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Normal
01-18-2025, 06:22 AM
I agree with OP the loss of a true grocery to Aldi wouldn’t fit our grocery needs, even for a quick necessity.

Then again anyone remember Sweetbay in LSL, until it was bought by WD? I loved that store staff was knowledgeable, great deli, well stocked.

Now LSL gets to shop out of a cardboard box. My guess is Kroger trucks will be far more prominent around LSL.
I am confused why would anyone buy salmon from Aldi, when Fresh Market has better quality in the same price range.

Yum, a buttery Atlantic salmon slow cooked on a grill via cedar plank. Is there anything better?

asianthree
01-18-2025, 06:29 AM
Yum, a buttery Atlantic salmon slow cooked on a grill via cedar plank. Is there anything better?

Our dinner tonight….Pecan plank, Salmon with pecan balsamic drizzle, lightly roasted potatoes with grilled zucchini. Peach half grilled with homemade ice cream.

Normal
01-18-2025, 06:43 AM
Our dinner tonight….Pecan plank, Salmon with pecan balsamic drizzle, lightly roasted potatoes with grilled zucchini. Peach half grilled with homemade ice cream.

Very nice. I do a brown sugar coated with teriyaki sauce and crushed pineapple. Asparagus sprouts rolled around in tinfoil olive oil and sea salt on the side.

I will have to try yours out. Who can turn down ice cream?

Kelevision
01-18-2025, 08:17 AM
Our dinner tonight….Pecan plank, Salmon with pecan balsamic drizzle, lightly roasted potatoes with grilled zucchini. Peach half grilled with homemade ice cream.

Hopefully it’s wild caught salmon. There’s so much farm raised crap out there. They have to use dye to color the flesh “salmon”

LuvtheVillages
01-18-2025, 09:46 AM
Yum, a buttery Atlantic salmon slow cooked on a grill via cedar plank. Is there anything better?

Yes, lots of better salmon! Atlantic salmon is farm raised, with questionable sanitation and questionable feed.

Wild caught is cleaner and better tasting. No additives for coloring. More omega-3's.

Try king salmon, or sockeye salmon, or coho salmon.

asianthree
01-18-2025, 04:13 PM
Hopefully it’s wild caught salmon. There’s so much farm raised crap out there. They have to use dye to color the flesh “salmon”

Yes, lots of better salmon! Atlantic salmon is farm raised, with questionable sanitation and questionable feed.

Wild caught is cleaner and better tasting. No additives for coloring. More omega-3's.

Try king salmon, or sockeye salmon, or coho salmon.

So my salmon comes from the waters of Alaska, fished by hand from a Native tribe. Both amazing smoked and fresh flash frozen, arriving yearly. The color is beyond anything one sees in grocery.

The 20lb ish box of Salmon, itself is a gift of gratitude, for something our oldest selfless sacred act that made the tribe, whole.

So honestly compared to whatever Salmon you are eating, it doesn’t come close to fresh out of the river, without any bear bite marks. (Not a joke, for anyone who has fished Alaska).

FloridaGuy66
01-18-2025, 05:16 PM
Yes, lots of better salmon! Atlantic salmon is farm raised, with questionable sanitation and questionable feed.

Wild caught is cleaner and better tasting. No additives for coloring. More omega-3's.

Try king salmon, or sockeye salmon, or coho salmon.

I'm surprised in today's age of information that people still believe this long debunked myth that farmed salmon is dyed.

I thought only conspiracy people still believed that kind of stuff.

Stu from NYC
01-18-2025, 08:05 PM
I'm surprised in today's age of information that people still believe this long debunked myth that farmed salmon is dyed.

I thought only conspiracy people still believed that kind of stuff.

I have heard from good sources that the color we get is not the color of salmon swimming in a farm

Bill14564
01-18-2025, 09:20 PM
I have heard from good sources that the color we get is not the color of salmon swimming in a farm

From three out of three sources I found, your "good sources" are mistaken..

