iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app

Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
EatingWell

GET UPDATES FROM EatingWell
 

How To Buy The Healthiest Salmon

Posted: 03/30/2012 9:45 am

By Lisa Gosselin, Editorial Director, EatingWell Magazine

I went to two dinner parties recently and guess what was served at both? Salmon. It made me wonder: is salmon the new steak? If so, great! I LOVE this fish and am perfectly fine with that. My doctor probably is, too: the new U.S. Dietary Guidelines recommend Americans eat two servings of fish a week. There are so many different types of salmon, which is loaded with heart-healthy, brain-boosting omega-3 fats, and ways to serve them that it would be hard for me to get bored with this fish.

Recipes to Try: Easy Salmon Cakes and More Delicious Salmon Recipes

But that said, there are certain types of salmon that I try to stay away from and certain questions I always ask before I buy. Here are seven tips to help you buy the best salmon, which I reported on with Rowan Jacobsen in the March/April 2012 issue of EatingWell Magazine:

1. Wild or farmed?
The first choice you should make is whether to buy wild salmon (and all Alaskan salmon is wild-caught) or farmed Atlantic salmon. In most instances, I opt for wild salmon. Why? Environmental groups such as Seafood Watch and the Environmental Defense Fund, have put nearly all farmed salmon on their “red” or “avoid” list. The reason: many farms use crowded pens where salmon are easily infected with lice, may be treated with antibiotics and can spread disease to wild fish (one reason Alaska has banned salmon farms). In addition, it can take as much as three pounds of wild fish (and fishmeal) to raise one pound of salmon. However, there’s some good news. Salmon farmers are currently in talks with environmental groups about improving their practices and there is a proposal before Congress to set standards for aquaculture. Already some farms, such as Sweet Spring in British Columbia, are raising coho in closed pens, that reduce the impact on wild fish. Others, such as Verlasso in Patagonia, are using feeds fortified with the omega-3 EPA, which helps cut back the ratio of pounds of fish needed to feed the salmon to 1-to-1.

2. Should I buy organic salmon?
There is no USDA organic standard for salmon and no guarantee “organic” label means anything except the salmon was farmed.

Related: 12 Foods You Should Buy Organic

3. Is fresh salmon better than frozen? What about canned or packaged salmon?
You can order fresh salmon by mail order or find it in your markets from June-September. Most fish is flash-frozen when caught to preserve its freshness and allow for shipping. Frozen salmon is good for up to four months, when properly frozen and thawed overnight in the refrigerator. Canned wild salmon is an excellent and economical choice. Look for BPA-free cans (Wild Planet has these) or better yet, pouches.

Related: 3 Tips for Buying the Healthiest Canned Tuna

4. Does salmon carry PCBs or other toxins?
Wild Alaskan salmon, which spend most of their lives in open oceans, generally have very low levels of toxins. Coastal and farmed salmon, depending on the fish and meal they are fed, may have higher levels. The Environmental Defense Fund lists farmed Atlantic salmon as an “Eco-Worst” choice and recommends people eat no more than two servings a month due to high PCB levels.

Related: 7 Simple Ways to Detox Your Diet and Your Home

5. Do different types of salmon taste different?
There’s a wide range of price, color and taste among the six species of salmon we commonly eat, so it depends on your budget, what's available and the recipe you have in mind. The largest (and often most expensive), the king or chinook, is prized for its high fat content and buttery texture and is rich in omega-3s.  Sockeye, an oilier fish with deep red flesh, is also high in heart-healthy omega-3s but has a stronger flavor and stands up well to grilling. Coho is milder and often lighter in color. Pink and chum are smaller fish and most often used in canning or smoking and are good budget choices. Last, the most common fish you will find at the market, the species known as Atlantic salmon, is a farmed species. It has a rich, fatty taste but is not recommended by environmental groups (see Question #1).

