Given all the attention that fish is getting these days for both health and environmental issues, Economix decided to take a quick look at the comparative prices of various fish recommended by the Monterey Bay Aquarium’s Seafood Watch, which grades menu choices based on how the fish have been caught or farmed.
Unfortunately, the United States Department of Agriculture does not track seafood prices the way it does milk, eggs, beef, fruit and vegetables.
So I took a selection of five fish listed under “best choices” and five on the “avoid” list, all commonly used by home cooks, and compared prices at four New York area seafood sellers: FreshDirect, the online grocery delivery service; Fish Tales, in Brooklyn; Wild Edibles, at the market in Grand Central Terminal; and Citarella, on the Upper West Side.
Over all, it looks as if being environmentally conscientious will come at a price. Wild Alaska salmon, on the “best choices” list, ranges from $23.99 to $34.99 a pound, while Pacific halibut is anywhere from $23.99 to 29.99 a pound. On the “avoid” list, monkfish is $10.99 to $14.99 a pound while farmed Atlantic salmon is just $11.99 to $13.99.
via economix.blogs.nytimes.com
I bought unfrozen Copper River sockeye salmon for $16.99/lb at the Earthfare in Boone this weekend.