Where Caught
Found
Found and caught
When Caught
Year round
Important Features
- Wild/Farmed
- Wild
- Habitat
- Saltwater, Caught in open waters
- Recovery Rate
- Fillets (skin on, wing off): 35% from whole John dory, Dories have a low recovery rate because the head and gut cavity are large, and the body is very compressed (i.e. flattened from side to side).
John Dory Research
FRDC provides a comprehensive search of the latest research papers and images on John Dory
Remarks
John dory is well known and highly regarded. However, mirror dory, which has a similar taste, also has excellent cooking potential, and can often be cheaper. The mirror dory has a thick edible skin but the thumbprint on each side, characteristic of John dory, is inconspicuous.
The dories and oreos are similar foodfishes and can be used as alternatives for each other.
Imports
- New Zealand:
- usually John dory frozen and chilled fillets, chilled whole
Common Size
30-45cm
Overseas Names
GB, NZ, ZA: John dory; D: HeringskÆnig, Petersfisch; DK: Sankt Petersfisk; J: matoodai; NZ: kuparu; ZA: Jandorie; General: Peterfish
Grading
John dory are graded by total length or by whole weight (examples given below). Other dories are sometimes graded by length.
John Dory (Zeus faber)
Photograph by Gordon Yearsley & Thor Carter


Nutrition Facts
per 100g of raw product
| Kilojoules | 399 (95 calories) |
| Cholesterol | 24mg |
| Sodium | na |
| Total fat (oil) | 0.6g |
| Saturated fat | 28% of total fat |
| Monounsaturated fat | 14% of total fat |
| Polyunsaturated fat | 57% of total fat |
| Omega-3, EPA | 21mg |
| Omega-3, DHA | 152mg |
| Omega-6, AA | 17mg |
Cooking Ideas
| Bake | Boil | Deep Fry |
| Grill/barbecue | Poach | Raw |
| Roe | Roe & Milk | Salted |
| Shallow Fry | Smoke | Steam/microwave |
Note: Cooking Ideas identified by dark bold text are relevant to this species Dories are fine table fishes, readily available freshly chilled and frozen all year round. They have succulent, white, sweet and finely textured flesh that can be baked, grilled, barbecued, fried, steamed or poached. Be careful to not overpower the delicate flavour. If baking or steaming whole, use the complementary flavours of tarragon, dill, parsley, thyme or chives. Asian flavours of chilli, coriander and lime are more suitable when frying whole.
For fillets to be grilled, herbed butters or oils are suitable and even a salad of fresh dates and orange with parsley is complementary. Roll smaller fillets around prawns or Atlantic salmon, poach and serve with a light, lemon beurre blanc.
Dory fillets are delicate and often best coated or wrapped in foil for cooking.
Carlo and Danny Tosolini of Tosolinis in Canberra cleverly combine strongly flavoured accompaniments to complement the delicacy of the silver dory.
- Flavour
- Mild, Delicate flavour. The John dory has a distinctly sweet taste.
- Oiliness
- Low
- Moisture
- Moist
- Texture
- Medium, Fine flakes
- Flesh Colour
- White
- Thickness
- Thin fillets
- Bones
- Not many bones, and these are easily removed
- Price
- The John dory is a high-priced finfish; the other dories are medium priced.
Suggested Wines
Dories need a wine that will not dominate their distinctive light, sweet flavour. Young, cool climate rieslings fit the bill.
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