Delicasea Brand Frozen Seafood

Delicasea Brand Frozen Seafood DelicaSea Brand Shrimp and Crab Meat

DelicaSea offers a full line of premium cooked, uncooked and shell-on frozen shrimp products that have been carefully harvested and selected to ensure consistent quality and freshness.

New from IMS  Lower Price Points!~ Lower Price Points~ Same DelicaSea Quality~ 2 Star BAP Or Better~ Year Round Availabi...
03/19/2017

New from IMS Lower Price Points!

~ Lower Price Points
~ Same DelicaSea Quality
~ 2 Star BAP Or Better
~ Year Round Availability

Visit us at the Boston Seafood Show for details!

03/15/2012

More on fish fraud in todays Boston Globe

BOSTON—Those plump and tempting scallops behind the fish counter glass might be a lot smaller than they look -- a sodium-based compound can bloat scallops well past their actual size. And that po***ck fillet isn't such a good deal if the price includes the layers of ice glazed onto it to keep it fresh.

This "overglazing" rips off consumers, as does so-called "soaking" of scallops, which can also alter the taste of the shellfish. At the International Boston Seafood Show this week, a top federal seafood quality officer announced his agency was increasing efforts to stop these and other types of seafood fraud.

"We've decided we're going to take on the economic fraud concern," said Steven Wilson, chief quality officer at the National Marine Fisheries Service's seafood inspection program.

Perhaps the best known kind of seafood fraud is species substitution, when sellers secretly replace a prized species with a similar tasting, cheaper fish -- say, whiting substituted for grouper, or mako shark for swordfish.

But fraud involving inaccurate food weights, caused by practices such as overglazing and soaking, is far more common, Wilson said. Inspectors at his agency find some kind of economic fraud in at least 40 percent of all products submitted to them voluntarily. And in at least eight out of 10 of those cases, inaccurate weights are the problem, he said.

"If we focus on the net weight issues we'll drop that 40 ... percent to very, very minor percentages," Wilson said.

The problem with detecting the soaking or overglazing is that both involve legitimate ways to keep seafood fresh, so it's tough to tell when someone is cheating.

The law says a package labeled as 10 pounds of fish must contain 10 pounds of fish, with the ice glaze as extra, uncounted, weight. But the only way to know whether the ice is being counted is with labor-intensive inspections that match the fish weight with the weight advertised on the package.

That happened in 2010, when an investigation by 17 states showed customers were often charged for the ice in seafood packaging, sometimes as much as $23 per pound. In the four-week investigation, 21,000 packages of seafood were removed from shelves.

"This sounds like something that is so simple, and so sort of pedestrian in the world of fraud, you would think ... people wouldn't get away with it," said Gavin Gibbons of the National Fisheries Institute, a seafood trade association. "But it is absolutely a challenge."

The soaking of scallops and other seafood, such as shrimp and even whitefish fillets, involves moisture retention agents that keep seafood fresh.

It's tough to define how much is too much for a given species, but their use can be abused. Wilson described a scallop as "a little sponge" that can absorb as much as half its own weight in water. The truth about these bloated scallops becomes clear when they hit the frying pan, shrink and their water burns off.

"You're paying for water that's going to disappear when you cook the product," Wilson said.

Since about two-thirds of the water-retention compounds are sodium-based, they can also add a saltiness to the seafood that isn't natural, but which some research has shown consumers see as normal, and even prefer, Wilson said.

"If this goes on long enough, the consumer thinks it's normal, when it's not," he said.

Both problems are hard to detect, so they're also tough to stop.

Most seafood eaten in the U.S. is imported and packed outside the country, so regulators here can't prevent any fraud. And the more fraud there is, the more industry members feel pressure to commit it to compete.

Once seafood arrives in the U.S., the Food and Drug Administration regulates it. But that agency's resources are often consumed by more urgent concerns, such as food safety and bioterrorism, according to a report by the Congressional Research Service. The report said just 85 of the FDA's 1,350 inspectors work mainly with seafood.

"Enforcement of economic fraud and labeling laws may be a lower FDA priority relative to protecting the health and safety of the U.S. food supply," said the 2010 report.

Lisa Weddig of the Better Seafood Bureau, an arm of the fisheries institute, said public and industry awareness can make a difference because complaints lead to action. The 2010 study on overglazing, conducted in consultation with the FDA by the different states, is an example.

She added that while the National Marine Fisheries Service doesn't have authority to regulate seafood fraud, it can cut down fraud by awarding certifications for seafood that meets voluntary quality standards it devises.

Weddig said that because fraud affects both the value and taste of seafood, and the industry wants to say it's delivering the maximum amount of both, it has major motivation to comply with the voluntary standards.

"If you serve poor-quality seafood to consumers, it might be the last seafood meal they eat," Weddig said. "And nobody wants that to happen."

