PRBuzz
01-18-2013, 05:57 AM
Today Boston Globe, relentless pursuers of this problem!
View Full Version : Seafood mislabeling to be a crime PRBuzz 01-18-2013, 05:57 AM Today Boston Globe, relentless pursuers of this problem! beamie 01-18-2013, 07:33 AM There are some restaurants that will saute dogfish.....which from what I hear is actually quite pleasing to the pallet. I just wonder what they call it on the menu. And what do they charge...since the boat gets like 20 cents a pound. JackK 01-18-2013, 08:08 AM I love escolar- complete bull #^&#^&#^&#^&! Can't stand these two "journalists"- seems like their personal vendetta against Ming Tsai has gone out of control... Gary 01-18-2013, 01:34 PM So are we going to see Patagonian tooth fish on the menu instead of Chilean sea bass? Another feelgood bs law to suck away tax dollars. Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device Piscator 01-18-2013, 01:38 PM I love escolar- complete bull #^&#^&#^&#^&! Can't stand these two "journalists"- seems like their personal vendetta against Ming Tsai has gone out of control... Ming Tsai's Butterfish at his “Blue Ginger” restaurant is one of the best tasting dishes I’ve ever had. You are right, they have some kind of vendetta against him. See his response to the Globe: Ming's Response to the Globe — Ming Tsai (http://www.ming.com/blue-ginger/dinner/mings-butterfish-statement.htm) Sea Flat 01-18-2013, 01:42 PM There are some restaurants that will saute dogfish.....which from what I hear is actually quite pleasing to the pallet. I just wonder what they call it on the menu. And what do they charge...since the boat gets like 20 cents a pound. In England they call it Fish and Chips, :rotf2: 5/0 01-18-2013, 03:50 PM Mmmmmm nothing taste better than a great piece of a$$ Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device Nebe 01-18-2013, 04:00 PM How about selling calimari to your customers, but instead you serve them hog rectum. There was a great story about this on NPR last week. Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device Nebe 01-18-2013, 04:05 PM 'Imitation Calamari' Investigated By 'This American Life,' Suggested To Have Dubious, Pork-Based Origin (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/mobileweb/2013/01/16/imitation-calamari-sliced-pig-rectum_n_2482063.html) Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device MakoMike 01-18-2013, 05:09 PM Escolar is called "white tuna" in about 99% of the sushi bars in the U.S. Who do you think they're kidding? What right does a state have to ban a food that is not poisonous? If they are going to do that they should also bad the sale of nuts. Nuts are much more of a danger to more of our population than escolar. Rob Rockcrawler 01-18-2013, 08:32 PM I heard the hog rectum thing too, hilarious. 5/0 01-18-2013, 10:34 PM I heard the hog rectum thing too, hilarious. Like i said nuttin beats a great piece of a$$!!! Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device Nebe 01-18-2013, 10:41 PM Rusty trombone fra diavlo Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device Strider 01-19-2013, 09:53 AM Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device Slingah 01-19-2013, 10:09 AM Rusty trombone fra diavlo Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device good one :laugha: MAKAI 01-19-2013, 10:17 AM . Nuts are much more of a danger to more of our population than escolar.[/QUOTE] I agree. We should round up all the "nuts" and put them back behind the brick and ivy walls of the asylums. Where they belong, medicated like zombies. Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device PRBuzz 01-19-2013, 10:20 AM . Nuts are much more of a danger to more of our population than escolar. I agree. We should round up all the "nuts" and put them back behind the brick and ivy walls of the asylums in Washington DC. Where they belong, medicated like zombies. Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device[/QUOTE] Steve K 01-19-2013, 11:10 AM I do have a problem with sushi bars calling escolar "white tuna." It is totally misleading and most people have no idea that eating too much of it has the same effect as eating olestra. It also should not be priced the same as chu-toro. I have a friend who is a Japanese sushi chef and he will not serve it. Funny story - a friend of mine went to a wedding where escolar was served. His wife ate it and spent much of the night in the bathroom. The funny part is that the bride's father was such a jerk that the chef served it in order to get back at him. Nebe 01-19-2013, 11:27 AM Whoa! Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device spence 01-19-2013, 11:28 AM I do have a problem with sushi bars calling escolar "white tuna." It is totally misleading and most people have no idea that eating too much of it has the same effect as eating olestra. Wow... Escolar's wax ester content can cause keriorrhea (Greek: flow of wax), gempylotoxism or gempylid fish poisoning.