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| FishChoice Newsletter: April 20, 2011 |
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Dear Friends and Partners,
Most of you by now have probably seen the latest Greenpeace report, Carting Away the Oceans -version 5, that ranks the top U.S. retailers on the sustainability of their seafood. But did you know there is a group that rates restaurants on their seafood sustainability? Fish2Fork, founded by Charles Clover, the man behind the movie 'The End of Line,' has a program that evaluates "whether a restaurant is doing all it can to serve sustainable seafood."
The ratings system uses a clever blue fish, red fish system for the best or worst restaurants respectively on a spectrum of 1-5 fish. Over 100 restaurants in the U.S. have been assessed by this program and it is a useful resource for understanding more about seafood restaurants where you live or for when you travel. If you are a chef or restaurant owner, you can answer a questionnaire to get assessed and if you have a restaurant you want evaluated you can let Fish2Fork know on their website.
Cheers,
Justin Boevers
Outreach & Development Manager
FishChoice.com
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New Product Listings on FishChoice.com |
Some of the new sustainably rated or certified products posted on FishChoice.com recently include:
Please support FishChoice and mention us to the suppliers when you contact them regarding their product listings on the website.
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New Seafood Ratings |
Monterey Bay Aquarium just released two new ratings:
- American shad- U.S. Atlantic: Gillnet-caught is rated "Avoid."
- Weakfish (Sea Trout)- U.S. Atlantic: Gillnet, seine net, & bottom trawl-caught fisheries are rated "Avoid."
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Market Alert - Striped Bass & Blue Crab |
Striped Bass
Look for catches of high-quality wild striped bass to pick up starting in June, when the commercial hook-and-line fishery opens June 1 in Chesapeake Bay targeting resident populations of the smaller male striped bass. At the same time, the bigger female stripers will begin migrating inshore off New York and Massachusetts, where they are landed by commercial hook-and-line fishermen in Massachusetts and by gillnets and hook-and-line fishermen in New York. Continued...
Blue Crab
As the blue crab season opened in early April in Chesapeake Bay, watermen were optimistic they would have another good year. Last year's harvest was the best since 1997, following a number of bleak years that saw the blue crab harvest in the Bay decline to just 21,000 metric tons in 2003 before rebounding to more than 35,000 metric tons last year. Although the results of the annual winter dredge survey are not announced until the end of April, crabbers hit the water in early April amid reports that the dredge survey showed continued abundance of crab. Biologists from Maryland's Department of Natural Resources said that preliminary survey results looked "very promising." Continued...
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Quality Driving Sustainability in Halifax |
Fred Greene has seen a lot in some 50 years in the Nova Scotia fish business. In the 1980s, for example, he witnessed the near collapse of the industry, when Ottawa had to step in and bail out the biggest players to keep them afloat after they had engaged in an orgy of building too many processing plants and boats. He's seen towns like Canso, a 400-year-old fishing community on the northwestern tip of the island that survived plundering by the pirate Black Bart in the 1700s, collapse along with the cod stocks. One cod plant alone employed a quarter of the town's population. (Facing a budget deficit of almost $200,000 and a dwindling population that couldn't cover it, Canso decided to call it quits as a town late last year.)
Through the years, though, Fred Greene has managed to not only stay afloat, but to thrive by focusing on catching, processing and retailing top quality seafood. It hasn't been easy. Greene has built his company, Fisherman's Market of Halifax, into a vertically integrated business that owns numerous licenses, operates several hook-and-line fishing boats and operates several buying stations with live lobster holding tanks in four Nova Scotia ports, including Canso, and a processing plant and retail market in Halifax.
Fisherman's Market sells customers throughout Canada, the U.S., Europe and worldwide. Sustainability is an important issue to Fisherman's Market and they have been strong supporters and a part of the steering committee behind getting several local fisheries certified by the Marine Stewardship Council. As a result, Fisherman's Market can now offer scallops, haddock and harpoon swordfish from fisheries that have been MSC-certified. Meanwhile, several additional local fisheries have applied for MSC certification.
Still, some stocks, especially cod, have a long way to go before towns like Canso can recover. One of the impediments to the recovery of these stocks, say Nova Scotia processors like Greene, is an explosion in grey seal populations, some stocks of which have increased 10-fold in recent years. Off the southwest coast of the province, on the Scotian Shelf, there are so many seals Greene won't buy groundfish from there because the fish are infested with parasites from the seals. It all comes down to quality, he says. "I always tell my staff: If you wouldn't eat it yourself, don't sell it."
Click here, to see Fisherman's Market International's products, and remember to tell them you found them on FishChoice.com when you contact them.
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Will you be attending the National Restaurant Association Show?
FishChoice will be exhibiting at booth 373, and we always enjoy meeting those who are using our website, please contact us to let us know you'll be there.
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