Pan-Fried Fish
- Servings
- 2
- Prep time
- 5 min
- Cook time
- 8 min
Ingredients
- 2 white fish fillets (barramundi, snapper, sea bass, tilapia, or grouper — about 150–200 g each)
- 2 tbsp all-purpose flour (for dusting)
- 2 tbsp vegetable oil
- 1 tbsp butter
- 1 clove garlic, whole and lightly crushed
- 1 sprig fresh herbs (thyme, rosemary, or cilantro)
- 1/2 tsp salt
- 1/4 tsp black pepper
- 1 tbsp lemon juice (or lime juice)
For serving:
- Lemon or lime wedges
- Steamed rice or roasted potatoes
- A simple salad or steamed greens
Instructions
1. Prep the fish
- Pat the fish fillets very dry with paper towels — wet fish won’t get crispy.
- Season both sides with salt and pepper.
- Lightly dust with flour, shaking off any excess. The flour gives a thin, golden crust.
2. Sear skin-side down
- Heat 2 tbsp vegetable oil in a non-stick or cast iron pan over medium-high heat.
- When the oil is shimmering, lay the fillets in the pan skin-side down (if they have skin).
- Press gently with a spatula for the first 20 seconds to keep them flat — fish likes to curl.
- Cook for 3–4 minutes without moving. The skin should be golden and crispy.
- If the fillets are skinless, just cook 3–4 minutes on the first side until golden.
3. Flip and baste
- Carefully flip the fillets.
- Reduce heat to medium.
- Add 1 tbsp butter, the crushed garlic, and the herb sprig.
- Tilt the pan and spoon the foaming butter over the fish repeatedly for 1–2 minutes.
- The fish is done when it flakes easily with a fork and is opaque all the way through.
4. Finish
- Remove from the pan.
- Squeeze lemon or lime juice over the fillets.
- Spoon any butter from the pan over the top.
5. Serve
- Place on plates with rice or potatoes and a simple salad.
- Extra lemon or lime wedges on the side.
Tips
- Pat the fish dry. This is the #1 rule. Wet fish steams, dry fish crisps. Paper towels, both sides.
- Flour dusting is optional but worth it. Just a light coat — it creates a thin golden crust that holds up beautifully.
- Don’t move the fish. Lay it down and leave it. It releases naturally when the crust forms — if it sticks, it’s not ready yet.
- White fish cooks fast. 3–4 minutes per side is usually enough. Overcooked fish is dry and chalky — take it off when it just flakes.
Variations
| Variation | Change | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Thai style | Season with fish sauce instead of salt, top with cilantro, lime, and chili flakes | Pairs great with jasmine rice |
| Lemon butter caper | Add 1 tbsp capers to the butter when basting | Classic, briny, elegant |
| With garlic and chili | Add 1 diced red chili and extra garlic to the butter | Spicy and aromatic |
| Fish tacos | Flake the cooked fish into warm tortillas with slaw, avocado, lime crema | Mexican-style |
Result
A golden, crispy-skinned fish fillet with a delicate, flaky interior — basted in garlic herb butter and finished with a squeeze of citrus. Simple, fresh, and on the table in under 10 minutes.