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Eat Invasive Species

Posts Tagged ‘snakehead’

Out to Eat! March 30, 2013

Saturday, March 30th, 2013

Eating invasive species news and notes from around the internet!

Out to Eat! February 2, 2013

Saturday, February 2nd, 2013

Eating snakehead to save the Chesapeake Bay

Friend of Invasivore.org Chef Chad Wells shares a blue catfish recipe (and check out video here)

For participants of the Python Challenge, here’s a warning against eating your bounty (we’d still try one bite though…)

Out to Eat! December 15, 2012

Saturday, December 15th, 2012

A buffet of eating invasive species news and notes from around the internet!

Out to Eat! November 17, 2012

Saturday, November 17th, 2012

A helping of eating invasive species news and notes from around the internet!

An Invasive Feast in Three Courses

Monday, August 20th, 2012

Guest contributor Dr. Christopher Patrick recently enjoyed dinner at Alewife Baltimore where Chef Chad Wells is working to educate people to eat local and eat invasive.  Here, Chris reviews the meal in 3 courses, interspersed with an interview with the Chef himself.

First Course: Wild Boar Meatballs

Chef Chad tells us that feral pigs have invaded the great state of Texas (among many other places).  Invasive boar root up native vegetation and are a general nuisance species.  He has a friend who professionally shoots the boars and ships up the meat.  Chad hopes to visit Texas soon and maybe practice a little invasivore style management himself!

As our server brings out the first plate, I take in the presentation: four meatballs served adjacent to a bed of shaved fennel, daikon sprout, and pickled carrot salad in a ginger mustard sauce.  The meatballs are light, both in texture and flavor.  The meat is savory but not overly so.  My lovely girlfriend Laura remarks that this pork tastes lean, and I have to agree.  The spicy garnish, when paired with the meatballs is reminiscent of spring rolls.  I have visions of trying some wild boar in a meatloaf when I get a chance.  This is a great way to start the meal!

The meal kicks off with wild boar meatballs

Second Course:  Blue Catfish Tacos

Chef Chad buys his blue catfish from fishermen who get it in the Potomac River, so the next course is fresh, locally caught, and cheap!  At $4.00 per pound, you can’t beat this fish for price. Blue catfish are voracious omnivores and do a lot of damage to the Chesapeake Bay ecosystem, so we’re anxious to do our part to eliminate this pest by diving into the next course. 

Each of the emerging taco towers high with toppings.  Laura and I try to guess all the flavors as we take our first bites.  We detect shoe string crunchy sweet potatoes and a homemade spiracha on the side.  There is also fresh crunchy cabbage coleslaw, chimichurri (we peeked on the menu for that one), blistered corn salsa, and of course, blue catfish.  The catfish has a very mild flavor- not too fishy.  The meat melts in your mouth.  It’s not tough at all, providing the perfect tender fish for a taco dish.

Blue catfish tacos were a spicy treat

Third Course:  Snakehead

Chef Chad tells us that two years ago, this was a hard fish to buy.  Commercial fishermen would only encounter it as by-catch and didn’t know what to do with it.  You’d have to call special to request one, and it was really cheap.  Now the fishermen are starting to target it, and snakehead sells for $12.50 a pound- more expensive than rockfish, a more traditional local delicacy!  Media attention and several local chefs working to promote it have made it locally popular.  Some people are still scared to eat it, but it’s becoming an environmentally conscious food choice, and every time you eat one of these you’re not eating a native fish, so it’s a win-win.  Chef Chad informs us that another great thing about these fish is that they have a very thick slime coat on their skin which protects the meat when frozen.  

Finally, the main event!  The server brings out a massive mound, a tower of delight for our taste buds.  The snakehead sits atop a pile of chorizo, black beans, cilantro, and grilled onions, all mashed together and charred to perfection.  The fish has white meat and it is firm, like a salmon or a thin piece of tuna.  The flavor of the fish is light, but it has been blackened with spices that offset the light flavor.  The mixture of chorizo, beans, onions, and cilantro is so amazingly delicious that I have trouble focusing on the snakehead itself, which is a shame, because a fish this good deserves to be the center piece, not a side show.  Nevertheless, snakehead proves to be a delicious fish.

Snakehead, the delicious main course

Out to Eat! August 12, 2012

Sunday, August 12th, 2012

A helping of invasive species news and notes from around the internet!

Out to Eat! June 23, 2012

Saturday, June 23rd, 2012

Invasive species news and notes from around the internet!

Out to Eat! June 3, 2012

Sunday, June 3rd, 2012

A weekly helping of eating invasive species news and notes from around the internet.

Potomac Snakehead Tournament June 2-3

Thursday, May 31st, 2012

 

Invasivores in the US Northeast might be interested in checking out the Potomac Snakehead Tournament this weekend (June 2nd and 3rd).  It will be a great chance to learn about invasive northern snakehead, and you might even get to meet a friend of invasivore.org, Chef Chad Wells.

 

Tournament Sponsors

Species profile: Northern Snakehead

Monday, January 23rd, 2012
Until our recent interview with Chef Chad Wells at the Alewife in Baltimore, MD, I was blissfully unaware of the voracious top predator invading the waterways of Maryland and Virginia known as the northern snakehead.  Now that I know, I’m eager to make the journey to the Mid-Atlantic and try some!

Native to China, Russia, North Korea, and South Korea, the northern snakehead (Channa argus), is now found in many parts of the eastern United States and California preying on native fish populations.  Their introduction to the United States can be attributed to both release from the aquarium trade and live food fish trade.  One specific introduction in the year 2000 to a pond in Crofton, Maryland utilized both these pathways when a local resident purchased a pair of live snakehead to prepare a traditional soup remedy and instead kept them as pets.  Unable to keep up with their appetites, the pair of snakeheads was released and propagated like mad!

The scary face of the northern snakehead Channa argus.

In the waters of the Mid-Atlantic and the south (warmer relative to its native northern Asia), the northern snakehead can reproduce all year and grow to lengths greater than 1 meter (3 feet).  As adults, they prey mostly on fish but are capable of eating amphibians, birds, and small mammals.  However, as juveniles, they can be subject to predation by the invasive blue catfish (Ictalurus furcatus Lesueur, 1840).  Northern snakeheads are obligate air breathers which facilitates their hardiness and ability to survive a lengthy trip from Asia out of water. These traits make this invasive species so dangerous that the Maryland Department of Natural Resources has issued a mandate for fishers to kill upon capture.

Their overconsumption of native aquatic species will not only decimate native populations but will likely cause millions of dollars in damages as well.  A market already exists that is facilitated by consumption; can snakehead be another gateway to invasivory?  Chef Chad Wells is already preparing it for culinary masses!