tilapia is better pan fried in a tbs or so of oil so you get a tiny bit of malliard to flavor up the meat. Baked can be awfully bland.
I usually add spritz of lemon and a splash of vermouth, salt and pepper to mine.
Another way I prepare it: "en papillote", which means "in paper". I used to use baker's paper for this, but now I just use foil. Works the same. Can be used with just about any fish.
Ingredients:
fish fillets
olive oil
carrots, leeks, fennel
lemon
thyme
dill
fennel
vermouth
foil or baker's paper.
preheat oven to 425 (which is close to the flash point of paper, another reason I use foil these days). Cut fennel and leeks (just the white part) into very thin strips. Make matchsticks of carrots. Slice a lemon very thin and pick out any seed pieces.
Assemble your packets:
Take foil or paper, and make a big square (or if you wanna do it the fancy French way, cut a heart shape. Not necessary) that's basically twice as wide as a couple fillets. Crease it down the middle.
Put a tsp of olive oil on one side of the crease, in the middle of that space. Put a couple of slices of lemon on the oil and smear it around a little. Put 2 fillets on the lemon (tilapia is small. Thicker fish would only need 1 fillet). Top with a bit of leeks, fennel and carrots. Salt and pepper. Pinch of dill and thyme. Splash of vermouth.
Fold over at crease, and then seal the packet by folding all the edges over a couple times. It'll look like this (not my pic)
This pic has oil on the outside of the paper. I have no idea why. It's not necessary.
Bake 12-15 minutes on a baking sheet. Tear open and eat.
This method basically steams the fish in it's own juices, lemon, and vermouth. The steam helps carry the flavors of the salt and herbs throughout the meat. My family loves this dish, and they will ask for it specifically every now and again.
It's also a very quick dish once you get the hang of it. In the 10 minutes it takes for the oven to heat up, I can have the veggies prepped and the packets assembled, so they just go right in.