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Copper River salmon
From the Anchorage Daily News (adn.com):
"The celebrated and lucrative Copper River salmon fishery opened at 7 a.m. Thursday under overcast skies, with commercial fishermen near Cordova scooping 1,549 kings and 20,216 sockeye out of the water." The story goes on to say that prices are down somewhat from last year, although still too high because of all the hype. One Seattle wholesaler was asking $25/lb. It's great tasting fish but not for us at that price. We had turbot from TJ's frozen fish case yesterday. Nice, easily pan- fried, mild-tasting, affordable. -aem |
Copper River salmon
aem wrote:
> From the Anchorage Daily News (adn.com): > > "The celebrated and lucrative Copper River salmon fishery opened at 7 > a.m. Thursday under overcast skies, with commercial fishermen near > Cordova scooping 1,549 kings and 20,216 sockeye out of the water." > > The story goes on to say that prices are down somewhat from last year, > although still too high because of all the hype. One Seattle > wholesaler was asking $25/lb. > > It's great tasting fish but not for us at that price. > > We had turbot from TJ's frozen fish case yesterday. Nice, easily pan- > fried, mild-tasting, affordable. -aem TJ's is great for fish! -- Jean B. |
Copper River salmon
aem wrote:
> > We had turbot from TJ's frozen fish case yesterday. Nice, easily pan- > fried, mild-tasting, affordable. -aem I eat a lot of that. I usually make fish and broccoli soup. |
Copper River salmon
On Sat, 16 May 2009 14:51:10 -0400, "Jean B." > wrote:
>aem wrote: >> From the Anchorage Daily News (adn.com): >> >> "The celebrated and lucrative Copper River salmon fishery opened at 7 >> a.m. Thursday under overcast skies, with commercial fishermen near >> Cordova scooping 1,549 kings and 20,216 sockeye out of the water." >> >> The story goes on to say that prices are down somewhat from last year, >> although still too high because of all the hype. One Seattle >> wholesaler was asking $25/lb. >> >> It's great tasting fish but not for us at that price. >> >> We had turbot from TJ's frozen fish case yesterday. Nice, easily pan- >> fried, mild-tasting, affordable. -aem > >TJ's is great for fish! We've got a place about two miles from us that sells fresh pickerel for $6.50 lb., or pickerel cheeks for $10 lb., now that's good eating. |
Copper River salmon
Jean wrote on Sat, 16 May 2009 14:51:10 -0400:
> aem wrote: >> From the Anchorage Daily News (adn.com): >> >> "The celebrated and lucrative Copper River salmon fishery >> opened at 7 a.m. Thursday under overcast skies, with >> commercial fishermen near Cordova scooping 1,549 kings and >> 20,216 sockeye out of the water." >> >> The story goes on to say that prices are down somewhat from >> last year, although still too high because of all the hype. One >> Seattle wholesaler was asking $25/lb. >> >> It's great tasting fish but not for us at that price. >> >> We had turbot from TJ's frozen fish case yesterday. Nice, >> easily pan- fried, mild-tasting, affordable. -aem > TJ's is great for fish! Certainly, for frozen fish! However, you won't find fresh Copper River salmon and I came across frozen "Atlantic Salmon" marked "Produce of Chile". Chile's Atlantlic coast is hard to find. -- James Silverton Potomac, Maryland Email, with obvious alterations: not.jim.silverton.at.verizon.not |
Copper River salmon
On May 16, 12:11*pm, Mark Thorson > wrote:
> aem wrote: > > > We had turbot from TJ's frozen fish case yesterday. *Nice, easily pan- > > fried, mild-tasting, affordable. * *-aem > > I eat a lot of that. *I usually make fish and broccoli soup. It's a good product and that sounds interesting. Do you use a fish stock? Clam juice? Tomato? -aem |
Copper River salmon
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Copper River salmon
James Silverton wrote:
