Does the vendors’ storage method affect shellfish quality?

Does the vendors’ storage method affect shellfish quality? - Through glass back view of unrecognizable worker in white T shirt at meat preserving factory with long sausages hanging from metal rail in tiled room

For the same shellfish (like Little Neck clams),

  • Some supermarkets keep them in tanks with running water:

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  • While other supermarkets fridge them dry, without water:

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Does the storage method affect the quality of the product, and if yes, how? As a consumer, which is preferable?



Best Answer

Temperature is the most important factor in shellfish storage.

Also, keeping shellfish in fresh water (compared to sea water) is not a good thing.

From the British Columbia Center for Disease Control (pdf)

"Do not put live shellfish in a closed container or into fresh water (the shellfish will suffocate and die)".

Anecdotal, most of the shellfish I've seen in either supermarkets or in specialty stores are either directly on ice or in pans over ice; but never under running water or in water.




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More answers regarding does the vendors’ storage method affect shellfish quality?

Answer 2

For shellfish like clams and mussels, it's actually possible for a fishmonger to keep them alive. Keeping them in clean, cold, circulated SALT water is best, because that allows them to stay alive but dormant. Obviously, it doesn't get fresher than live.

For fish, this is not an option. Most fishmongers receive the fish already dead, so the best practice is to keep it on ice, with proper drainage. That will ensure the best shelf life and quality.

That whole foods with dry storage may very well be cold enough to keep those clams from spoiling, but they're certainly too dry to stay alive.

Answer 3

Keeping any seafood alive and healthy in water is difficult. The water needs to closely match the water from the fishery where it was caught, needs to be kept filtered, clean, oxygenated, and at the proper temperate. Note that OCEAN WATER can't be trivially recreated from tap water and table salt. Table salt is refined to remove certain "oceany" things, and tap water often has chemicals (like chlorine) added for health & safety.

Even if multiple fish come from the same fishery, different depths of water have different qualities (such as temperature), so different seafood would need to be kept in different tanks with different requirements. This adds complexity & cost to the shipping and storage via this method.

In North America, fish is usually shipped on ice, rather than alive, because water requirements are so diverse, in addition to the difficulty/cost of shipping tanks of water large enough for fish to safely swim. Most fish die in air, so water is the only way to keep them alive.

With shellfish, they are capable of living out of water for about a week, so long as they are kept at temperate and have access to fresh air. As such, this is often the "best" option to maximize freshness and minimize cost.

Crabs and lobster are sometimes sold in tanks, as the "math" is a little bit different related to their mobility needs when alive. This leads to a more expensive product, but consumers are willing to pay for fresh product.

Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

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