Smithson Posted October 27, 2008 Posted October 27, 2008 I've been trying unsuccessfully to find out the English name for the fish Thai's call Tubtim. Does any body know? Also, how difficult is it to rear the fish and how long before they are ready to eat? Cheers for the help.
ThaiLife Posted October 27, 2008 Posted October 27, 2008 Hi , may be have a look here .. http://www.thaivisa.com/forum/Fish-Farming...ent-t87368.html TL
IsaanAussie Posted October 27, 2008 Posted October 27, 2008 I've been trying unsuccessfully to find out the English name for the fish Thai's call Tubtim. Does any body know? Also, how difficult is it to rear the fish and how long before they are ready to eat?Cheers for the help. Smithson, Find attached document (with full credits to Nam Sai Farms, whose web site I dragged it from some time ago) it is the best overview on Tilapia growing here in Thailand I have read. Tilapi_Farming_manual.doc Isaanaussie
Gary A Posted October 28, 2008 Posted October 28, 2008 A friend of mine stocked his pond with pla nin and tub tim. He paid a premium for the tub tim. when he sells the fish, the pla nin are worth more. The locals like them better than the tub tim. In other parts of Issan, tub tim brings a higher price than pla nin. I can't tell any difference as far as taste. The pla nin in his pond are normally larger at the same age.
Smithson Posted October 28, 2008 Author Posted October 28, 2008 In Bangkok the tub tim are more expensive. I think they take longer to grow. Ozzydom was saying the locals in Isaan won't pay the extra and aren't that keen on the taste. My wife wants to stock our pond with them because they look nice, so she can enjoy watching them before she eats 'em.
IsaanAussie Posted October 28, 2008 Posted October 28, 2008 A friend of mine stocked his pond with pla nin and tub tim. He paid a premium for the tub tim. when he sells the fish, the pla nin are worth more. The locals like them better than the tub tim. In other parts of Issan, tub tim brings a higher price than pla nin. I can't tell any difference as far as taste. The pla nin in his pond are normally larger at the same age. Yesterday Pla nin 17 baht/kg against Tubtim 115 baht/kg in Tesco Lotus in Song Phi Nong near us.
Smithson Posted October 28, 2008 Author Posted October 28, 2008 A friend of mine stocked his pond with pla nin and tub tim. He paid a premium for the tub tim. when he sells the fish, the pla nin are worth more. The locals like them better than the tub tim. In other parts of Issan, tub tim brings a higher price than pla nin. I can't tell any difference as far as taste. The pla nin in his pond are normally larger at the same age. Yesterday Pla nin 17 baht/kg against Tubtim 115 baht/kg in Tesco Lotus in Song Phi Nong near us. Are you sure the Pla nin was 17B a kg and not for individual fish? This price is very cheap and Tesco often sells by the peice, rather than kg.
Gary A Posted October 28, 2008 Posted October 28, 2008 My friend gets 60 baht per kilo for either one. The locals normally throw the tub tim back in and keep the pla nin.
Samuian Posted October 28, 2008 Posted October 28, 2008 (edited) Prefer Seafood once and for all! What most locals do to fish out here is outrageous! Either grilled to charcoal, fried till it has the texture of crisp cardboard, salted to death, or fermented till it smells like eaten once already, or bathed in chillies, garlic till one can't recognize the fish anymore. Edited October 28, 2008 by Samuian 1
IsaanAussie Posted October 28, 2008 Posted October 28, 2008 Prefer Seafood once and for all!What most locals do to fish out here is outrageous! Either grilled to charcoal, fried till it has the texture of crisp cardboard, salted to death, or fermented till it smells like eaten once already, or bathed in chillies, garlic till one can't recognize the fish anymore. Yeah, but whatever they do to them, they still glow in the dark. We have all seen the flithy klong water in Bangkok and the results of phosphate runoff in the rivers. Yuck!
Gary A Posted October 29, 2008 Posted October 29, 2008 The locals around here normally wrap them in foil and cook them over charcoal. The skin peels off nicely and that is as good a way to eat fish as I know of. Of course the Thais have several different sauces to dip the meat in. Seldom do I eat fish here cooked any other way. The Thais may be able to eat fish bones but I can't.
arunsakda Posted May 2, 2012 Posted May 2, 2012 It is always on the English menu as Rubyfish, which is misleading. According to Wikipedia "The rubyfish, Plagiogeneion rubiginosum, is a rover of the genus Plagiogeneion, found off South Africa, Australia, New Zealand, and the south west Pacific, at depths of between 50 and 600 m. Its length is up to 60 cm."
andycrosby Posted May 4, 2012 Posted May 4, 2012 Does anyone know if you can you buy / sexed female only tab tim ?
grimleybob Posted May 5, 2012 Posted May 5, 2012 Does anyone know if you can you buy / sexed female only tab tim ? Andy There's no point. The females are slower growing and if they are sex reversed I think I read somewhere that they are infertile It's not like day old chicks where they divide the sexes. With the fish they feed them testosterone and change the females into males. BTW don't eat too many capons (female hormones) or your bells will drop off Bob
ozzydom Posted May 6, 2012 Posted May 6, 2012 Does anyone know if you can you buy / sexed female only tab tim ? There may be hatcheries who are prepared to sex Tabtim for you (at a price).Tilapia (including Red Tilapia) were originally hand /eye sexed . Male fish have only the urinary orifice whereas females have a separate tiny orifice from where eggs are laid ,,I think a dye is applied to help show up this tiny orifice. As GB says ,why would you want females? they are smaller and slower growing.(unless you had your tongue firmly in your cheek when you posed the question)
Gladiator Posted May 6, 2012 Posted May 6, 2012 (edited) Prefer Seafood once and for all! What most locals do to fish out here is outrageous! Either grilled to charcoal, fried till it has the texture of crisp cardboard, salted to death, or fermented till it smells like eaten once already, or bathed in chillies, garlic till one can't recognize the fish anymore. Well ....My favourite way is to take a fillet of fish place in tin foil .. plus buter + Herbs+ garlic and bake for 20 minutes Edited May 6, 2012 by Gladiator
Jotham79 Posted May 6, 2012 Posted May 6, 2012 Last year in late July we bought 1000 male sex/reversed red tilapia fry from a local government hatchery for 350 baht. The wife put them in a hapa for a month or so and transferred them to 2 nets, but didn’t sort by size, which only totaled about 9 sq meters (half of what is recommended). I only found out after I returned from work New Years. Also, the feed had been dropped to 25% protein to save money. I got the feed sorted, but the farm was very busy and we didn’t have another net. She started selling them in March(300 – 500gm) and finished in late April. She got 45 to 50 baht a kilo. Even with everything that was done wrong she still made a couple of thousand baht. I bought the last 10 kg of small fish for 40 bhat/kg and tossed them in my general fishing pond.
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