Grocery Store Seafood: What to Eat and What to Avoid
by
Mark Sisson
Mark’s Daily Apple
Recently
by Mark Sisson: Farmed
Seafood: What’s Safe and Nutritious
In the comment
section of last week's post on farmed
seafood, readers asked about the safety of regular, everyday
seafood that you can find in any supermarket in the country – the
popular, easily obtainable species that conventional supermarkets
proudly display on ice, in frozen sections, and in cans and packets.
Not crayfish, New Zealand green lipped mussels, and boutique tank
raised Coho salmon, but tilapia, cod, and crab. They may not be
ideal or as sexy as some of the species from last week, but they
are common.
So – what's
common? To make this as objective and universal as possible, I'll
examine the ten most common seafoods consumed by Americans. As of
2009, they
were, from most eaten to least eaten: shrimp, canned tuna, salmon,
pollock, tilapia, catfish, crab, cod, clams, and pangasius. Shrimp
I'll cover in depth next week, catfish and clams were handled last
week, and I covered farmed
versus wild salmon a couple years ago, but what about the others?
Which are worth eating? Which should be avoided?
Let's take
a look.
Tuna
The tuna is
a big predatory fish, rather high up on the food chain. As such,
it tends to accumulate heavy metals present in the food chain, with
mercury being the most egregious of the bunch. Mercury in tuna gets
a ton of bad press, not because it's the worst offender – that honor
is shared by shark, marlin, king mackerel, and a few other niche
fish – but because it's the second-most consumed fish in the nation,
and small children and unborn fetuses are particularly vulnerable
to it. You don't see toddlers clamoring for king mackerel casserole,
do you? It's also affordable, comes in convenient cans, mixes well
with mayo,
tastes relatively mild (as opposed to canned sardines or mackerel),
and is a staple for bodybuilders everywhere. It's essentially really
easy to eat a lot of canned tuna on a regular basis, so the relatively
elevated levels of mercury in tuna are problematic.
There are many
species of tuna with varying mercury contents. Canned white, or
albacore, tuna has more mercury on average than canned light tuna,
which is skipjack, tongol, or smaller yellowfin; pregnant
women and small children are advised to eat no more than six
ounces of the former or twelve ounces of the latter each week. To
be on the safe side, I'd suggest those groups avoid the stuff altogether
and maybe eat sardines, mackerel,
or wild salmon for the omega-3s
instead. Both canned varieties tend to have less
mercury than tuna steaks or fillets, probably because larger
(and thus, more mercury-rich) fish produce better steaks, while
smaller fish work better in cans. Other types of fresh or frozen
tuna you might run into include ahi, also known as yellowfin (longline
caught yellowfin are larger and contain higher levels of mercury,
while troll/pole-caught yellowfin are smaller and contain lower
levels), and albacore, which is more expensive than ahi and milder.
Bottom
line: Tuna is tasty, especially the steaks, and it's a
decent source of omega-3s,
but the mercury content can't be ignored. Avoid if you are pregnant,
nursing, or a small child, and don't make tuna of any kind a daily
staple. Look for troll and pole-caught tuna over longline-caught
tuna, as the former tend to run smaller and accumulate fewer contaminants
than the latter. Also, Atlantic tuna seems to run with higher
mercury content than Pacific tuna, regardless of species, with
ahi/yellowfin running lower than albacore.
Salmon
Regular grocery
store salmon is almost always of the farmed Atlantic variety, which
happens to be the variety I already
lambasted. Avoid it and stick with wild Alaskan salmon, the
fisheries of which are extremely well
managed and sustainable. There's also wild Pacific salmon caught
off the coasts of California, Washington, and Oregon, which I sometimes
get at local farmers' markets. I still like Alaskan sockeye salmon
best, even the frozen stuff, but they're all worth eating.
Bottom
line: Eat wild salmon, which is a great source of protein,
omega-3s, and selenium. Avoid farmed salmon (unless it's that fancy
tank-raised Coho salmon I mentioned last week).
Tilapia
Tilapia is
fast-becoming a consumer favorite, for a few reasons. It's cheap
to raise. It isn't carnivorous, meaning farmers can use corn and
soy pellets without springing for comparatively pricey fishmeal.
The fish's vegetarianism also endears tilapia to those who worry
about the state of wild fish stocks (a concern that, though I also
share it, must be meted out against concerns about corn
and soy subsidies). Parents and schools love it because it's bland
enough to feed to picky kids with dysfunctional industrial taste
buds (just add ketchup). Plus, it's technically fish and therefore
"healthy," meaning heart disease patients and hospitals can satisfy
the AHA's recommendations that folks eat at least two servings of
fish a week by eating a few inexpensive, inoffensive tilapia fillets.
Don't tell
them that they aren't getting much omega-3 out of it, though. According
to the USDA nutrient database, tilapia contains very few omega-3
fatty acids at just 200 milligrams per 100 gram serving. In fact,
that same 100 gram portion contains very few fatty acids in general
– 800 mg saturated fat, 700 mg monounsaturated fat, and 200 mg omega-6
polyunsaturated fat. According to a recent
study, however, tilapia has far more omega-6
than the database would suggest, with most of it coming as arachidonic
acid (which admittedly isn't as problematic as excessive dietary
linoleic acid). Overall, it's a lean fish, akin to chicken breast.
I find it pretty inoffensive if uninteresting. It's low
in contaminants, inexpensive, and melds into any dish without
asserting itself. Good as a cheap source of protein, but not as
a source of unique marine nutrition.
Tilapia comes
frozen, whole, live, or in fresh fillets. Most frozen tilapia comes
from China or Taiwan, while fresh comes either from US or South/Central
American farms. Live tilapia are US farmed, and pretty rare (go
to Asian supermarkets for these). Asian tilapia is inexpensive,
but the Monterey
Bay Seafood Watch recommends against eating it very often due
to poor farming conditions. Stick to US farmed tilapia if possible.
South/Central American also gets good marks. Tilapia farming is
fairly intensive, and caged tilapia raised in freshwater ponds can
pollute
surrounding waters, but standards
seem to be changing for the better.
Bottom
line: American and S/C. American tilapia is a safe source
of protein, but it's not a good source of omega-3s. If environmental
impact matters, buy American. Avoid Asian imports (at least until
the aforementioned farming standards are adopted worldwide).
Read
the rest of the article
May 19, 2011
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