Posts Tagged ‘seafood’

Now We’re Cooking Tilapia, Recipe Roundup

Thursday, October 15th, 2009

seared-tilapia

It’s been a tough job, but somebody had to do it. I’ve scoured some of the best home cooks’ blogs to find these tasty and simple tilapia recipes. With easy fish recipes like these, there’s no excuse not to eat more fish at home. Click the links to go directly to these tasty entrees.

Spicy Sauteed Tilapia with Cherry Tomatoes

This gorgeous dish, courtesy of Lynda’s Recipe Box, is a perfect way to use up the cheese in the feta container. It’s also a great example of improvising a recipe. Not having the exact ingredients didn’t stop Lynda. She simply substituted with something she had on hand. There are no rules, and sometimes it’s better to take a risk on an alternate ingredient than make an extra trip to the store.

Breaded Tilapia Sticks

I like this recipe on {creative cents} for two reasons. First, it’s frugal! It’s hard to go wrong when you start with tilapia, and this recipe keeps the cost down with simple ingredients. Everything you need is probably in your pantry or refrigerator right now. I also love that this recipe is baked. I make breaded tilapia at least twice a month, but I fry mine. It’s awfully tasty, but baking would definitely cut the calories!

Broiled Tilapia with Lime Chipotle Marinade

Normally, this would be just the type of recipe I’d shy away from. Lime Chipotle Marinade? Sounds fancy, doesn’t it? But a quick glance at the Soup Belly’s ingredient list hints at its simplicity. If you can’t get fresh nectarines, I’ll bet you could substitute with canned peaches in a pinch. The other reason I chose this recipe because the blog was so beautiful. Presentation is everything, after all. I’m a sucker for food bloggers who are also amazing photographers.

Pan Seared Lemon Tilapia with Parmesan Pasta

This simple preparation from Rachel vs. “The Kitchen” showcases the flavors of the lemon and spices. Super light and flavorful, and super fast to put together. Rachel reminds us that she pulled some frozen tilapia out of the freezer for this one. Easy!

Baja Shrimp and Tilapia Enchladas

This recipe was rounded up by a blogger I’ve recently discovered, Pioneer Woman. One of her readers submitted this unique combination of shrimp and tilapia, two of my favorites. Warning, you can lose yourself quickly on this beautiful website. That Pioneer Woman seems to do everything well!

Image Credit: LAYeiser, Flickr

Mislabeled Seafood: What Are You Eating?

Wednesday, July 1st, 2009

box_fish

Earlier this year the Government Accountability Office (GAO) released a report that formally acknowledges that companies illegally mislabeling seafood products in order to avoid paying anti-dumping duties are also evading U.S. food safety laws. While the report did not specifically identify tilapia as a mislabeled fish, it’s important for all of us to understand the lengths that certain companies will go to in order to avoid duties or taxes.

What is Seafood Fraud?

The Seafood Fraud report identifies seafood fraud as a variety of illegal activities done that occur at various points in the seafood supply chain, and result in economic gain to the seller. According to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), in fiscal year 2007, over 80 percent of the seafood consumed in the US was imported, most frequently from Canada, China, and Thailand. These products enter the country through an importer and before moving on to a distributor, who sells them to grocery stores and restaurants.

Seafood fraud typically involves mislabeling seafood products. The following are examples of specific techniques: 

Transshipment
This involves shipping seafood to another country before sending it on to the US so that the product is labeled with a different country of origin, therefore avoiding regulatory controls such as FDA import alerts.

Over-treating
Using excess breading, water-retaining chemicals, or over-glaze with ice can artificially increase the weight of seafood products.

Species Substitution
Seafood products are often labeled as a lower market value species to increase the seller’s profit.

Short-weighting
This refers to the practice of labeling packages of seafood as weighing more than they actually do.

The report gives a specific example of a Vietnamese exporter shipping thousands of pounds of catfish into the United States labeled as grouper. His intention was to avoid paying antidumping duties that the Department of Commerce had imposed on Vietnamese catfish.

“Incidents like these and others have led FDA officials, including a senior official in FDA’s Office of Food Safety, to reconsider the agency’s limited level of effort regarding economic fraud because they now believe that, if left unregulated, over time, seafood fraud may create food safety problems.”

According to the report, FDA has not previously been very responsive to consumer or industry complaints about mislabeling. One consumer complained about frozen shrimp labeled as a product of Mexico that had a second label underneath indicating it was a product of Thailand, a country subject to antidumping duties. FDA took no action according to the GAO.

The FDA is now working with Customs and Border Protection, the Department of Homeland Security, and Immigration and Customs Enforcement to target commodities that pose health and safety risks through Operation Guardian, which is an enforcement initiative to deal with imported substandard, tainted, and counterfeit products. Operation Guardian’s efforts have led to seizures of such commodities as pharmaceuticals, steel components, honey, shrimp, and toys. SSA will continue to work with these agencies to identify unlawful evasion of U.S. laws.

Food safety: it’s a big deal. Do you know where your seafood comes from?

Image Credit: Sidelong, Flickr