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Sustainable Seafood 101

  

red_fish_sign_bigstockphotoShrimp:  No Small Topic

By Chef Bryan Szeliga, February 2012

fresh_shrimp_bigstockphoto_200x267My dad loves shrimp, along with the rest of America!  Shrimp is the #1 seafood consumed by Americans. Globally, shrimp have the highest economic value of all seafood, accounting for nearly 20% of the total value of all seafood combined.

My dad consumes more then four pounds of shrimp per year (the amount the average American consumes). On a recent visit with my family, the first words from my dad as I walked in the door were, "That shrimp is from Canada!"  I have been telling my dad that he has to ask where the shrimp is from before he buys it. My response, "Is it sustainable?" My dad couldn't look me in the eye as he replied, "I don't know.”  Read more....

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red_fish_sign_bigstockphotoWhy Buy Sustainable Domestic Seafood?

By Chef Bryan Szeliga, December 2011

fishmonger_shopper_bigstockphoto300x200Buying local has become a popular topic for produce and to some degree beef, pork, and poultry. This is a philosophy that is also important when it comes to buying seafood. When buying seafood you are not just buying a piece of fish, you are providing a fisherman with a livelihood.  The overall economic health of many coastal communities relies on the success of fishermen!

In 2010, 86% of the seafood Americans consumed was imported! China, Thailand, Indonesia, and Vietnam are a few of the top seafood suppliers of the 5.5 billion pounds imported into the United States.  Read more....

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red_fish_sign_bigstockphotoFarm Raised Fish is a Sustainable Choice

By Chef Bryan Szeliga, October 2011

I believe one of the largest misconceptions in sustainable seafood revolves around fish farming. In many cases, farm raised seafood is a large part of the equation for sustainable seafood. Ideally, there should be plenty of wild fish in the sea to thrive, allowing humans to consume for sustenance.

fish_farm_in_ocean_bigstock250x188Over 14,000 years ago humans lived in hunter-gatherer communities.  Their nourishment came from seasonal migratory patterns.  At that time humans followed the food sources.

Around 8000 B.C. the Fertile Crescent gave birth to agriculture.  Agriculture changed what and how humans ate.  Agriculture led the way to the domestication of rice, squash, and corn followed by goats, pigs, and cows, which in turn gave birth to animal husbandry (the practice of breeding and raising livestock).  Read more....

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red_fish_sign_bigstockphotoIs Frozen Fish Better Than Fresh Fish?

By Chef Bryan Szeliga, August 2011

Imagine the server at your favorite restaurant describing the nightly special, 'tonight we have a previously frozen fillet of pan seared striped bass, with grilled ramps, roasted fingerling potatoes, caramelized Brussels sprouts, topped with warm saffron and d'Espelette emulsion.' Any takers? Replace previously frozen with 'fresh' and the special will be the restaurant’s top seller!

Contrary to popular belief, frozen seafood can be superior to its fresh counterpart.

When we look holistically at sustainable bigstockphoto_alaskan_fishing_boatseafood, frozen seafood is often times more sustainable and superior to fresh. Seafood is often harvested far from the consumer and must travel a great distance to reach the marketplace. Fresh fish is shipped by air, which is a high carbon footprint shipping method.  Read more..

 

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red_fish_sign_bigstockphotoTop 10 Fish Eaten by Americans

By Chef Bryan Szeliga, April 2011

Eating seafood brings to mind many special memories, a few of my fondest having been provided by Chefs Barbara Lynch, Eric Ripert, Vitaly Paley, and Daniel Humm and one very special meal at La Mandrágora  in Tarifa, Spain.  The flavors of each of these meals still dance on my tongue when I think of tasting the lobster roll, the hiramasa, the spot prawn, the Arctic char and the squid. 

At the dinner table I love the sexy look of a superbly halibut_searedseared halibut with the contrasting colors of golden brown and ivory white flesh.  Also pleasing to the eye the grilled Bristol Bay sockeye salmon with perfect black hash marks on the ruby pink fillet.  When I landed my first cooking job at a seafood restaurant in Durango, Colorado in 1994, a delivery of “fresh” fish would arrive at the back door of the kitchen every day of the week except Sunday. Read More....

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red_fish_sign_bigstockphoto5 Things to Ask When Selecting Seafood

By Chef Bryan Szeliga, January 2011

As a chef, I look beyond conventional benchmarks to provide the most responsible seafood possible to my customers.  Commercial fishermen supply thefresh_fish_sign_bigstockphoto products while I juggle to meet the demands of my customers.  Sport fly-fishing is my hobby and my core values are in line with many large seafood conservation organizations.  These factors create a unique lens through which I view seafood.

Worldwide annual seafood consumption per person has increased from about 22 pounds in 1960 to over 36 pounds in 2005.1   In the same timeframe, our human population has doubled.  Read More.....

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red_fish_sign_bigstockphotoSustainable Seafood is My Passion

By Chef Bryan Szeliga, December 2010

I am a chef, fly fisherman, and salmon conservationist.  As a child from Colorado I have fond memories of vacations in Atlantic City, New Jersey.  My father grew up in Philadelphia with a family tradition of fishing the bay and ocean for flounder, sea bass, weakfish, sand shark, blue fish, and stripers.  A day on the water was sure to produce this quote from my father and Uncle Jack, “Fishing is just not what it used to be.  mess_of_fish_bigstockphotoRemember how many fish we used to catch as kids?”

However, as a child I do remember that the result of an Atlantic City fishing trip was a cooler filled with fish!  At that time we would harvest every legal size fish we could catch.  Read More......

 

  

 

 

 

 
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