Now, is it true that farm raised salmon is fed a diet that causes them to turn pink? Yes, the same diet they eat in the wild. Farm raised salmon is the same color as wild salmon because the farmers feed them a similar diet.

Two Bills
01-19-2025, 06:08 AM
From three out of three sources I found, your "good sources" are mistaken..

Now, is it true that farm raised salmon is fed a diet that causes them to turn pink? Yes, the same diet they eat in the wild. Farm raised salmon is the same color as wild salmon because the farmers feed them a similar diet.

It is my experience, having eaten both, that wild salmon is a deeper pink.
And the excessive fat lines in farmed trout and salmon is also a major difference between both.
I have also caught many river trout over the years, and the difference between wild and farmed is easily recognized.

New Englander
01-19-2025, 10:06 AM
Just one answer among many, but I can tell you my reason for buying salmon at Aldi. We are very picky so we don't eat salmon out (usually), and Aldi is the one place we can get NON POND RAISED, non Atlantic, USA Alaskan wild sockeye caught in season at a reasonable (not inexpensive but reasonable cost). We have and do order whole copper river salmon at Fresh market when available. Personally don't believe anyone can come close to quality of Aldi's produce, nor beat their prices. To each their own, at least we have many many choices here, something to please everyone hopefully,

:agree:

FloridaGuy66
01-19-2025, 03:16 PM
I have heard from good sources that the color we get is not the color of salmon swimming in a farm

Please state your "good sources".

Wild Salmon is a different color because they're fed differently than wild salmon. Different amounts and types of carotenoids that give salmon the distinctive pink color.

There's no dye involved.

Dr.SammieMD
01-19-2025, 03:20 PM
Costco has fresh wild Alaskan salmon during the season at a very fair price. Also, during the off season, they often have previously-frozen, cryovacced wild Alaskan salmon, again at a reasonable price and difficult to distinguish from fresh. Finally, they have two grades of farmed salmon in most stores - one from Chile and another, far better in my opinion, from Norway. The Norwegian is 2 to 3 dollars per pound more expensive, and well worth the price.

tag460
01-19-2025, 05:20 PM
Sam's Club usually has fillets of wild caught salmon. Every year towards the end of June early July Publix flies in fresh caught never ben frozen salmon from Alaska.

CFrance
01-19-2025, 05:40 PM
Costco has fresh wild Alaskan salmon during the season at a very fair price. Also, during the off season, they often have previously-frozen, cryovacced wild Alaskan salmon, again at a reasonable price and difficult to distinguish from fresh. Finally, they have two grades of farmed salmon in most stores - one from Chile and another, far better in my opinion, from Norway. The Norwegian is 2 to 3 dollars per pound more expensive, and well worth the price.
What is the season for the fresh wild Alaskan salmon? We're about to make a run to Costco.
Otherwise, Norwegian salmon is sustainable, even the farmed.

Kelevision
01-20-2025, 07:10 AM
From three out of three sources I found, your "good sources" are mistaken..

Now, is it true that farm raised salmon is fed a diet that causes them to turn pink? Yes, the same diet they eat in the wild. Farm raised salmon is the same color as wild salmon because the farmers feed them a similar diet.

They add a chemical called astaxanthin in their food. Without the chemical in their feed, the farm-raised salmon would naturally be white.

opinionist
01-20-2025, 07:39 AM
They have wild-caught salmon at Marion Market.

Bill14564
01-20-2025, 07:41 AM
They add a chemical called astaxanthin in their food. Without the chemical in their feed, the farm-raised salmon would naturally be white.

Salmon in the wild eat crustaceans (shrimp, krill, etc) that feed on astaxanthin. Without the shrimp and krill in their diet, the wild salmon would naturally be white (gray).

From here (https://thekitchenknowhow.com/is-salmon-dyed/)as well as other sources:
Salmon are unable to produce astaxanthin on their own, so they accumulate it through their diet. The more astaxanthin-containing prey they eat, the redder their flesh becomes.

