Wednesday, July 4, 2012

How Much Do You Know About Salmon? (Fisherpeople, Cooks, and Restaurant-goers)

Below are 11 questions about salmon, some for people who fish and others for people who eat.  Which facts did you know or not know? 

1.     Match the common name of a salmon species on the left with its alternative name(s) on the right (Some have more than one match).



1.     Pink
a.    Chinook
2.     Red
b.     Coho
3.     Silver
c.     Dog
4.     King
d.     Humpies or Humpbacks
5.     Chum
e.    Sockeyes

f.     Steelhead

g.    Blackmouth

h.    Spring salmon

i.      Tyee



  



2.         Which of the choices above right (letters) is a trick option because it is not really a salmon but a trout, despite its sales name, Atlantic salmon?



3.         Which species can potentially live the longest?  Which has the shortest lifespan?



4.         Which two species are the most common?



5.         Which two have the highest oil content (omega 3s), and are therefore best suited to grilling, smoking, and freezing?



6.         Which have the lowest oil content and therefore may lose texture when frozen and may dry out when cooked the wrong way?



7.    Which ones have the darkest, red-orange meat (while the others can be beige-pink)?



8.    Although the species run (migrate upstream) at different times in different parts of Alaska (and elsewhere), which of the numbered options tends to run the earliest?  The latest?


9.    Which species is exported in vast quantities to Japan and may be the one you eat at a sushi bar?


10.  Which species develops the startling green head and red body when spawning in fresh water?



11.  Which species is distinctive by its vertical stripes and deeply cut tail fin?


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How did you do?  For the answers and more information, enjoy the next blog entry, "Salmon Facts for Tourists, Cooks, and Restaurant-goers."


Saturday, June 2, 2012

Visitors among Other Invasive Creatures

(I welcome your comments and questions through the "comments" option below any entry. --Laura)

Everyone who has a second home on a lake or beach or other attractive setting has stories about their visitors.  Below are some of mine. 

Like any parent who is sure that his baby is the most beautiful in the world, Bryan’s love affair with the state of Alaska and his property adventure had prompted him to invite everyone on the planet to visit us over the next few summers.   Initially, I looked forward to these visitors as a break from outdoor labor.  On the other hand, the experiences of our first few visitors soon engendered in me an intense reaction approaching xenophobia.  I came to fear an onslaught of naïve visitors, larded up with the same multi-faceted ignorance that we demonstrated so amply on any given day.  Given Bryan’s superlatives, what if they expected a vacation resort rather than what was really a remote homestead?  What if they regarded words like “rustic” as something that still included indoor plumbing and a gravel road to a doctor or shopping mall?  On the other hand, what if they thought they knew their way around guns and fishing hooks and fire ... because they were of a particular gender that assumes muscle memory from being a cub scouts several decades earlier or watching Discovery Channel once upon a time.


With each ensuing visitor, I adapted a planning, and packing guide – whether to encourage or discourage visitors is open to interpretation.  I also limited the number of guests to one set per month and, except for relatives, to 3 days,  after one particularly social summer when I cooked 156 person/meals (yes - I counted) for business friends of my husband (and their families) - people I had never met before and rarely seen since.  

Below are some of the "best - worst guest anecdotes." 

 (Dear Friends:  you know who you are).