[3] Keriorrhea is similar to diarrhea, only the body will expel yellowish-orange drops of oil instead of liquid bowel movements. Some individuals suffering from escolar-induced keriorrhea also report other digestive issues, including stomach cramps, diarrhea, headaches, nausea, vomiting, and anal leakage; onset may occur between 30 minutes and 36 hours following consumption.[4] This condition may also be referred to as steatorrhea. -spence J_T_R 01-19-2013, 01:10 PM Anyone ever been to the Kam Man in Quincy? Take a look around there and eating "imitation calamari" will be a walk in the park. Pig uterus, with ovaries, anyone? Or perhaps ox shlong interests you? MAKAI 01-19-2013, 02:26 PM I live in Quincy. Road kill doesn't last long. Yum yum eatem up !! Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device JackK 01-19-2013, 07:46 PM Just FYI keriorrhea occurs when mass quantities (IE, 6oz (wiki)... a STEAK) of escolar is consumed. Normal sushi servings are a fraction of that and shouldn't cause it. MAKAI 01-19-2013, 09:08 PM The other name for that fish is Snake Mackerel Dick Durand 01-23-2013, 05:19 PM Not so much a matter of mislabeling, but earlier this week I came upon a fish called "swai" in a buffet at a Todd English reataurant. Not knowing what it was, I refrained from eating it. Upon returning home, I googled "swai" and learned that it was a Southeast Asian type of catfish. While some may be farm raised in the western hemisphere, I suspect most is imported from the East. Frankly, I have no qualms about passing up the swai, as it was probably harvested from somewhere in the Mekong Delta, where water quality is suspect, to say the least. Typhoon 01-24-2013, 06:54 AM Not so much a matter of mislabeling, but earlier this week I came upon a fish called "swai" in a buffet at a Todd English reataurant. Not knowing what it was, I refrained from eating it. Upon returning home, I googled "swai" and learned that it was a Southeast Asian type of catfish. While some may be farm raised in the western hemisphere, I suspect most is imported from the East. Frankly, I have no qualms about passing up the swai, as it was probably harvested from somewhere in the Mekong Delta, where water quality is suspect, to say the least. As many of you know I'm in the seafood business. Swai is one of those fish I would stay FAR away from. MAKAI 01-24-2013, 08:02 AM You couldn't pay me to eat Asian farm raised shrimp. Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device Typhoon 01-24-2013, 09:13 AM You couldn't pay me to eat Asian farm raised shrimp. Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device asian farm raised shrimp are like smoking cigars. I know the damage I'm doing to myself when I eat them. They're just so damn good. The sh1t they treated those with is scary. Rob Rockcrawler 01-24-2013, 05:50 PM My sister told me a tale of being in china and seeing a shrimp farm beneath a chiekn coop? i dont know if it was true or now. I dont eat farm raised shrimp knowingly. I know they are sometimes mislabed as well. I was at shaws a few weeks ago and in the seafood case they had wild domestic shrimp and i wanted a pound of them. Well they didnt have a pound so she went over to the frozen shrimp section and got a 2 lb bag and was going to open it up and give me half. All of those shrimp were farm raised from Asia. I pointed out that fact and she said "that is what we always do"... Nebe 01-24-2013, 07:15 PM That's bull#^&#^&#^&#^& Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device beamie 01-24-2013, 08:22 PM I believe I read that 90% of the shrimp you buy at the store are imported mostly from Vietnam. Rob Rockcrawler 01-24-2013, 08:55 PM I very rarely get shrimp at restaurants for the same reason. Unless they state that its wild gulf shrimp and i trust the place. That is even along shot. MAKAI 01-24-2013, 11:17 PM asian farm raised shrimp are like smoking cigars. I know the damage I'm doing to myself when I eat them. They're just so damn good. The sh1t they treated those with is scary. I like cigars, but aren't they rolled on the inner thighs of virgins ? That's what I was told any way. But, shrimp from Vietnam raised in sewer runoff and rice paddies fertilized with human feces, well I gotta draw the line somewhere.:yak4: Raven 01-25-2013, 03:20 PM You couldn't pay me to eat Asian farm raised shrimp. Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device SEVERAL TIMES: I've picked up packages of Flounder at stop and shop only later to read the back "fine Print" and discover they are from CHINA so back in the Bin they go. thefishingfreak 01-25-2013, 06:58 PM Many reasons to ask for and demand fresh-local fish. There are many places, like Red's Best, right on the fish pier in Boston, that will sell direct to the consumer and even ship it to your door. Red's Best? : Home (http://www.redsbest.com/shopreds/) Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device vBulletin® v3.8.7, Copyright ©2000-2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
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