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Question about curing skein for salmon

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5.4K views 26 replies 14 participants last post by  nichola8  
#1 ·
My buddy gave me a frozen bag of skein that he got from a fish last fall. The fish was properly bled out so the eggs are blood free. I was wondering what is the best way to cure these eggs if any?
 
#2 ·
I cure mine before storing them in the fridge, or freezer. If I were you, I would pull those eggs from the freezer about 4 days before I wanted to use them. I would put them in the fridge, in a bowl, and let them thaw slowly for a couple days. Once they are thawed, dump them out, drain the juice, and shake them in a baggie or bucket of spawn cure, until they are thoroughly coated. You might want to chunk them up before curing.
 
#7 ·
Slow thaw like mentioned.

I like to use Pautzke Borx o fire for skein.

Lay the skein out on some paper towel. Butterfly the skein, dust it with Borx o fire. While you are dusting it pull back egg clumps with your fingers so the Borx of fire can get down in there. Once you have it dusted I like to toss the skein in a zip lock bag, add some more Borx o fire if needed, gently roll the eggs in the bag. Put the bag in the fridge over night. You can pull the skein and cut into fish able chunks and head right out or dry them out a little. I usually pull them and set them on paper towel and let them dry out for a little bit before cutting them up.

Save your peanut butter jars in the off season, I usually put all my chucked up pieces in peanut butter jars so I can toss them in my vest, cooler or gear bag and don't have to worry about them getting crushed.
 
#22 ·
I've harvested worse looking eggs from dead hens, that were lying on the bottom of rivers. They worked. Cut that into golfball sized chunks, put a quart of 20 Muleteam Boraz (Laundry soap - you can usually find it at Walmart) into a gallon Ziploc, add the chunks, and shake until the are entirely coated. Then put 6-8 chunks in a qt Ziploc, add a bit more soap, squeeze the air out, and put em in the fridge, or freezer. Or use them within a week. They will continue to get darker over time.

If you catch a hen that is full of eggs, do the same thing with the fresh spawn, before you freeze it.