Wild salmon and farmed salmon are the same color. If farmed salmon are fed the astaxanthin that wild salmon eat, then farmed salmon are red. If wild salmon cannot find enough astaxanthin-rich food then wild salmon are white. Wild salmon and farmed salmon are the same color and neither is injected with dye.

EDIT: It looks like no one claimed that farmed salmon were injected, the assertion was they were dyed. In as much as they are fed a diet that turns them pink then yes, I suppose they are fed a dye. It needs to be noted that the pink color of wild salmon comes from the same exact dye in their diet.

DrMack
01-20-2025, 08:39 AM
Any salmon are great for your diet no matter what others say. Yes some do have more or less Omega 3 content and other beneficial nutrients, but there rarely is a significant portion or difference.

I wonder if those that bash farm raised salmon have ever eaten crustaceans, whose intakes are loaded with all the junk from the sea floor, know that farm raised salmon are much better for them than their scallops, lobster or shrimp that eat the true garbage of the ocean.

Bay Kid
01-20-2025, 08:41 AM
How about the fish cart at Brownwood market? What are your thoughts about her fish?

Normal
01-20-2025, 09:48 AM
I'm surprised in today's age of information that people still believe this long debunked myth that farmed salmon is dyed.

I thought only conspiracy people still believed that kind of stuff.

Of course not all Atlantic Salmon is farm raised.

CoachKandSportsguy
01-20-2025, 10:02 AM
Alaskan in season salmon is June-July, get yours flown in directly from Pike's market
Just a moment... (https://pikeplacefish.goldbelly.com/categories/salmon)

or, wait until the local grocer's fly in their ownfish.

I would buy the whole, split the cost with another person or two, three, cut it down the middle,
and then grill the salmon with a touch of seasoning, and feel very happy about once a year.

The local fish market in MA buys their flown in from the major Boston fish market,
and resells the cuts at $30-40 per pound, depending. . .

flown in whole fish are about $30 per pound plus shipping

PJOHNS2654
01-20-2025, 10:09 AM
I have recently grilled Pharos Island salmon from Fresh Market. The best I have ever tasted. About $20. a pound.

OrangeBlossomBaby
01-20-2025, 03:38 PM
I usually get a couple pieces of Bourbon Salmon fillets at Publix. It doesn't matter to me where they're sourced, they satisfy my taste buds just fine. For smoked salmon, I've found Flakeowitz in Boynton Beach makes great Nova, and they also have belly lox which is amazing. Even more - they have smoked sable. Stupidly expensive, but you only buy 1/8 of a pound at a time anyway. Now if only I could find a place that has smoked carp, I'd die happy.

Dr.SammieMD
01-20-2025, 05:01 PM
What is the season for the fresh wild Alaskan salmon? We're about to make a run to Costco.
Otherwise, Norwegian salmon is sustainable, even the farmed.
The season usually starts in late May and lasts through September. Also, be aware that the Keta salmon, which usually appears at the end of the season, was originally called Chum salmon and was used as dog food. Years ago, they couldn't give it away for $1.99 per pound. That was about a quarter of thee price of the other wild salmons.

Stu from NYC
01-20-2025, 05:19 PM
Alaskan in season salmon is June-July, get yours flown in directly from Pike's market
Just a moment... (https://pikeplacefish.goldbelly.com/categories/salmon)

or, wait until the local grocer's fly in their ownfish.

I would buy the whole, split the cost with another person or two, three, cut it down the middle,
and then grill the salmon with a touch of seasoning, and feel very happy about once a year.

The local fish market in MA buys their flown in from the major Boston fish market,
and resells the cuts at $30-40 per pound, depending. . .

flown in whole fish are about $30 per pound plus shipping

We buy a half salmon every few months from Sams, pay about $ 12 per pound and enjoy it.

