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Full black bream guide
How to spot it, where it lives, how it is caught and how to cook it — the complete guide, in one easy read.
Deep-bodied, silvery and stubborn on the line, black bream is the fish that tells us spring has landed. It holds hard on rocky, weedy ground and takes a careful, natural bait far more readily than a clumsy one. Learn to read its big-eyed, spiny-finned profile and you'll never put the wrong name to it again.
How to spot it
Count the spines and you've got it: the single long dorsal fin carries eleven, and that's the surest tell of a black bream. The body is deep, flattened and muscular, clad in large scales, silvery-grey across the back and fading to a white belly. The head is small and neat, with notably large eyes and a small mouth that gives away its careful, bottom-feeding habits. At around 35cm it's a well-proportioned, handsome fish, and the mix of deep body, big eyes and that spiny dorsal makes it easy to name once you know the signs.
Where it lives
Black bream are fish of structure and cover. They favour rocky, weedy ground and estuaries where there's shelter and food, and rather than roving open water they sit hard on the bottom and work the ground methodically. Around Cornwall, Helford and Mevagissey are the two names to keep in mind. They arrive in April and May, when warming water brings them within easy casting range of the shore, and that late-spring window is your best shot at them.
Catching it
Once you've found their ground, black bream are obliging, and they reward a thoughtful, natural bait. Prawn, worm, sand eel and mussel all suit their cautious feeding. A float rig carrying a baited hook is a lovely way to fish for them; freelining with next to no weight lets the bait drift naturally and fools the warier fish. Work close to the bottom over rocky, weedy ground through April and May, with Helford and Mevagissey as good starting points. They spawn inshore in spring, the males guarding nests in the shallows, so go gently on the breeding fish and slip the smaller ones back unharmed.
In the kitchen
Bream is at its best whole on the BBQ, and it's built for it. Score the sides down to the bone, push lemon slices and a few sprigs of thyme or fennel into the cavity, and lay it over coals that have settled to a steady glow. Give it four or five minutes a side until the skin blisters and lifts; the flesh underneath stays moist and turns from glassy to white. If you'd rather have fillets, take a sharp knife down the spine from head to tail, lift each side clear of the rib bones, and grill them skin-side down. The flesh is firm with a mild, nutty edge that loves a char and a hit of lemon.
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FAQs
Quick fish questions
Short answers for the questions families and coastal readers often ask first.
How do I identify black bream in the UK?
Count the dorsal spines: a black bream has a single long dorsal fin carrying eleven. Add a deep, flattened, silvery-grey body with large scales, a small neat head, notably large eyes and a small mouth, and you've confirmed it.
What is the best bait for black bream fishing?
Prawn, worm, sand eel and mussel all work well and suit the bream's cautious feeding. Present them on a float rig, or freeline with minimal weight so the bait drifts gently near the bottom where bream hold.
How do you fillet a black bream?
Run a sharp knife down the spine from head to tail, then lift each fillet clear of the rib bones, keeping the blade flat against them. The skin is robust and worth leaving on for the BBQ or pan, where it crisps nicely.
What is the nutrition like in black bream?
Black bream is a lean white fish: high in protein, low in fat, and a good source of B vitamins, selenium and phosphorus, with some omega-3. Cooked simply on the BBQ rather than fried, it's a light, healthy plate.
When is black bream season in the UK?
April and May are the prime months. As the water warms in late spring, black bream move within easy reach of the shore, and that's your best window to target them before they move on.
Where can I catch black bream in Cornwall?
Helford and Mevagissey are both well worth trying. Black bream favour rocky, weedy ground and estuaries with plenty of cover, sitting hard on the bottom rather than roving in open water.
How do you cook black bream on the BBQ?
Score the sides of the whole fish, stuff the cavity with lemon and thyme, and grill over settled coals for four or five minutes a side until the skin blisters and the flesh turns white. Finish with sea salt and a squeeze of lemon.




