Wednesday, January 4, 2017

You must be codding.

Last week we had friends over for a meal, one of them is vegetarian but does eat fish so I decided I would do baked cod with a cream prawn sauce. We normally drive over to Ballina some 60k away to buy our fish from one of the very few wet fish shops still in existence, but still being in the Christmas period we guessed that there would be little in the way of fresh fish available so opted to buy frozen fish from our local supermarket, after all most people buy their fish this way so it must be of reasonable quality. How wrong can I be?
We bought one of the best known 'Irish' brands, 'Donegal Catch'. Unfortunately with frozen stuff you can't see what you are buying but I had a good prod at the bag and decided that I had better play safe and buy two bags to get four evenly sized pieces of cod. So the day arrived and four even peices were selected, we picked out the largest peices which would have been fine if they had not shrunk to almost half their size. Fortunately I had made plenty of prawn sauce with  lots of prawns in it, this compensated a little for the lack of cod. We cooked the cod exactly as instructed on the packet and very surprised to find a good half pint of fluid in the baking dish. We also have doubts as to whether this cod was the correct size, the flakes could barely be called flakes, quite possibly this fish was from undersized fish.
 The following day I had a good look at the packaging,
it stated that there was an 'ice glaze' of 5%, 95% cod fillets.  We then decided just for our own research to bake another piece of fish, weighing it before and after. The before weight was 77grams, the after, 48grams, a weight loss of 38%. This just does not happen when we buy fresh fish. It was not even cheap, it worked out at 15.78 per kg of fish. We buy fresh cod for 17euro a kg, and don't end up needing a magnifying glass to see the fish. We have emailed the company, needless to say we have received no reply. I guess they are well used to getting complaints. I am basing that assumption on another occasion  when I sent a query to a food company about the origin of their Organic bacon, the packaging gave the impression that it was an Irish product, in fact the pork that the bacon was cured from was Danish, but the company replied to my enquiry, by phone, not five minutes after I had sent the email. That's what I call good customer service. Needless to say, we will never be buying frozen fish again, and certainly not 'Donegal Catch'.
Spring is trying to appear, well ahead of time. We have had our first Muscovy duck egg, the willows have their pussy buds bursting, I even have an Anemone in bloom,

and I spotted the first primrose out in the bank of one of the lanes nearby. The broad beans, planted in the new tunnel are up a good three inches and tomorrow our first cauliflower plants will be planted into the tunnel, these plants were planted as seeds early November, they all germinated well and have spent the last two months in the cold frame, they are now three inches high, definitely time to be planted out. The buds on the peach trees are now swelling and there are also tip buds on the fig tree which we relocated to the new tunnel. Our new tunnel seems to becoming the fruit tree tunnel, with a peach fig and kiwi planted in it, this weekend this will be added to with an apricot tree, kindly donated to us by a friend who feels it's too big for her small tunnel . I hope it does as well as our peach tree . 
 
Mrs. Duck get the bread crust, unwilling to share,
Dilly Duck and hen look on,
Mrs.Duck finding it a little hard then dips it in the pond so soften it, how clever is that.

10 comments:

  1. I knew there was a reason i didnt eat fish!!! Oh for the room to have a poly tunnel. Sigh.....

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. We both love fish but it is more expensive than organic meat and we live so far away from a fresh fishmonger. If it was closer to hand I think we would both be happy to eat it in preference to meat.

      Delete
    2. You see, that is the problem. I was raised 6 hrs from the coast. If it didnt walk on legs, i didnt eat it and now it all just taste so weird. I am at this moment thought eating a can of sweet chilli tuna - Huh! Perhaps if it comes in a can its not fish. LOL

      Delete
    3. No Lynda, tuna in a can is still fish!

      Delete
  2. I tried frozen fish and was very disappointed, it shrivelled to nothing.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It was a first and last for us, we enjoy good food and no way can that cod be called good food.

      Delete
  3. We don't eat fish very often but I remember the days when there was a fishmonger on every high street, these days they're very hard to find.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I was brought up in a fishing town in Dorset Jo and we had two fishmongers, plus my Grandfather used to go out fishing so fish was part of my life growing up. I understand that the next nearest fishmonger to the one that we use is some 100k up the coast.

      Delete
  4. Oh how I love seeing Ireland all green! One of the things I enjoyed most when I visit is coming in Feb or march when most tourists don't but when Ireland is quite lovely with its's spring happenings. I also love getting Kinvara Salmon! But, I do avoid the frozen stuff, over there, over here, over anywhere. So consequently I don't eat enough fish, we're days away from the coast!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi Donna, our fish shop man buys a lot of his fish from the fishermen in Kinvara. It's a place that we love, there's even an organic cafe there now and one of the eating houses makes a superb fish chowder.

      Delete