
① I Always Add Oil First — The Most Common Habit
When you cook fish,
lots of home cooks still start by adding oil to the pan.
They think it keeps the fish from sticking
and helps it brown and cook through.
So, without thinking much,
they stick to that method every time.
But there’s one step you should totally change.
Try searing the fish first — without oil.

② Why Start Without Oil?
Fish holds a surprising amount of moisture.
If you add oil while it’s still wet,
the water and oil can just slide together,
so the fish may fail to
get that nice sear you want.
That’s the key.

③ Why That ‘Fishy’ Smell Happens
If the moisture doesn’t evaporate properly,
you’re often left with a stronger, ‘fishy’ odor.
So early on,
controlling moisture matters.
Skipping this step
means the final dish will suffer.

④ The Most Important Step
Heat your pan before anything else,
then lay the fish in — no oil.
Let the surface cook for a bit,
so moisture can evaporate — that’s essential.
This stage
makes or breaks the flavor.

⑤ When to Add Oil Later
Don’t add oil at the start.
Wait until the fish has started cooking, then drizzle in oil.
Doing so
changes the whole cooking flow.
So the end result
is cleaner and crisper.

⑥ What People Miss
A lot of people cook the same way from start to finish.
Because they never vary their approach,
they don’t build stages into the process,
and miss the small shifts that matter.
Those differences
change the outcome.

⑦ In the End, Order Matters
Even when you’re using the same ingredients,
the order you cook them in
can completely transform the result.
It sounds minor,
but it can have a huge impact.
That’s why order is everything.

⑧ The Final Difference
In cooking, process often matters more than ingredients.
Even familiar ingredients like fish
change dramatically when you change the method.
So start trying this approach today.
Ultimately, flavor comes down to the order.











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