Free: Contests & Raffles.
White king salmon meat = crab bait
I think a lot of you that are bagging on them, might be harboring some sort of bad memory of eating a booted fall chinook...
My brother sells fish for a living all over the world, and he says they are way higher priced than the normal ones. We barbecued several of them he obtained and they were tasty. Its funny how many different opinions there are and how many different "facts".
http://fishmarketfridays.com/descriptions/ivory_king_salmon.htmhttp://www.wildbcfish.ca/products.html#ivorychinookhttp://www.adfg.alaska.gov/index.cfm?adfg=wildlifenews.view_article&articles_id=244http://frugeseafood.com/salmon-ivory-king/A little info for the haters.
Not like liver. Like arguing apples and oranges. Seems some are far more experienced than others when it comes to fish. Those who aren't think tule yuk! Those who are know there is a complet differnce between the two. Fall run tule don't run in July. Even if you don't know fish you should know that. Just cause you've been tricked by family into eating rotten fish don't hate on good clean ivory chinook. I've been eating sockeye recently and the ivory chinook was WAY better taste. Real mild salmon flavor but real firm. Boots definitely get thrown back but I've never seen a boot in July cause they just hit the bay no time to turn brown.
I had never heard of a Tule Chinook (other than a lesser known common name like King) but after reading a bit and looking into it, it sounds to me like a lot of people are ignorant, misinformed, or just plain prejudiced by a different genetic stock of chinook. The same thing happens to different genetic stocks of Chum Salmon, in SE Alaska a chum in salt water is considered junk because of their rapid deterioration while many places on the Yukon, hundreds of miles from SW have very good quality chums being targeted. It is just a difference in genetic evolution. A true white or ivory king (their flesh is that color even when dime bright, it is not a deteriorated red flesh) is a great eating fish and highly sought after by some of the most picky of salmon eaters. It typically contains a much higher oil content and has a more delicate flavor. The reason for this (the last I knew) is unknown but related to an enlarged pyloric caeca (the frilly organ in the fish that metabolizes fats). There is a reason that commercially caught white king is more expensive, it is a superior and more desireable product.