> Jean wrote on Sat, 16 May 2009 14:51:10 -0400: > >> aem wrote: >>> From the Anchorage Daily News (adn.com): >>> >>> "The celebrated and lucrative Copper River salmon fishery >>> opened at 7 a.m. Thursday under overcast skies, with >>> commercial fishermen near Cordova scooping 1,549 kings and >>> 20,216 sockeye out of the water." >>> >>> The story goes on to say that prices are down somewhat from >>> last year, although still too high because of all the hype. One >>> Seattle wholesaler was asking $25/lb. >>> >>> It's great tasting fish but not for us at that price. >>> >>> We had turbot from TJ's frozen fish case yesterday. Nice, >>> easily pan- fried, mild-tasting, affordable. -aem > >> TJ's is great for fish! > > Certainly, for frozen fish! However, you won't find fresh Copper River > salmon and I came across frozen "Atlantic Salmon" marked "Produce of > Chile". Chile's Atlantlic coast is hard to find. > Interesting. I also did note that not all of the fish was wild the last time I looked. -- Jean B. |
Copper River salmon
On May 16, 6:42*pm, "Jean B." > wrote:
> James Silverton wrote: > > Jean *wrote *on Sat, 16 May 2009 14:51:10 -0400: > > >> aem wrote: > >>> From the Anchorage Daily News (adn.com): > > >>> "The celebrated and lucrative Copper River salmon fishery > >>> opened at 7 a.m. Thursday under overcast skies, with > >>> commercial fishermen near Cordova scooping 1,549 kings and > >>> 20,216 sockeye out of the water." > > >>> The story goes on to say that prices are down somewhat from > >>> last year, although still too high because of all the hype. *One > >>> Seattle wholesaler was asking $25/lb. > > >>> It's great tasting fish but not for us at that price. > > >>> We had turbot from TJ's frozen fish case yesterday. *Nice, > >>> easily pan- fried, mild-tasting, affordable. * *-aem > > >> TJ's is great for fish! > > > Certainly, for frozen fish! However, you won't find fresh Copper River > > salmon and I came across frozen "Atlantic Salmon" marked "Produce of > > Chile". Chile's Atlantlic coast is hard to find. > > Interesting. *I also did note that not all of the fish was wild > the last time I looked. Atlantic salmon are never wild. I have nothing against cheap, farm raised fish. I eat a lot of tilapia, but I haven't bought Atlantic salmon in many years. The Copper River salmon is a one meal a year thing. Salmon is my son's favorite fish. That strange child likes to eat lamb's quarters, raw. He ate some out of our front yard this morning. > > -- > Jean B. --Bryan |
Copper River salmon
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Copper River salmon
On May 16, 11:47*am, aem > wrote:
> From the Anchorage Daily News (adn.com): > > "The celebrated and lucrative Copper River salmon fishery opened at 7 > a.m. Thursday under overcast skies, with commercial fishermen near > Cordova scooping 1,549 kings and 20,216 sockeye out of the water." > > The story goes on to say that prices are down somewhat from last year, > although still too high because of all the hype. *One Seattle > wholesaler was asking $25/lb. > > It's great tasting fish but not for us at that price. > > We had turbot from TJ's frozen fish case yesterday. *Nice, easily pan- > fried, mild-tasting, affordable. * *-aem I love copper river salmon, but eat it maybe once a year when it's in season. $25/lb?? Wow, makes even lobster look cheap. Kris |
Copper River salmon
On Sat, 16 May 2009 21:48:18 GMT, James Silverton wrote:
> Jean wrote on Sat, 16 May 2009 14:51:10 -0400: > >> aem wrote: >>> From the Anchorage Daily News (adn.com): >>> >>> "The celebrated and lucrative Copper River salmon fishery >>> opened at 7 a.m. Thursday under overcast skies, with >>> commercial fishermen near Cordova scooping 1,549 kings and >>> 20,216 sockeye out of the water." >>> >>> The story goes on to say that prices are down somewhat from >>> last year, although still too high because of all the hype. One >>> Seattle wholesaler was asking $25/lb. >>> >>> It's great tasting fish but not for us at that price. >>> >>> We had turbot from TJ's frozen fish case yesterday. Nice, >>> easily pan- fried, mild-tasting, affordable. -aem > >> TJ's is great for fish! > > Certainly, for frozen fish! However, you won't find fresh Copper River > salmon and I came across frozen "Atlantic Salmon" marked "Produce of > Chile". Chile's Atlantlic coast is hard to find. south atlantic, maybe: <http://www.trailmonkey.com/latin/Chile_MAP.jpg> your pal, blake |
