suggest keeping a couple of smaller, mid-20-inch pike for dinner.

I'll tell you the same thing I tell them: I prefer dining on pike, as opposed to walleye and most other species of freshwater fish because the flesh is so white, flaky, and firm and oh, so, nutritious and delicious. Especially, when you cook it using the recipe I am going to share with you in a moment.

Still, I am always greeted with the question: How in the heck do you remove the "Y" bones?

Well, trust me, it is easy. In fact, filleting and de-boning a pike is no different than cleaning a walleye so long as you make two additional knife cuts.

Now, I've cleaned my share of pike over the years, and, all modesty aside, I am pretty good at it. Still, I wouldn't want to have a "Y" bone-removing contest with buddy Gord Bastable.

Gord is the owner of Vermilion Bay Lodge on Northwestern Ontario's Eagle Lake. Eagle is renowned for having produced world-record-class muskies, but the walleye, bass, lake trout, whitefish and northern pike fishing is just as good.

Being the personable resort operator that he is, Gord's cleaned his share of northern pike over the years and he recently produced this short video that is the best I've ever seen, on how to remove the "Y" bones, lickity split, from a northern pike.

Now, that you've watched Gord perform his magic, and have your northern pike fillets in hand, here is a family favourite Creole recipe, straight from the bayou country of Louisiana, that is simply out of this world.

I received the recipe many years ago from a good friend and In-Fisherman Television host Doug Stange, who calls it Cajun Your Catch and when you taste it, you'll understand why it has become such a hit with everyone who has ever tasted it.

By the way, a couple of reasons you'll love this recipe are that it is so simple to prepare, so out-of-this-world tasty and so downright adaptable.

The Best Recipe Ever For Your Northern Ontario Pike (5)

By adaptable, I mean that if you don't like hot spicy food, simply reduce the Tabasco sauce to one or two drops and cut the Cayenne pepper in half. By the same token, if you're on a cholesterol-restricted diet or just watching your figure, substitute Becel margarine or olive oil for the butter. I've done this many times and the result is every bit as wonderful when it comes to serving the fish.

Cajun Your Catch

Here are the ingredients:

  • 3 strips of diced smoked bacon
  • 2 cloves of garlic, crushed
  • 2 tbsp. onion
  • 1/3 green pepper, 1/3 red pepper and 1/3 yellow pepper sliced into thin strips
  • 2 sticks of butter
  • 1 tspCayenne pepper
  • 1 1/2 tspGrey Poupon mustard
  • 1/4 tspdried basil
  • 1/4 tspdried thyme
  • 1/4 tspdried oregano
  • 1 - 5 squirts of Tabasco sauce (be careful now)
  • 2 tbsp crab boil seasoning or Old Bay seasoning
  • 1 1/2 pounds of pike filets cut into cubes
  • a handful of fresh shrimp and/or small scallops

Preheat the oven to 375° F. Sauté the bacon, onion, and garlic in a skillet until the onion is translucent. Add the green, red and yellow pepper and stir them around the skillet. Add the butter, mustard, cayenne, basil, thyme, oregano, Tabasco and crab boil. Simmer for 3 minutes. Add the cubed pike and shrimp. Stir and simmer for another 3 minutes. Transfer to a baking dish and bake for 15 minutes.

I always serve the pike on a bed of steamed brown rice or a mix of brown rice and ancient grains. With a side salad, you'll have your friends and family begging you for more which is so easy and so much fun to do when you fish for pike across Northern Ontario.

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The Best Recipe Ever For Your Northern Ontario Pike (2024)

FAQs

Is northern pike good eating? ›

The northern pike is large, easy to catch, and good to eat.

Can you eat pike in Ontario? ›

Northern pike are as exciting to fish for as they are to eat, and some things you just never forget.

What is northern pike favorite food? ›

Northern Pike are at the top of the food chain in most lakes and they just about eat anything. Walleyes, Chubs, Perch, Bass, Shiners, Frogs, Snakes, Birds, Bugs and other Pike are all on their menu.

