Converts to Italy’s Slow Food movement can see past poisonous spines and bulging eyes: The scorpion fish and needlefish may be ugly, but they are also cheap, sustainable and taste fantastic.
“It’s time to go back to eating ‘poor’ fish, the types that your grandma used to eat years ago. Not only are they tasty and cheap, they can save other fish from dying out,” fisherman Roberto Moggia said at Italy’s Slow Fish event.
Moggia and other small-scale fishers threatened by industrial fishing have gathered together for four days in Genoa to give curious consumers a taste of the more unusual fish they are missing out on.
Species at high risk of extinction — from bluefin tuna to swordfish and eel — are replaced by a large variety of spiky, flat or bloated fish of differing colors, laid out on display or served up raw, salted or pickled.
“Slow Fish brings people up close with the more unusual types of fish which are slowly making their way back into kitchens,” 49-year old Moggia said, showing off his counter of whiskered and scaly sea creatures.
Visitors to the fair, held on the north Italian city’s wind-blown sea front, sampled delicacies from free-range Australian oceanic trout to the Dutch Oosterschelde lobster and alternative sushi rolls, made with sustainable fish.
“We’ve replaced tuna and salmon with leerfish and horse mackerel, and people really can’t taste the difference,” said Nicola Fattibeni, a gastronomy student who helped organize the sushi session, complete with on-site Japanese chefs.
“But we’re not just trying to save at-risk fish. The idea is also to help save another species: the local fisherman,” she added.
While small-scale fishermen are often credited with helping protect the marine environment, their numbers are dwindling in the face of profit-seeking trawlers harvesting vast amounts of fish, large numbers of which are often dumped.
“We can probably change the way we eat, but we definitely have to change the way we fish,” EU Commissioner for Fisheries Maria Damanaki said at the start of the event.
Many fish are being caught too early to give them chance to reproduce, but attempts to encourage sustainable fishing have already seen the list of stocks consumers are strongly advised not buy drop from 14 to 11 this year.
Damanaki also told reporters the EU was cracking down on illegal fishing, which disrupts the ecosystem, lowers fish quality and creates unfair competition.
Visitors unsure how to tell whether they’re buying the right sort of fish or what condition it is in can join the fair’s “personal shopper” tours.
“I do try to think about what fish I buy in the supermarket. Everyone should make an effort,” Livia Polgacini said.
Nearby, visitors lined up for tasting sessions with international chefs who rustled up “poor” fish dishes and offered advice such as how to impress your mother-in-law with little more than a common sardine.
“In my restaurant we don’t serve tuna anymore, we use local products and traditional recipes ... one of my favorites is a Venetian recipe for stargazer fish from the 1300s,” 44-year old Italian chef Gianluca Cazzin said.
Cazzin said to guests sampling his fried soft-shell crab and Roman cockle pasta just how important a role restaurants have to play in changing attitudes towards eating sustainable fish.
“Ethically speaking, people cannot go on eating fish like tuna or swordfish. The less sought-after types are great and they also cost less, but it’s up to us to come up with the dishes and turn ‘poor’ fish into ‘good’ fish,” he said.
“We have to preserve species for future generations by giving them the chance to reproduce. No one’s going to die of hunger if we don’t eat tuna for 10 years,” he added.
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