Know Your Salmon
Wild salmon consist of five distinct species. Each of those species has different characteristics for taste, texture, color and nutritional content.
I once spent a summer in Bristol Bay Alaska working with Spearfish's Corey Brost on his salmon fishing crew, and learned to quickly identify each species.

Corey and Fisher Brost
King, or Chinook salmon is the largest, least common and most sought after salmon. It's generally only found in high-end restaurants. It has an incredibly high level of Omega 3 fatty acids and is known for its rich, red flesh and firm texture. They weigh twenty pounds on average but can easily exceed fifty. Their migratory habitat covers a surprising amount of the world, even as far away as Japan, but like all salmon they always return to their home spawning grounds in Alaska, usually after 2-4 years.
Sockeye salmon, also known as red salmon, make up the majority of the fish we caught in Alaska. They weigh about six pounds on average, have a deep red flesh, firm texture and their filets are frequently found in upscale restaurants.
Coho, or silver salmon are commonly found in mid-range restaurants and have a distinctive, visually appealing orange color to their flesh. They are the second largest salmon species, with an average weight of 12 pounds and have the second lowest Omega 3 content.
Keta salmon weigh eight pounds on average, have the lowest Omega 3 content and have pink flesh. They are frequently used for canning.
Pink salmon are the smallest and most abundant of the salmon species. They generally weigh between two and three pounds and have light, rose colored flesh. They have the second highest Omega 3 content but are seldom found in filets because of their small size.

Here is a comparison of the Omega 3 content of each type of salmon. Each number is per 100 gram serving.
King - 1,700 mg
Sockeye - 1,200 mg
Coho - 1,100 mg
Keta - 800 mg
Pink - 1,300 mg
Diets high in Omega 3 fatty acids have been shown to improve mood and cognitive function, decrease systemic inflammation (thus possibly warding of heart disease, asthma, arthritis, macular degeneration, and a host of other diseases or maladies), decrease muscle soreness and inflammation, potentially destroy cancer cells and thwart metastasis, improve cholesterol ratios and levels, and increase insulin sensitivity and metabolism, which is a powerful way to decrease body fat.
If you were to go to the health food store and purchase standard fish oil capsules, they would contain 300 mg per serving of Omega 3's. This means that a tiny, 100 gram (3.5 ounce) serving of Chinook salmon contains almost six times the Omega 3 content of a serving of fish oil capsules from the health food store.

Six times the EPA and DHA of a serving of fish oil caps.
Really, who eats a 3.5 ounce salmon fillet? Restaurants typically serve portions in the 6 ounce range, and the ones I cook at home are usually over half a pound. This means that by eating a decent-sized filet of king salmon, you're getting the equivalent of around a dozen servings of fish oil caps. That's going to have some powerful health benefits. Even with the slightly lower Omega 3 content in a sockeye filet, you'd still be getting 2,400 milligrams of Omega 3's from a seven ounce serving.
Now, what about farm raised salmon? It's cheaper and more common in supermarkets, after all. Farmed salmon has almost none of the unique health benefits of wild salmon.
It's omega 3 content is generally only a tenth of what is found in wild fish. Their densely populated pens and unnatural diet of soy protein, canola oil and corn meal predisposes them to disease and parasites such as sea lice to the extent that some states are considering banning them entirely due to the danger of spreading infections and parasites to native populations. In fact, at least one state has banned them already.

Kade Welfl, Bristol Bay, Alaska, 2009
Comments for This Entry
I have a part time job at The Fresh Market, a high end grocery store and we carry King, Sockeye, and Coho while its salmon season. When its not, we just have frozen Copper River Sockeye and the standard farm raised "Atlantic" Salmon. Even being a high end store we sell a ton of the atlantic salmon.
Hopefully after reading your last two posts, people will start learning their health is more important than saving those few extra dollars on crappy salmon.
Posted on 06:54AM on November 21, 2011 [permalink]
Collin,
I think that's a big part of it. People really just don't know what they're buying.
My favorite is the "I only buy the fresh stuff from the counter" refrain. Particularly from people living in the Midwest.
The fish sitting there on display is just thawed out in the back. With the possible exception of some large king salmon that they actually fly out each night on small bush planes from our little island, it's all flash frozen on site. It goes from our nets to a bag of iced salt water to a tending boat with a bigger tank of 32 degree salt water straight to the processor.
Posted on 11:10AM on November 21, 2011 [permalink]
I've always heard wild sockeye salmon is the way to go, but point taken on the king. Always stay from farm raised, like the kind that you hear about in China, have to worry about the mercury.
On the supplements, I like the ones from Sundown Naturals Triple Omega 3-6-9. In just one capsule, I get 1200mg (400 fish, 400 Flax, and 400 Borage). I do only one, but he recommended dose is two a day.
I think that is why the supplement industry is so lucrative. When you don't have money to spend on expensive salmon or other foods and because the food we get nowadays is not as good as 40-50yrs ago when produce, fish, meats, etc... were better harvested, taking supplements from a quality sourced company is the next best thing.
I still believe if we all made the time to cook quality meals at home with fresh products and enjoyed quality family time and got all our proper nutrients from fruits, veggies, lean meats, fish, etc...then the supplement industry would eventually die away. Wishful thinking....life in the 21st century is just too fast paced, we are on the go a lot, juggling work, a wife, kids, etc... that you do the best you can and try to achieve balance.
Well, enjoyed the info.
Regards,
Tom
Posted on 02:20AM on December 01, 2011 [permalink]
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