How tasty is northern pike? ›

Pike if caught in cold waters and cleaned by someone who knows how to do properly is a extremely tasty fish. It's actually sweeter tasting than walleye, and if I have a choice I will take pike all day long. In a frying pan with butter and a little oil , lightly flowered and cooked till golden brown.

What is the best size northern pike to eat? ›

The best eating size fish: walleye 15 – 18 inches, perch 9 – 12 inches and northern pike 22 – 28 inches, we encourage our guests to enjoy eating while they are here when the fish are at their very best freshness and taste.

What size of pike can you keep in Ontario? ›

For walleye, you are not allowed to keep any that are between 16.1” and 22”. You can only keep one larger than 22”, then rest must be smaller than 16.1”. For pike, you can can only have one larger than 34”, the rest must be smaller.

Who eats Northern Pike? ›

Newly spawned Northern Pike are commonly preyed on by perch, minnows and waterfowl, as well as older Northerns. Mature Northern Pike have few natural predators, among them Sea Lampreys and humans. Northerns skulking in nearshore shallows also put themselves at risk from bears, dogs or other land-roaming carnivores.

What is the best fish to eat in Ontario? ›

  • Walleye. Walleye, also known Pickerel, are a great gamefish that are fun to catch and also taste wonderful for those anglers that wish to keep some. ...
  • Largemouth and Smallmouth Bass. ...
  • Northern Pike. ...
  • Musky. ...
  • Brook Trout. ...
  • Lake Trout. ...
  • Salmon and Steelhead. ...
  • Perch.

How old is a 40 inch pike? ›

2) By the time a Northern Pike reaches 40 inches they are usually around 20 years old. It's rare to have a Pike live to 20 years old down south because they usually die from parasitic infestation or disease.

How old is a 50 inch northern pike? ›

Rarely, some pike are more than 20 years old and over 50 inches long.

What is the lifespan of a pike? ›

Northern it Page 4 pike usually live about 7 years, although there have been reports of individuals surviving for 25 years in nature and 75 years in captivity. Northern pike fingerlings fall prey to aquatic mammals, waterfowl and diving birds, and many other fishes; the mortality rate is high.

Is pike high in mercury? ›

Notes: Small pike (< 2 feet long) often have less mercury than large pike (> 2 feet long). Also, dried pike has a higher mercury concentration than fresh pike (the mercury is “diluted” with the water in the fresh pike).

Are pike top or bottom feeders? ›

Northern Pike are ambush predators while Musky are hunters. Both Musky and Northern Pike will feed in shallow water or in deep water. Many people think pike only hang around in shallow water but nothing is farther from the truth. Northern Pike in lakes with Whitefish and Lake Trout will go deep to feed.

Do northern pike have a lot of bones? ›

Northern pike, muskellunge (muskie) and pickerel are uniquely endowed with a narrow row of Y- shaped pin bones that run just above the ribs. Fishing enthusiasts are sharply divided, not over how to remove the pesky little bones from these species, but whether they should be removed at all.

Is northern pike high in mercury? ›

Notes: Small pike (< 2 feet long) often have less mercury than large pike (> 2 feet long). Also, dried pike has a higher mercury concentration than fresh pike (the mercury is “diluted” with the water in the fresh pike).

Who eats northern pike? ›

Newly spawned Northern Pike are commonly preyed on by perch, minnows and waterfowl, as well as older Northerns. Mature Northern Pike have few natural predators, among them Sea Lampreys and humans. Northerns skulking in nearshore shallows also put themselves at risk from bears, dogs or other land-roaming carnivores.

What does pike taste like compared to walleye? ›

Not only do I prefer pike fishing, but I also prefer eating pike. To me they have a much better taste. While I do like walleye, I think that their taste is too mild, sometimes almost tasteless. I know that I am in the minority on this, but that's the way I like it.

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