Cogito wrote:I wouldn't eat it. Do you believe them when they say it is wild caught? I think they would say anything to make a buck.
NFriday wrote: It says on the bag though it is wild caught, and a product of China. Does anybody know how salmon from China compares to Alaskan salmon. Alaskan salmon is supposed to be very sustainable,...
Cogito wrote:Maybe not a huge difference, but I think we have more safeguards in place to monitor the safety, cleanliness, and quality of our foods than exists in China. I think US food companies will try to get away with anything that can fly under the radar, whereas in China there is no radar.
Mmm... gypsum! Salmon feed, tofu coagulant, is there anything that magical mineral can't do?mrbarolo wrote:In China, they farm the salmon and feed them on a ground surplus Chinese dry wall.
NFriday wrote:Hi- I was in Jewel today, and noticed that they had 2 pound bags of frozen wild salmon on sale for $8.99, which is really cheap, and I ended up buying a package of it. It says on the bag though it is wild caught, and a product of China. Does anybody know how salmon from China compares to Alaskan salmon. Alaskan salmon is supposed to be very sustainable, but I don't know about fish from China. Anybody have any idea how sustainable Chinese fish is?
Thanks, Nancy
This makes actually no sense.
spinynorman99 wrote:This makes actually no sense.
Laborers paid $1/day vs. laborers paid $7.50/hr to remove pin bones and cut fish into portions. Makes sense to the company.
Darren72 wrote:spinynorman99 wrote:This makes actually no sense.
Laborers paid $1/day vs. laborers paid $7.50/hr to remove pin bones and cut fish into portions. Makes sense to the company.
Nancy, my guess is that that the computer you are using, the car you drive, and most of the appliances in your house, were manufactured in considerably more complicated ways...
kanin wrote:Cogito wrote:Maybe not a huge difference, but I think we have more safeguards in place to monitor the safety, cleanliness, and quality of our foods than exists in China. I think US food companies will try to get away with anything that can fly under the radar, whereas in China there is no radar.
The Jewel she's thinking of purchasing the salmon from is not in China, is it?
Habibi wrote:What's wrong with Scottish, Norwegian or Salmon other than not being American?
stevez wrote:Habibi wrote:What's wrong with Scottish, Norwegian or Salmon other than not being American?
As long as it's not farm raised, nothing.
It's my understanding that if you buy Alaskan salmon you can only get wild. There's no farming of salmon in Alaska.
kenji wrote:It's my understanding that if you buy Alaskan salmon you can only get wild. There's no farming of salmon in Alaska.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alaska_salmon_fishery
Jonah wrote:I'd be curious as to what Dirk's product is. My understanding from many visits to Alaska is that full farming is illegal. They do have many hatcheries, but those fish are released into the wild. One can debate what to call a hatchery raised, wild caught fish, but to my knowledge there is no such thing as an Alaskan salmon that is fully farm raised. Have their laws changed recently?