The Seafood Dilemma

Posted on 23rd April 2011

The Seafood Dilemma
Fish has been a mainstay on our menu, featured primarily in our favorite Fish and Chips. It has also been an important feature of the American diet, especially for those who look to fish as a healthy alternative to meat. However, there has been abundant evidence that many fish choices are no longer sustainable. Atlantic cod, haddock, and hake, the quintessential fish for Fish and Chips, has been overfished in many areas to perilous extent.  According to one report by NOAA, the Georges Bank stock is at 10% of its target level and the Gulf of Maine stock is currently at 58% of its target level. This has been the case since the 1950’s. Unfortunately, the traditional main ingredient in Fish and Chips is just one example of dangerously low fish stock.  At The Ship Inn, we have moved to Bassa, a type of catfish, for most of our Fish and Chips, and select primarily from a narrow range of sustainable options for our fish specials (escolar, mahi, wahoo). In many cases, it is a real challenge to find sustainable options that fit the desired price point of our customers and the matter sometimes becomes a choice of the lesser of two evils.
Fishing methods have been so intensive that that species are having considerable difficulty maintaining their population. Furthermore, modern fishing methods also tend to be destructive to untargeted fish caught in the nets called by-catch. By-catch can easily be 30% of what is caught at any time and it is often just discarded. Marine habitats fall casualty to intensive fishing. One type of trawling, for example, scrapes the sea floor, effectively obliterating habitats. Its efficiency has created low prices for fish in the short term, but as we have learned from the example of cod, long term supplies have been depleted.  Furthermore, overfishing effects are not local. We live  in a global fishing market. Refrigerated ships and air transport make the Mediterranean, or reaches of the Pacific “just around the corner” in terms of supply. So even though the following article by Reuters targets a European fishery, it is worthy of note here in the USA.
The fishing method, we would argue, is just as critical to your choice of fish as flavor or abundance. Without your choice being based in part on sustainability of methods, this year’s abundant fish will become next year’s overfished species. Yes, certain fishing methods are more costly, but they encourage resilience of a species.  Seafood Watch from www.montereybayaquarium.org   or www.fishchoice.com are helpful resources to navigate the complexities of fish selection. There are even apps for your phone. We have recently decided to increase our variety of seafood in response to customer request. We hope that customers will, in turn, support sustainable methods despite the higher price point.  The following newspaper article illustrates the issue at hand:
Mediterranean fishermen break rules, fish die out: report(Reuters) – Some of the most prized fish on the menus of prestigious European restaurants are faced with extinction because too many are being caught, according to a report issued Tuesday. Among those that could disappear from Mediterranean and nearby waters in the coming years, it said, are bluefin tuna, sea bass, dusky grouper and hake — around all of which leading chefs plan favored dishes. The report, by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN), also predicted a glum future for non-commercial fish like shark and non-edible ray and at least 12 species of bony fish which are shunned by consumers. These, as well as dolphins, whales, turtles and birds which have no commercial value were swept up in trawling nets and illegal driftnets, putting their species’ survival at risk. The report said bluefin tuna in waters off European and North African coasts had seen an estimated 50 percent decline in reproduction capacity over the past 40 years due to intensive overfishing.  Based on latest research by IUCN scientists, the report was the first detailed assessment by the organization — which links governments, environmental and nature groups and academic institutions — of the native marine fish for an entire sea. Although some national and European Union quotas are in place for bluefin tuna in the Mediterranean and eastern Atlantic, it said, these were being widely ignored and catches were frequently under-reported. Overall, more than 40 fish species found in the waters between southern Europe and northern Africa could disappear within the next few years unless governments acted to enforce regulations, reduce quotas and create new marine reserves, according to the Swiss-based organization. The report, to be included in the IUCN’s running “Red List” of threatened species (www.iucnredlist.org), was released following another study showing that fast-warming oceans could be pushing many fish to extinction. The study, by Australian scientists and published in the journal Nature Climate Change, said the warming of sea-surface temperatures and the resulting increased acidity slowed fish growth rates and damaged coral reefs where they breed. This could be especially serious for many commercial fish which do not move much, one author of the study said.

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Our Summer Achievements

Posted on 5th September 2010

This summer has seen a number of important changes at The Ship Inn. We’ve sourced food locally: vegetables from Open Acres CSA, and  beef, pork, and lamb from Swift Farms, all within 5 miles of the restaurant. We’ve  returned our compostable vegetable and brewery refuse back to those farmers. We’ve also purchased bio-degradable drinking straws, to-go containers and sauce cups instead of plastic ones we’ve historically used.  We’ve decreased our electric usage two years in a row.  It has been a pleasure to convey this news to our customers, who also share our enthusiasm for sustainability and support for community.

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The Learning Curve in Beef and other Thoughts on Meat

Posted on 5th September 2010

We’re just about through our first steer, Number 27, from Swift Farms and the second one is scheduled for the end of August. What have we learned so far?  For one, a single steer weighing 740 pounds butchered provides about a week’s work of ground beef (100 pounds) and four weeks’ worth of steaks and roasts. This is problematic when most of your beef business is in burgers. On occasion, we’ve gone back to Dickson’s Farmstand Meats and the local Amish Market to bolster our supply.
So we started looking at other cuts of the animal and wondered what else we could use besides the chuck.  Chuck comes from the front of the animal and when all is said and done, provides about 15% fat into the grind. A bit of fat is helpful in creating a pleasing texture in addition to flavor.  Furthermore, it helps keep the burger from falling to pieces while on the grill.
Other parts of the animal are leaner. Roasts from the back end of the animal do not contain quite as much fat but we would rather grind them up for burgers instead of the filet or the prime rib. At the end of the day, we need a few hundred pounds of ground beef per month, not just one hundred in order to make our burger business work. We’ll be sampling and savoring our burgers over the next month to see how the different cuts nuance our burgers.
We’ve also been reminded that grass-fed beef is really really delicious but can get tough when cooked inappropriately. Steaks don’t do well past medium. Braises and roasts take a little bit longer to cook to improve tenderness. As you tuck in, please be reminded that you may need to chew a little bit more than you would with a feedlot-raised animal. The animal got exercise and so shall you.
We’ve also just bought a whole hog and a whole lamb. We’ve ground up almost the entire lamb, except for the chops and a leg, because we feel that at least SOMETIMES, you should have a Shepherd’s Pie with lamb. Up until now, it has been very difficult to get ahold of  ground lamb for this purpose. Lamb Shepherd’s Pie will be a dinner special soon.
The pork has already started to make an appearance on our menu in the form of bacon and ham. The other cuts, like braised pig’s feet, smoked hocks, and even a home-made pâté will appear soon.
It’s very rewarding to use the whole animal. It reminds us that it is a local resource to be respected.  It exercises our cooking skills, provides a much wider palate for creativity, and more dining choices for the customer.  We are happy we made the leap to locally pastured meats.

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More on the green initiative

Posted on 9th July 2010

The next step in being an ecologically responsible restaurant

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