tOfficial Night Shift Thread v61 with less Gophers, Voles and Fake Birds

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I always had the best luck trout fishing with salmon eggs, though I doubt they were actually salmon eggs. Also has a lot of luck using the eyeball of a trout that had already been cleaned and cooked.

But I’m not a big fan of trout. Too much work for a fish people use as striper bait
 
Twas the salmon I had last week.

Ma makes da best salmon patties!
They’re good. My grandma makes some damn good ones, but she rarely makes them. There’s a store around here that makes good salmon patty biscuits, but it’s out of the way from anywhere I ever go
 
Ugh. So gross. I usually end up getting steelhead because all the salmon is farmed and looks disgusting.

You should see it before they dye it.

There's farmed salmon out there, but the people here prefer the sockeye (red) salmon, especially the Copper River salmon from Alaska. They fly them in and people are lined up to buy them at $19 or more a pound.
 
There's farmed salmon out there, but the people here prefer the sockeye (red) salmon, especially the Copper River salmon from Alaska. They fly them in and people are lined up to buy them at $19 or more a pound.
That's great for folks that live near the PNW coast.
 
But the best way to eat salmon is canned salmon

On those infrequent occasions when I eat salmon, for canned salmon I like the red salmon mixed with chopped hardboiled egg, chopped onions, mayonnaise, yellow or dijon mustard with lettuce and tomato on toasted bread.
 
Oh, and the "corruption" I mentioned lies within the "wild-caught" and "organic" labels.

Actual wild-caught salmon isn't much better. Multiple studies average over 75% of wild salmon infected with anisakid nematodes. (@Dole ver 2.0...this is in yer wheelhouse, bud)

Something like 80% of the available salmon is farmed, and it is nasty af.
 
Oh, and the "corruption" I mentioned lies within the "wild-caught" and "organic" labels.

Actual wild-caught salmon isn't much better. Multiple studies average over 75% of wild salmon infected with anisakid nematodes. (@Dole ver 2.0...this is in yer wheelhouse, bud)

Something like 80% of the available salmon is farmed, and it is nasty af.
Have you seen the Seaspiracy doc on Netflix? I've heard mixed reviews, but it's on my list to watch.
 
welll fml

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