Seafood Seasonal update - April 2017
Salmon, seaweed and squat lobsters…find out about these unique and diverse industries this month in our Seasonal Update with the Staff Canteen.
Brought to you by Seafood Scotland, the national trade body for the Scottish seafood Industry. For further help on fishing methods, sustainability or advice on sourcing Scottish seafood for your restaurant, get in touch enquiries@seafoodscotland.org, 0131 557 9344.
Monthly Catch
Sustainability and traceability are high priorities for fish farmers and skippers, an important unique selling point of the 540,000 tonnes, worth £1bn, of Scottish seafood landed each year. The Scottish aquaculture (or fish-farming) industry, centred mostly in the cold clean waters off Scotland’s beautiful Highlands and islands, plays a significant part in this huge success story. Scotland is the biggest producer of salmon in the EU and the third largest globally.
Salmon’s domination continues. It’s the UK’s most popular seafood and consistently the number one Scottish food export. This year marks 25 years since it became the first non-French product to attract (and retain) the coveted Label Rouge quality mark from the French government, proving its strength in quality now world renowned!
Scottish farmed salmon PGI is prized in the Far East, with larger fish popular in Japanese restaurants for sushi, and with wealthier Chinese consumers who choose it for home cooking for its quality and strong provenance.
Scotland’s reputation for innovation (think telephone, Tarmac, the bicycle and haggis, of course) runs deep in this industry too. Worth considering are newer farmed species like halibut. It’s not an easy fish to farm but Gigha Halibut, the most southerly of the Hebridean islands, has cracked it. Recommended by MCS as a Fish to Eat, fish are hand-reared and fed an organic diet, and best cooked simply with just butter and lemon.
Farmed mussels are well established. Pacific rock oysters are now being produced in their millions each year, with lower volumes of slower-growing native species. It may surprise you to learn that king and queen scallops are being cultivated, though since volumes are very low they are perhaps only affordable by higher-end restaurants.
With technological expertise in sustainability growing by the day, it’s safe to say that when choosing Scottish, the world really is your oyster.
Species in season
Squat lobster, along with cockles and clams, are coming into season. Creel-caught mainly off the West Coast of Scotland, many chefs use them for rich-flavoured stock in dishes such as risotto and bouillabaisse, or as the base for deep-flavoured creamy lobster bisque.
For Graeme Cheevers, head chef at the Michelin-starred Restaurant Martin Wishart at Loch Lomond, this is the best way to use squat lobster, which he gets from Troon. “They’re the relatively inexpensive by-catch of the prawn boats, and full of flavour,” Graeme told The Staff Canteen. “Since they’re fiddly to handle individually they use up precious prep time so I prefer to use them as stock.”
Palourde clams can be cleaned and steamed in a large pot like mussels and used in pasta vongole, or in chowder. Another popular dish is cockle popcorn, where the opened shells are scraped of their tiny bounty, which are then dipped in batter and deep-fried (it’s possible to do the same with mussels).
Scotland produces some of the world’s finest seafood from the cool clean waters of its deep lochs and surrounding seas.
>>> Take a look at what else is available from Scotland here.
CLICK HERE If you would like a copy of the Seafood Seasonal Guide for your kitchen or help on fishing methods, sustainability or advice on sourcing Scottish seafood for your restaurant, get in touch: enquiries@seafoodscotland.org, 0131 557 9344.
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