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The Eel Deal: This D.C. Restaurant Serves Up Eel From The Chesapeake

September 14, 2018 โ€” Eels are misunderstood. Theyโ€™re slimy, and look like snakesโ€”which makes it hard for some people to stomach the thought of eating one. But eel season is ramping up at one D.C. restaurant, where the chef serves eels caught in the Chesapeake Bay.

Despite appearances, eels are fish. They breathe through gills and move using two long finsโ€”one down their back, another along their bellies. The two fins meet to form a tail.

At seafood restaurant The Salt Line, chef Kyle Bailey is happy to offer eel to his customers.

โ€œTheyโ€™re available and I want that because I donโ€™t see them anywhere else in town, and I would love to be the restaurant that has something that nobody else has,โ€ Bailey says.

Baileyโ€™s eels are provided by Dock-to-Dish, a restaurant-supported fishery program in the Washington region. It allows chefs to trace the fish they get back to the dock they came from.

From Kent Island To The Salt Line

The source of Baileyโ€™s eels is Troy Wilkins, one of a couple dozen Maryland watermen who fish for the elusive, yet abundant creatures on a regular basis.

On a recent day, Wilkins sails near Kent Island in the Chesapeake. From the deck of his fishing boat, the Misty Tango, he reels in two-foot-long, cylindrical eel pots one by one.

Several pots come up nearly full. Roughly a dozen greenish-brown eels writhe around inside the pots before he dumps them into a holding tank. Some eels are big, about four or five pounds. Others are much smaller.

Read the full story at DCist

 

Dock to Dish Prepares New Seafood-Tracking System

February 8, 2018 โ€” Itโ€™s 10 p.m. Do you know where your shipments of iced-down, black sea bass are? Or perhaps you want to check on the status of the longline boat that is catching your carton of golden tilefish from the 500-foot depths of the Hudson Canyon, located about 80 miles south of Montauk? For those who demand the freshest, most sustainable seafood, and partake in the increasingly popular and expanding Montauk-headquartered Dock to Dish community-supported fishery program, keeping an eye on your seafood order is a simple mouse click away.

โ€œMore and more people want to know where, when, and how their fish are caught,โ€ explained Sean Barrett, a fisherman and restaurateur who founded the cooperative fishery program in 2012. โ€œOur motto is โ€˜know your fishermanโ€™ and that has not changed. Members of Dock to Dish can check in real time the status of their catch from the beginning of the fishing trip all the way until it is delivered by hand right to their doorstep. Itโ€™s just one of the many enhancements we have made since we started.โ€

This year Mr. Barrett hopes to improve the fishery marketplace by having the worldโ€™s first live tracking dashboard so that end consumers on land can monitor hauls of wild seafood from individual fishermen at sea in near-real time. Named Dock to Dish 2.0, the new technology bundle was created in partnership with several fish tracking companies, including Pelagic Data Systems, Local Catch, and Fish Trax. Once completed, the bundle will be open-sourced, meaning it can be replicated and used by all independent small and medium-scale fisheries operations around the world.

โ€œDock to Dish 2.0 is the first public-facing system to ever combine vessel and vehicle tracking with geospatial monitoring technologies on an interactive digital dashboard,โ€ Mr. Barrett explained last month as he unloaded a catch of tilefish just outside the kitchen door of Nick and Toniโ€™s, one of the first members of Dock to Dishโ€™s restaurant-supported fisheries program. Fishing boats will be outfitted with solar-powered automatic data-collection monitors and application-specific wireless sensors.

Read the full story at the East Hampton Star

 

You May Soon Be Able to Track Your Seafood in Real Time to Fight Fish Fraud

March 29, 2017 โ€” Fishermen and chefs are working together to curb rampant fraud in the seafood industry by allowing people to track a fish from the moment itโ€™s caught until it lands at a restaurant or market.

Dock to Dish, an organization that fights seafood fraud by connecting chefs with fisheries in their local communities, is building a tracking system in an effort to solve the common problem of mislabeled seafood. A global test of more than 25,000 samples of seafood found that 1 in 5 was mislabeled as the wrong type of fish, according to a 2016 report from ocean conservation advocacy group Oceana, meaning people often purchase and eat seafood that is not what they presume it to be.

