Coho or Sockeye?
KBGirts
Posts: 882 Member
Which one is "better"?
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Replies
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I prefer sockeye.0
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Now I figured it out...had to join the group...
Sockeye (or blueback as the Quinault Indians call it) is probably the oiliest (sp), which gives it a buttery flavor
coho is good, but my fav is steelhead0 -
Ditto.. I prefer sockeye. I don't know if one is nutritionally better than the other, but sockeye is darker red flesh and I've been told the darker fleshed salmon are fattier/oilier, ie better for you. I don't know if that's true, but but when I've had coho its been dry and kind of mushy.. Ick0
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I like oily fish, so I may stick with sockeye. I'll try the coho just to see though. i just wanted to make sure they are comparable in terms of nutrition and environmental sustainability.0
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Sockeye, and make sure it is a wild caught fish.0
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Ya, make sure your fish is wild caught, both species can be harvested in a sustainable manner, you just don't want the farmed crap, which coho can be, not so for sockeye.0
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Steelhead salmon used to be known as steelhead trout. It has only been recently that DNA testing determined the difference. Landlocked steelheads are also known as rainbow trout; in fact that is their common name. The term 'steelhead' is used to differentiate between those rainbows that stay in fresh water permanently and those that go out to the ocean. That being the case, be careful to make sure that they aren't farmed or artificial coloring isn't used to make them look more like salmon.Now I figured it out...had to join the group...
Sockeye (or blueback as the Quinault Indians call it) is probably the oiliest (sp), which gives it a buttery flavor
coho is good, but my fav is steelhead0 -
Steelhead salmon used to be known as steelhead trout. It has only been recently that DNA testing determined the difference. Landlocked steelheads are also known as rainbow trout; in fact that is their common name. The term 'steelhead' is used to differentiate between those rainbows that stay in fresh water permanently and those that go out to the ocean. That being the case, be careful to make sure that they aren't farmed or artificial coloring isn't used to make them look more like salmon.Now I figured it out...had to join the group...
Sockeye (or blueback as the Quinault Indians call it) is probably the oiliest (sp), which gives it a buttery flavor
coho is good, but my fav is steelhead
Thanks, trust me I know, and the only steelhead I will eat comes straight from tribal fisheries.0 -
Whenever available, you must try copper river king. Truly hard to beat, and impossible to find in any restaurant.0
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Whenever available, you must try copper river king. Truly hard to beat, and impossible to find in any restaurant.
This. Best tasting salmon I ever had. Fried it crisp in some butter, but it definitely doesn't need the butter to be sweet-tasting! I almost cried yesterday when I went back to the store and they were out. Today I'm gonna try some wild sockeye, hope I'm not disappointed by the comparison!0 -
It is indeed a very short run. I usually stock up the freezer to last me a year. Makes me wildly popular at bbqs in late summer.0
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