Neptune Island Nannygai - Red SnapperThis may be the most renamed fish in the Southern Ocean. Fortunately, all those names do have one thing in common. They are naming the same fish (something that cannot often be said about imported fishes carrying multiple names). Red Snapper, Golden Snapper, Red Bight Fish, Nannygai are so named for their beautiful red skin (possibly more pink hued to some colourists). Red Snapper has firm, slightly oily white flesh that can withstand cubing, cutting and dicing. It can also look gorgeous pan-fried with that red skin still on (so long as there is enough butter and heat involved for lovely crispy skin). Baking it in the oven with a crust of something herby or nutty suits its fat slightly oily fillets perfectly. Even the amateur chef will have a hard time drying it out.Another benefit of snap frozen at the source Australian fish fillets is that, because you only defrost them when you are ready to eat them, if you are up for cutting and dicing of your fish fillets, you can do so when they are still slightly frozen. Like the best sushi chefs do. It allows you to have fine knife skills even if you haven’t quite worked out how to sharpen your knives like a samurai on a naked steel!
Neptune Island Nannygai - Red SnapperThis may be the most renamed fish in the Southern Ocean. Fortunately, all those names do have one thing in common. They are naming the same fish (something that cannot often be said about imported fishes carrying multiple names). Red Snapper, Golden Snapper, Red Bight Fish, Nannygai are so named for their beautiful red skin (possibly more pink hued to some colourists). Red Snapper has firm, slightly oily white flesh that can withstand cubing, cutting and dicing. It can also look gorgeous pan-fried with that red skin still on (so long as there is enough butter and heat involved for lovely crispy skin). Baking it in the oven with a crust of something herby or nutty suits its fat slightly oily fillets perfectly. Even the amateur chef will have a hard time drying it out.Another benefit of snap frozen at the source Australian fish fillets is that, because you only defrost them when you are ready to eat them, if you are up for cutting and dicing of your fish fillets, you can do so when they are still slightly frozen. Like the best sushi chefs do. It allows you to have fine knife skills even if you haven’t quite worked out how to sharpen your knives like a samurai on a naked steel!
Red Snapper 280g
Neptune Island Nannygai - Red SnapperThis may be the most renamed fish in the Southern Ocean. Fortunately, all those names do have one thing in common. They are naming the same fish (something that cannot often be said about imported fishes carrying multiple names). Red Snapper, Golden Snapper, Red Bight Fish, Nannygai are so named for their beautiful red skin (possibly more pink hued to some colourists). Red Snapper has firm, slightly oily white flesh that can withstand cubing, cutting and dicing. It can also look gorgeous pan-fried with that red skin still on (so long as there is enough butter and heat involved for lovely crispy skin). Baking it in the oven with a crust of something herby or nutty suits its fat slightly oily fillets perfectly. Even the amateur chef will have a hard time drying it out.Another benefit of snap frozen at the source Australian fish fillets is that, because you only defrost them when you are ready to eat them, if you are up for cutting and dicing of your fish fillets, you can do so when they are still slightly frozen. Like the best sushi chefs do. It allows you to have fine knife skills even if you haven’t quite worked out how to sharpen your knives like a samurai on a naked steel!
Neptune Island Nannygai - Red SnapperThis may be the most renamed fish in the Southern Ocean. Fortunately, all those names do have one thing in common. They are naming the same fish (something that cannot often be said about imported fishes carrying multiple names). Red Snapper, Golden Snapper, Red Bight Fish, Nannygai are so named for their beautiful red skin (possibly more pink hued to some colourists). Red Snapper has firm, slightly oily white flesh that can withstand cubing, cutting and dicing. It can also look gorgeous pan-fried with that red skin still on (so long as there is enough butter and heat involved for lovely crispy skin). Baking it in the oven with a crust of something herby or nutty suits its fat slightly oily fillets perfectly. Even the amateur chef will have a hard time drying it out.Another benefit of snap frozen at the source Australian fish fillets is that, because you only defrost them when you are ready to eat them, if you are up for cutting and dicing of your fish fillets, you can do so when they are still slightly frozen. Like the best sushi chefs do. It allows you to have fine knife skills even if you haven’t quite worked out how to sharpen your knives like a samurai on a naked steel!
in 3 offers
The lowest price for Red Snapper 280g right now is $37.70 at Lettuce Deliver, compared across 3 retailers.
The all-time low was $33.95 on 9 Oct 2025 — today's price is 11% above the lowest ever. That's a little above the best price we've seen.
Prices last updated 17 July 2026.
Last updated at 17/07/2026 18:30:15
Wild South Seafood Fish - Red Snapper (Nannygai) 280g
Wild South Seafood Neptune Island Red Snapper Wild 280g
Delivery between Mon – Thu $7.76
Wild South Red Snapper 280g
Wild South Seafood Fish - Red Snapper (Nannygai) 280g
Wild South Seafood Neptune Island Red Snapper Wild 280g
Delivery between Mon – Thu $7.76
Wild South Red Snapper 280g