Ecuadog
01-20-2025, 05:24 PM
I found this years ago and use it for reference:

KNOW YOUR SALMON

All wild salmon taste their best when caught just before their journey home to freshwater spawning grounds, since they prepare for the trip by fattening up on ocean crustaceans. Featured here are the six varieties available in the United States.

1. Also known as chinook salmon, the mighty king can weigh well over a hundred pounds; its habitat ranges from California to Alaska. The meaty fish has a pure flavor and ample fat and cooks beautifully over a charcoal fire.

2. The coho salmon, also called silver salmon, constitutes just 10 percent of the commercial salmon fishery in the United States. Making its home in the waters from Oregon to Alaska and available in markets from late summer through fall, the fish has a firm texture and a rich, gamey flavor suited to simple preparations like poaching.

3. Pink salmon, also called humpback salmon, is the smallest variety available in this country, averaging only five pounds; the most abundant, it's often canned. Lower in fat, the delicate, sweet flesh of pink salmon has a subtle flavor best brought out by pan-frying or whole-roasting.

4. Sometimes known as leaper salmon, the Atlantic salmon once flourished in North Atlantic waters, but overfishing, pollution, and a host of other factors have decimated wild stocks. Demand for this fatty, full-flavored salmon, probably the most versatile variety when it comes to cooking, is met mostly by fish farms, which now produce more than half of all the salmon sold in this country.

5. The flesh of the red, or sockeye, salmon, a variety of Pacific salmon whose range stretches from British Columbia to Alaska and which is the second-fattiest type, has a distinctive, deep orange-red color and is dense and full-flavored. Sockeye, which first comes to market in May, is usually the variety favored for raw preparations.

6. The abundant and relatively neutral-tasting chum salmon, sometimes called keta salmon, is second only to the king in size and inhabits waters throughout the Pacific Northwest; chum salmon is harvested in the late fall and is most often canned, smoked, or cured.

JustSomeGuy
01-20-2025, 07:37 PM
They add a chemical called astaxanthin in their food. Without the chemical in their feed, the farm-raised salmon would naturally be white.
Here is the exact situation with farm raised salmon..... same primary sources for astaxanthin - which is GOOD for you no matter the source. In the business.

Is Salmon Dyed? The Truth Behind the Color of Farmed Salmon (https://thekitchenknowhow.com/is-salmon-dyed/)

Salmon are unable to produce astaxanthin on their own, so they accumulate it through their diet. The more astaxanthin-containing prey they eat, the redder their flesh becomes. Some species like sockeye salmon consume more of these pigmented foods and so have deeper red flesh. Other species like chinook salmon eat more fish and have paler meat.

So contrary to myth wild salmon are naturally pink – not gray. Their coloration comes from their natural diet.
Do Farmed Salmon Need Dye?

Aquaculture nutritionists make pelleted food that farmed salmon eat while they are raised in pens. To ensure optimal health and color, astaxanthin is added to their feed. Without this supplement, farmed salmon would be pale gray.

The astaxanthin for farm-raised salmon comes from natural sources like algae and yeast. It is the exact same pigment that makes wild salmon pink. There are no artificial dyes or color additives used.

The flesh color of salmon, whether wild or farmed, depends on how much astaxanthin they consume. Farmers can adjust dietary levels to achieve the desired pinkness. But the pigment itself is 100% natural, just like in wild fish.

Watch for Copper River Salmon in Costco. They fly it in fresh to their warehouses when the season starts (mid May until mid June or so) for about 3-4 weeks at a price better than anywhere. They set the season sometime in early May and it can be mid to late May (normally around May 15th/16th. It freezes very well so stock up!

SHIBUMI
01-22-2025, 03:45 PM
Hi,
Please call........508-454-4000

Thanks, Richard Iwaszko, PGA


Hopefully it’s wild caught salmon. There’s so much farm raised crap out there. They have to use dye to color the flesh “salmon”