Serious Kitchen Play


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Why seafood spoils  
Enzymes destroy seafood much more rapidly than they do chicken or other meats. You  
can actually see the results more quickly. The eyes are sunken, the scales loosen, and the thin  
layer of natural glossy sheen, that covers the fish turns blotchy and slimy. In more advanced  
stages you see yellowish patches, that are growing colonies of bacteria. Firm and translucent  
flesh becomes opaque and soft. Oxidation turns the gills from red to a brownish color. If you  
cannot find the gills on the fish, chances are the clerk cut them out so the aging is not be so  
obvious to the shopper. In fact, fishermen often remove the gills immediately when they catch  
the fish in the wild, as the change in their color is the first sign of aging. Farm-raised fish are apt  
to arrive at the market fresher than commercially caught fish and they seldom remove their gills.  
Can you trust the label?  
An excellent six-month Consumers Union survey (conducted in 1992) found that at least  
one-third of all the fish in the market had incorrect labeling, deliberately or otherwise. Some  
instances appeared deliberate because inexpensive fish had the label of a more expensive species  
more often than the other way around. When Consumers Union purchased eight samples of  
rather costly red snapper from various U.S. markets, for instance, they found that only one was  
really red snapper. The others were lower quality substitutes. Eight of the 14 sole samples had  
incorrect labels.  
Purposely mislabeling fish is illegal, but the U.S. Food and Drug Administration rarely  
enforces correct labeling. Many state officials also have concerns with mislabeling, but in  
general they have little enforcement money, furthermore, cut-up fish is difficult to identify  
correctly—efforts to monitor correct labeling are minimal. Matching protein signatures in the  
laboratory is the only valid way of identifying cut-up fish, and sometimes even this method fails  
because the proteins in different fish may have similar signatures.  
The excellent grading system we use for meats and dairy products just is not yet available  
in the seafood industry with the exception of some high-demand fish. Seafood is one of the least  
regulated of all foods. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration regulates wholesalers, packers  
and processors, but no one monitors very much at the fisherman’s level or at storage before  
processing. Retail sellers are under the jurisdiction of state governments, and it is at this level  
that most problems exist. Laws vary from state to state with no consistent rules governing even  
the use of correct names for the many species of fish.  
The federal government has issued a fish grading standard, but so far its use is voluntary.  
A government inspector may grade the fish in the processing plant as blemish-free, wholesome  
and in good condition, but how the distributor, transport company and retail outlet handle it in  
the next few days (or weeks) determines its quality when you select it from the fish counter. So  
when you see the label "U.S. Government Inspected," it is not a guarantee of the current state of  
the seafood.  
You may also see a label stating that the fish in this package was "Packed Under  
Government Inspection" (PUGI). That means that an inspector was standing by to observe  
processing and packaging at the wholesale level. Again, this label only promises that the fish left  
the processing plant in good condition.  
We don't have a good way to avoid either of these two problems—freshness and correct  
play © erdosh 103  


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101 102 103 104 105

Quick Jump
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