You are saying that all fish sold as "fresh" in supermarkets was previously frozen (non local fish)?Hope this helps, It's only what I do and know, and I'm by no means an expert.
My thoughts are in red.
Chris
You are saying that all fish sold as "fresh" in supermarkets was previously frozen (non local fish)?Hope this helps, It's only what I do and know, and I'm by no means an expert.
My thoughts are in red.
Chris
You are saying that all fish sold as "fresh" in supermarkets was previously frozen (non local fish)?
I need some help...I've smoked some salmon and steelhead previously - using a 4:1 sugar:salt dry brine and then smoking starting at 100* for an hour, and slowly bumping it up to 200* until IT was 145* (I think). So I've done this method a couple times and it turned out OK, but I want to try other brines/smokes to figure out what my wife likes best. So, my questions are:
2) If I buy a fresh unfrozen filet (which may have previously been frozen, but assume I don't know) - can I just cold smoke, or do I need to be concerned about parasites...and if I am concerned about parasites, what I can I do to kill them without going through a multi-day freeze?
I've done plenty of searching, but most posts are just saying the process they smoked their fish - but I haven't seen anything on the "what not to do" when cold/hot smoking fish.
I can understand the loss of quality if you re-freeze the fish...but what would be the potential food safety issues that you would be concerned about? If the initial flash-freeze kills the parasites, then they shouldn't be an issue with thawing and re-freezing (right?), since any potential parasite should have been killed in the initial freeze...especially if you keep it in the original plastic sealed package (which I'm assuming it came in).One of the costco stories i was referring to was about wild cod (with worm inside).
I also found live worms in halibut - i live nowhere near the ocean.
I am not concerned about loss of nutrients in fish frozen at sea. I am concerned with thawed fish sold as fresh that folks might freeze again at home - in which case there will be a loss of quality and potentially food safety issues.
The safety concern appears when the thawed fish is kept at above fridge temps.I can understand the loss of quality if you re-freeze the fish...but what would be the potential food safety issues that you would be concerned about? If the initial flash-freeze kills the parasites, then they shouldn't be an issue with thawing and re-freezing (right?), since any potential parasite should have been killed in the initial freeze...especially if you keep it in the original plastic sealed package (which I'm assuming it came in).