6. Why is some salmon more orange than others?
Ever wonder why salmon flesh is orange? Thank carotenoids, the same pigments that make carrots orange. Those magical antioxidants combat the damaging effects of free radicals. The carotenoid in salmon is a particularly potent antioxidant known as astaxanthin, which has been shown to protect against cardiovascular disease, cancer, inflammation, eye diseases, general aging and many other conditions. Astaxanthin is produced by phytoplankton, tiny plants that use it to shield themselves from ultraviolet radiation. Shrimp, krill and other tiny crustaceans then eat the phytoplankton and accumulate astaxanthin in their bodies (which is what makes them pink), and then salmon eat them and store the astaxanthin in their skin and muscles. Sockeye, coho and king salmon have the deepest color orange whereas pink and chum salmon (most often canned) are the lightest. Many farmed Atlantic salmon are given feed with astaxanthin and, in some instances, a manufactured pigment called canthaxanthin, to turn their flesh orange.

7. Are fattier fish healthier?
In the case of salmon, the answer is yes—in terms of both taste and health! Salmon is a fantastic source of DHA, the omega-3 fatty acid that is essential for brain development, which comes from phytoplankton. DHA is stored in salmon’s fat, most often in the belly, and one 4-ounce serving of salmon can dish up 2,400 mg of omega-3s. Larger species, such as king, and those that have longer upstream journeys, tend to store more fat and have more omega-3s. Farmed salmon are often fattier than wild salmon but that’s because they are fed a diet that includes grains and vegetable oils high in omega-6 fats, which combat the beneficial effects of omega-3s in the body. However the higher fat content (often as high as 16 percent versus eight percent for wild fish) means the fish is easier to cook and retains its moistness.

Related: 4 More Top Food Sources of Omega-3 Fats

Do you buy wild or farmed salmon?

By Lisa Gosselin
Lisa Gosselin
Lisa Gosselin is the editorial director of EatingWell Media Group, publisher of the award-winning EatingWell Magazine, books such as EatingWell One-Pot Meals and The Simple Art of EatingWell, and EatingWell.com. She lives in Vermont, near EatingWell's headquarters and Test Kitchen.


Related Links from EatingWell:

 

Follow EatingWell on Twitter: www.twitter.com/eatingwell

FOLLOW TASTE
 
 
  • Comments
  • 8
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
mscellanus
U may kiss it!
07:44 PM on 03/30/2012
I live in Florida and about a week ago, Salmon was selling for $5.99 a pound. It usually sells for $7.99 or $9.99. This is the cheapest I have ever bought salmon for. I was just wondering if it comes from the Pacific Coast and thus affected by the Japanese earthquake and the Nuclear reactor's leakage into the ocean?
05:51 PM on 03/30/2012
On a trip to Alaska I saw the salmon farms. It was disgusting! Large mesh-net pens crammed full of fish swimming( well trying to-not much room) I saw them being fed "meal" Never again after that did I eat farmed salmon
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
AbsoluteTruthiness
After the Rapture, can I have your car?
05:35 PM on 03/30/2012
You should know that farmed salmon is fed corn products, and unless it's organic corn, that translates to eating a fish that is now contaminated with Round Up. ALL US corn is classified by the FDA as a pesticide. You can thank Montsanto for that nastiness. And non-organic US corn is banned in Europe, Asia and Mexico. And I'm sure that those who feed crap to farm-raised fish aren't going to spring for ORGANIC corn-based products. No way.

So, opt for wild caught. READ THE LABELS.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bobman173
03:51 PM on 03/30/2012
If you have an Aldi supermarket where you live, you can buy wild caught Salmon for $3.99 a pound. This is the cheapest I've seen it. The pound is split into four ounce pre-wrapped frozen packages. Just marinate them overnight in Mr. Yoshida teriyaki sauce, burbon, and lemon pepper seasoning and they are great.
05:12 PM on 03/30/2012
How are you sure its wild-caught? More likely coloring is added to the flesh to make it look wild caught.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bobman173
11:57 PM on 03/30/2012
It says so right on the package. It says catch method: seine, gill net. I have been shopping at Aldi for a while now and I tend to believe what it says on the package. The same company that owns Aldi also owns Trader Joes, and they are very reputable.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
a1putwins
Slow walking fast talking son of the south with a
06:27 PM on 03/30/2012
this a joke right? you marinate fresh wild salmon in teriaki sauce produced by someone named Mr. Yosida and you buy the "wild caught fish at a place called Aldi supermarket.
you are not funny. cut it out. quit. drop the fish. stand away from the fish. geesh