The Prince Of Darkness To Be U S...
News1 min ago
Has anyone noticed how tuna has lost it's flavour over the past few years? It used to be so moist and full of flavour but is now tasteless, tough, dark in colour, too fishy, too salty or tastes of metal.
Anyone else agree or is it just me? If not, then what has happened?
No best answer has yet been selected by ceecee15. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Oh dear - tuna is a bit of a no-no - what we fetin the uK has largely been frozen and is not really the fresh fish it should be - ask at any of the supermarkets and theyll tell you not to re-freeze the tuna.
The East coast of England used to be a big landing area, but as there are now quotas for the atlantic tuna - split between east and west atlantc as they though there was no migration, but research has shown this not true - the industry has largely died out.
Also depends on the variety - big eye, yellowfin, bluefin, skipjack - all have different peoperties. Albacore or longfin tuna is one of the highest priced but is still regarded as in danger of over fishing and caught using unsustainable methods.
In respect of dolphin friendly tuna - that does not mean doplhin safe - no tuna fishing is when nets are used. Divers are used to flush dolphins out of the nets used to trap tuna, but obviously this is never foolproof and if you eat tuna - you will be in essence endorsing the death of dolphins. Balancing the desire for tuna against stock levels has been addressed by captive farming - but when you hear it takes 20 tons of white fish to feed 1 ton of tuna - why not stick to white fish??
Info on fish and stock levels at http://www.fishonline.org/ if you're interested in the issues.
As for flavour missing - if it means you won't eat it - you'll save lives of dolphins, albatross and other vunerable species killed by the line fishing and purse netting industry providing an expensive, tasteless product ....must be better.
By 'eck, Shaney, 'n I can 'ear t' Ovis music in t' background....Eh, Grenville lad, 'Ow 'bout a reet nice cuppa tea, then lad......now I remember, 1904 I think it were, first good storm of t' spring, an' them lassies, bye, we 'ad a laugh, but then Boer War came.....
Whoops, sorry - regression is a favourite past time......
We live on an island - sort of place that has water rond all of it - and still we get frozen stuff dumped here from the South Atlantic 'cos we can't be bothered to make the importance of sustainable practices get through to the people that matter....
That'll do for this one I think - loads of politics about to kick in and not what I want to see on a Sunday.
And may I be the last to wish you a Happy Easter Shaney - apologies for launching into memory lane!
Hi ceecee15 - its a fact that like most foodstuffs, what we are presented with now has little relation to produce form a while back, and when you are aware that there are now some 450 - 500 chemicals in the human body thatwre not present 40 years ago - these are by far the most likely to be sourced from foodsauffs.
If you have an interest in the fishiing processes, have alookthrough the info at: http://www.mcsuk.org/campaigns/campaigns.php?title=bycatch%20campaign and the other campaigns. You don't have to be a tree hugger type to see that sustainable is the key word - true for all sorts of food production.
I get on a soapbox to push the farmers' markets and farm shops, so do please get along to them if you can. Surveys regularly prove on a like for like basis they are 25 -30 % cheaper than supermarkets, and you can be assured that what you get is fresh, local and the provenance can be followed - which is an important issue. And you can ask about what is on sale - the fishmonger will tell you about his stock - farmed, line caught, where landed etc. as well as tips ways to handle and prepare it. Fish is a seasonal product, so do loo out for the best available, and thanks for the good query topic!
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.