Cultured Striped Bass
Whole, Boned Cultured Striped Bass
eight 2-lb bass $244 - Order
six 2-lb bass $194 - Order
four 2-lb bass $120 - Order
Fillet, Cultured Striped Bass
5.0 lbs fillet (serves 8) $130 - Order
3.0 lbs fillet (serves 6) $89 - Order
2.0 lbs fillet (serves 4) $68 - Order
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The history of Striped Bass in our waters is a tale of ecological
tragedy barely averted. Initial abundance was followed by
over-fishing and virtual extinction. But thanks to technology
and entrepreneurship, this woeful drama has a happy ending.
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The story begins in 1623 aboard the Mayflower on its
voyage from Delfshaven, Holland to John Smith's Virginia Colony.
With dwindling food supplies for the 102 souls on board, first mate
William Wood launched a skiff towards the Maryland shore of the
Chesapeake Bay.
Wood observed in his log, "Giant Bass leapt in
the air 40 at a time. Vast squirming masses of fish, their backs
out of the water, swam over a gravel bar against the changing tide."
One set of their nets provided enough fish for "three months
space."
Despite intense fishing, the "Striper" (sometimes called
Rockfish) proliferated for many years as both a commercial and sport
fish. Capitol regulars from Secretary of State Daniel Webster to
President Theodore Roosevelt would venture to the Chain Bridge on
the Potomac and drop a line in search of the spunky Striped Bass.
When her Majesty Queen Elizabeth hosted a diner at
the Waldorf-Astoria, nearly five thousand pounds of Striped Bass
were served for the royal feast. No less a gourmand than James Beard,
in 1973 declared the Striped Bass, "The most important commercial
fish on the East Coast."
Yet ten years later the fish had all but disappeared. The lethal
combination of unregulated commercial fishing and pollution rendered
those fish still caught by sportsmen unfit for human consumption.
Fortunately, some brilliant aquaculture scientists and risk-taking
businessmen came to the rescue. By combining a strain of the wild
"Striper" with a hardy freshwater cousin called the white
bass, a new species and a new industry were born. Kent SeaTech now
produces close to 4 million pounds of farm-raised Striped Bass per
year at their high-tech facility in Mecca, California.
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Twelve months per year, five days a week, Kent SeaTech harvests
nearly 15,000 pounds of fish from their ingenious round tanks.
These "Hybrid Stripers" have a mild delicate flavor,
and firm texture that can be grilled, baked, poached, steamed,
sautéed or broiled.
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FRESH-FISH-FAST.com proudly ships these Stripers overnight
to any kitchen in America. Quick-chilled, and processed for shipment
within hours of harvest, they have a moistness and shine, instantly
recognizable by seafood lovers as freshness beyond compare.
The pure delicious flavor of Kent SeaTech's California
Farmed Striped Bass is a salute to our bountiful past and
a testament to our hopeful future.
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