โ€œPeople want to know. Theyโ€™re demanding to know where food is coming from,โ€ Dock to Dish co-founder Sean Barrett said.

The organization has raised more than $69,000 of its $75,000 Kickstarter goal to build a tracking system called Dock to Dish 2.0. In addition to supplying local restaurants with the catch of the day, Dock to Dish aims to present a digitized โ€œend to end program that can answer every single question a consumer might have,โ€ Barrett said.

The program would enable restaurant guests to see where their dinners come from through an online dashboard that displays newly caught fish in barcoded bags, which can be tracked as they travel to eateries. Customers would also be able to chat with fishermen before heading out to eat.

Read the full story at Time 

Sustainable Fishburger Based On Chef Eric Ripertโ€™s Recipe Coming To Hamptons School

January 8, 2016 โ€” A group of extraordinary East End chefs have joined forces in the kitchen for The Montauk Fishburger Project, an initiative that aims to familiarize local elementary and high school students with one of the areaโ€™s plentiful, nutritious resources, which is being conscientiously harvested under firm federal and state fisheries management regulations, incredibly close to home.

The program is being pioneered by the founding members of Dock to Dish, the first Restaurant Supported Fishery program in the U.S., who have now established the inaugural partnership with The Long Island Commercial Fishing Association and the Bridgehampton Edible School Garden program, with the goal of making wild, sustainable, traceable local seafood readily available to East End youth.

Read the full story at Hamptons Online

DR. RAY HILBORN: Plenty of Sustainable Seafood Options Available

December 28, 2015 โ€” The rising trend of โ€œtrash fish,โ€ or unusual and underutilized seafood species, on fine dining menus in New York City was discussed last week in The New York Times by Jeff Gordinier. The idea is to, โ€œsubstitute salmon, tuna, shrimp and cod, much of it endangered and the product of dubious (if not destructive) fishing practices,โ€ with less familiar species that are presumably more abundant, like โ€œdogfish, tilefish, Acadian redfish, porgy, hake, cusk, striped black mullet.โ€

Changing dinersโ€™ perceptions isnโ€™t always easy, especially about seafood, but there is certainly momentum building for more diverse seafood species. Seafood suppliers are reporting record sales of fish like porgy and hake. Chefs feel good about serving these new species because, โ€œindustrially harvested tuna, salmon and cod is destroying the environment.โ€ A new organization, Dock-to-Dish, connects restaurants with fishermen that are catching underutilized species and these efforts are highlighted as a catalyst for this growing trash fish trend. From a culinary perspective, this trend allows chefs to sell the story of an unusual and sustainable species, which more compelling than more mainstream species like tuna, salmon or cod. From a sustainability perspective, Gordinier implies that serving a diversity of seafood species is more responsible than the mainstream few that are โ€œindustrially caughtโ€ and dominate the National Fisheries Institute list of most consumed species in America.

Comment by Ray Hilborn, University of Washington

While I applaud the desire to eat underutilized species, it seems as if the chefs interviewed donโ€™t know much about sustainable seafood. Below are a few quotes from the article that give the impression that eating traditional species such as tuna, cod, salmon and shrimp is an environmental crime.

โ€œSalmon, tuna, shrimp and cod, much of it endangered and the product of dubious (if not destructive) fishing practicesโ€

โ€œThe chef Molly Mitchell, canโ€™t imagine serving industrially harvested tuna or salmon or cod. โ€œYou canโ€™t really eat that stuff anymore,โ€ she said. โ€œItโ€™s destroying the environment.โ€

โ€œFlying them halfway around the world may not count as an ecofriendly gesture, but these oceanic oddities are a far cry from being decimated the way cod has. โ€œHopefully theyโ€™ll try something new and not just those fishes that are overfarmed and overcaught,โ€ said Jenni Hwang, director of marketing for the Chaya Restaurant Group.โ€

โ€œA growing cadre of chefs, restaurateurs and fishmongers in New York and around the country is taking on the mission of selling wild and local fish whose populations are not threatened with extinction.โ€

Read the full commentary at CFOOD

 

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