July 27, 2012

No. I'll Never Eat That Again! The Salmon Burger Wars.

I owned many of the books written by Dr. Mamet Oz before I knew who he was or that he was making a name for himself on the Oprah Winfrie Show. Since then, I've watched the Dr. Oz Show, I’ve been to his web page, and I've even, occasionally, taken his advice.

That’s why when a half-dozen members of his studio audience sampled and critiqued six quick, week-night, nutritious, and delicious entrées (according to Oz), I paid attention. I made a list of the choices, although I already knew of several of them. 

Two of the meals could not be found in my local freezer section. I had previously eaten the third, Amy’s Burritos, many times, so I bought just one, even though they are not as tasty as they sound. I passed up a fourth choice that looked and sounded dreadful.

My interest, of course, was in the Sea Pak Salmon Burgers. I had seen them in  frozen foods many times. “680mg Omega 3’s per 110 calorie serving,” the packaging screams. Those stats might be a figment of the imagination - like the grill marks on the box top picture. I don’t know.  My interest was tweaked by the fact that, to a person, every audience member who tasted all six healthy dinners chose the salmon as the favorite healthy freezer meal. I bought it, too, and without further ado.

When I got home with my groceries, I snatched out the box and read the ingredients: salmon, water, autolyzed yeast extract, canola oil, garlic powder, garlic, grill flavor from sunflower oil, lemon juice concentrate, natural food coloring of beet juice and citric acid, natural smoke flavoring, onion powder, paprika, rosemary, salt, soybean oil, tapioca, dextrin, and white pepper.

Finally, the list announces, “contains: salmon.” The label does not specify the variety of the salmon.

Even so, I opened the box. Frozen slime. I continued to read. I was concerned to see that Sea Pack worked out of St. Simon’s Island (no salmon there) which logistically can be nothing like a Gorton quick-freeze plant. 

Finally, I saw it. Yes, it was in bold albeit small print. “This salmon is wild caught. Product of China.”

The fish, according to directions, could be grilled (hence, I supposed, the lovely cover shot) or baked (which I did in the toaster oven) or pan seared ( which I also did, trying to get a crispy crust). All of that, and the product was still slimy from grinding the salmon and reconstructing it into patties. The smell, during cooking, was horrendous. The flavor was artificial lemony cardboard. No texture. 

Shame on you, Dr. Oz. This tastes terrible. I need to have my head examined and so do you. If you, reader, try to make this meal, after all I’ve written, be sure to toast your roll on medium to impart some crispness into this dish. Even so, this salmon is nothing close to tasty. I don't even think that a pickle would help!

Better yet, buy one 14 ¾ oz can of  Royal Red, Wild Alaska Sockeye Red Salmon. Open the can and drain the juices into a small bowl in case you need moisture later on. Crush everything else up with a fork. I use skin and bones but you don’t have to. Make it your own! Take them out, if they bother you.



Add one egg, onion and green peppers, celery - if you like - chopped any size you think best. Add crushed Saltines – enough to dry out the mixture. If you go too far, use some of the salmon liquid until the consistency is good for shaping a burger. Salt, pepper, and Worcestershire sauce should be enough seasoning. Form the patties whatever size you want. Sometimes I make many small ones; sometimes I form them into fewer, larger pieces. Handle them gingerly. This is not beef. 

Heat a few tablespoons of olive oil in a large frying pan or work in several smaller batches. You will need a nice medium hot temperature because the salmon will soak up cooler oil. The first side will brown up nice and fast. Then turn the burgers with a spatula and fork, so as not to break them up, and turn the heat down a little. Turn the patties as many times as you need to get a nice crisp outer surface. Drain on paper towels.

Better still, why not take advantage of the seasonal wild salmon when it's offered in the fish markets and save the canned product until later! Buy twice as much salmon as you need and make the burgers, according to the directions above, from the leftovers. Live it up; wild salmon is seasonal; eat it several times in a row when it's available.  

Serve these delicious salmon burgers on toasted buns with mustard and additional Worcestershire sauce, lettuce and tomato, sautéed onions, anything you like. I sometimes eat them on a bed of rice, with a side of baked beans!



We need to consume salmon, tuna, various cold water white fish, sardines, and other freshly harvested seafood several times a week as part of a healthy diet! Whatever you do, please don’t add that Sea Pak of Chinese salmon to your meal plan!  I’ll never eat that again. No way.  














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