03/14/2012

14 March, 2012 - Having reported on seafood fraud extensively in the past (in June 2007, July 2009 and March 2012), I attended Monday’s International Boston Seafood Show conference, “Seafood Substitution: Efforts and Strategies to Eliminate Mislabeling and Fraud from the Marketplace,” with great interest.

A diverse and experienced panel of speakers was lined up, including a U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) representative, a former fisheries law enforcement officer, the secretary of the Better Seafood Bureau, a federal seafood-inspection officer and an executive from a DNA-identification laboratory that tests suspicious seafood. Everyone brought a unique perspective and expertise that more people in the industry need to hear.

But panelist Morton Nussbaum, chairman of International Marketing Specialists in West Newton, Mass., was his usual show-stealing self. Nussbaum has relayed several stories to me about his experiences with fraud, both as a veteran seafood importer and as a restaurant lover. He’s a Boston guy, but he also spends a lot of time in Florida, a hotbed for species substitution; it is there that cheaper fish masquerade as regional favorites grouper and snapper. Nussbaum can spin an amusing tale about grouper and pompano dishes that contain neither grouper nor pompano.

On Monday he told another fish story, one with a frustrating ending. He wanted to try a new restaurant near his office last fall and was convinced that the USD 19.99 fried haddock entrée he eventually ordered wasn’t haddock. He’s no fool, and instantly knew it was swai, or pangasius, the catfish species farmed predominantly in Vietnam. If it was swai, as he believed, it wasn’t worth that price tag, seeing how swai fillets wholesale for only a few bucks while haddock fillets in and around Boston can cost a restaurant USD 8 to USD 10 (or more) per pound, if it’s sourced from a reputable, local dealer.

“Of the 4 million pounds of pangasius imported into the United States each week, can anybody here tell me where it goes? Because nobody calls it pangasius in a restaurant,” said Nussbaum.

So he called the Massachusetts Attorney General’s office to complain and report what he believed was a crime. Officially, it’s known as misbranding, defined simply by the FDA as a food item “offered for sale under the name of another food.” Unfortunately, he was told that they do not send officers out into the field for such matters — no funding for it. The AG office, he discovered, only offers consumer mediation where the restaurant operator would also state his or her case. Best-case scenario, Nussbaum gets his USD 19.99 back. I’m sure the time and effort that would take is worth more than 20 bucks to him.

This type of enforcement effort, or lack thereof, is just not cutting it. FDA isn’t sending anyone to restaurants either.

With all the scrutiny on fishermen and importers, it’d be tough to convince them that they’re the biggest part of the problem. Andrew Cohen, principal at ARC Consulting and a former special agent-in-charge at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, said at the conference that the vast majority of the pangasius that enters the U.S. market arrives with accurate paperwork. (Coincidentally, Cohen’s story about busting up an Olympia River sturgeon caviar operation — in a motel — back when he was a fisheries law enforcement officer in Pacific Northwest, was astounding.)

A lot can happen to seafood and its labels along the supply chain, but the risks and consequences of switching species in bulk for an importer versus those facing a restaurant operator are not comparable. One faces millions of dollars in fines and potential jail time while the other may or may not get bad press that’s quickly forgotten by the public.

Are regulatory and enforcement agencies concerned only with crimes that involve millions of dollars and not the millions of daily crimes that involve a few bucks here and there? Is there really a difference?

Nussbaum’s experience led him to come to one simple but sad conclusion: “If anybody’s looking to substitute swai for another species, the best place to experiment is in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts,” he said with deadpan delivery.

The room burst out in laughter, as did I — it was a classic Morty zinger. But it’s really not funny. Nussbaum closed by saying he’s looking forward to next year’s inevitable discussion on fraud. The cheat goes on.

New item from IMS! Swai fillets from Vietnam perfect for many dishes
03/02/2012

New item from IMS! Swai fillets from Vietnam perfect for many dishes

02/29/2012

We're all off to the International Boston Seafood Show! Stop by and visit us at Booth # 525 March 11, 12 and 13.

04/13/2011
Our own Morty Nussbaum "tells it like it is" as an invited panelist at the recent "Truth in Tare" seminar at the Interna...
04/05/2011

Our own Morty Nussbaum "tells it like it is" as an invited panelist at the recent "Truth in Tare" seminar at the International Boston Seafood Show

Eliminating the behaviors that lead to cheating, and influencing federal and state officials to enforce the rules, are vital in the fight against economic fraud, a panel of five industry experts emphasized at the “Truth in Tare” seminar during the International Boston Seafood Show on Sunday.

03/23/2011

We had a great Show - Thanks to all who stopped by our booth. Thank you for your continued support.

03/18/2011

We're all off to the International Boston Seafood Show! Stop by and visit us at Booth # 525.

03/15/2011

Check out this interesting documentary on Fine Quality Seafood

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