Copper River salmon
blake wrote on Sun, 17 May 2009 16:56:31 GMT:
>> Jean wrote on Sat, 16 May 2009 14:51:10 -0400: >> >>> aem wrote: >>>> From the Anchorage Daily News (adn.com): >>>> >>>> "The celebrated and lucrative Copper River salmon fishery >>>> opened at 7 a.m. Thursday under overcast skies, with >>>> commercial fishermen near Cordova scooping 1,549 kings and >>>> 20,216 sockeye out of the water." >>>> >>>> The story goes on to say that prices are down somewhat from >>>> last year, although still too high because of all the hype. >>>> One Seattle wholesaler was asking $25/lb. >>>> >>>> It's great tasting fish but not for us at that price. >>>> >>>> We had turbot from TJ's frozen fish case yesterday. Nice, >>>> easily pan- fried, mild-tasting, affordable. -aem >> >>> TJ's is great for fish! >> >> Certainly, for frozen fish! However, you won't find fresh >> Copper River salmon and I came across frozen "Atlantic >> Salmon" marked "Produce of Chile". Chile's Atlantlic coast is >> hard to find. > south atlantic, maybe: > <http://www.trailmonkey.com/latin/Chile_MAP.jpg> It's an interesting question and depends on what you consider the boundary between the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans. Is the southernmost coast of Chile in the Atlantic or Pacific or both? In any case, Atlantic Salmon (Salmo salar) is different from the five (?) Pacific Salmon species. There has been concern expressed about Atlantic salmon that have escaped into the Pacific and growing Salmo salar in Pacific farms would just add to the problem. -- James Silverton Potomac, Maryland Email, with obvious alterations: not.jim.silverton.at.verizon.not |
Copper River salmon
On Sat, 16 May 2009 21:48:18 GMT, James Silverton wrote:
> Certainly, for frozen fish! However, you won't find fresh Copper River > salmon and I came across frozen "Atlantic Salmon" marked "Produce of > Chile". Chile's Atlantlic coast is hard to find. They swam through the Panama canal. I shit you not. Atlantic salmon have extablished themselves on the west coast of South America by migration. Of course will try and argue this, unsuccessfully, until you stomp off in a huff. So wind up your rubber band-propelled brain and lets get started. -sw |
Copper River salmon
On 2009-05-16 08:47:46 -0700, aem > said:
> From the Anchorage Daily News (adn.com): > > "The celebrated and lucrative Copper River salmon fishery opened at 7 > a.m. Thursday under overcast skies, with commercial fishermen near > Cordova scooping 1,549 kings and 20,216 sockeye out of the water." > > The story goes on to say that prices are down somewhat from last year, > although still too high because of all the hype. One Seattle > wholesaler was asking $25/lb. > > It's great tasting fish but not for us at that price. You should try it raw as sushi. -- thepixelfreak |
Copper River salmon
On May 16, 8:47*am, aem > wrote:
> From the Anchorage Daily News (adn.com): > > "The celebrated and lucrative Copper River salmon fishery opened at 7 > a.m. Thursday under overcast skies, with commercial fishermen near > Cordova scooping 1,549 kings and 20,216 sockeye out of the water." > > The story goes on to say that prices are down somewhat from last year, > although still too high because of all the hype. *One Seattle > wholesaler was asking $25/lb. > > It's great tasting fish but not for us at that price. > > We had turbot from TJ's frozen fish case yesterday. *Nice, easily pan- > fried, mild-tasting, affordable. * *-aem Fortunately, the price gets lower as the season progresses. We usually wait for a few weeks before buying any...good stuff! |
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