What is the difference between Alaskan King Salmon and Scottish Salmon?

What is the difference between Alaskan King Salmon and Scottish Salmon? - Top view of white ceramic plate with colorful drawings of sushi and rolls placed on wooden table

I'm considering throwing a dinner party, and I don't have much experience cooking salmon. What are the main differences between these two types of salmon in terms of price, taste, and cooking methods?



Best Answer

Alaskan King, or Chinook, salmon is generally wild, generally caught in the Pacific Northwest, often but not exclusively in Alaska. Scottish salmon is generally farm-raised Atlantic salmon, and as far as that goes is essentially identical to farm-raised salmon from Chile or Norway.

Price: hobodave's comment is correct that the price will vary based on location, but in fact the king salmon will be more expensive almost everywhere. Generic farmed Scottish salmon is a commodity product that generally sells for about $1 more than other farmed salmon for no particularly good reason, but wild salmon can easily cost twice as much regardless. Short of actually being in the Pacific Northwest it's likely that the Scottish is substantially cheaper.

Taste: the quality comparison is the big one here rather than species. King is usually treated much better (shipped quicker, wild diet) because it's not a commodity, but not necessarily. Scottish will vary depending on the farmer, but I think you have to prefer the King to any generically-farmed Scottish salmon.

Cooking methods: no necessary difference. Smoked on a plank is a common method in the Pacific Northwest, but no real reason you couldn't do either in that way. Pick your favorite method.




Pictures about "What is the difference between Alaskan King Salmon and Scottish Salmon?"

What is the difference between Alaskan King Salmon and Scottish Salmon? - Sushi On Brown Wooden Board
What is the difference between Alaskan King Salmon and Scottish Salmon? - Close-up Photo of Sushi Served on Table
What is the difference between Alaskan King Salmon and Scottish Salmon? - Cooked Meat With Vegetables



Quick Answer about "What is the difference between Alaskan King Salmon and Scottish Salmon?"

Alaskan King, or Chinook, salmon is generally wild, generally caught in the Pacific Northwest, often but not exclusively in Alaska. Scottish salmon is generally farm-raised Atlantic salmon, and as far as that goes is essentially identical to farm-raised salmon from Chile or Norway.

Is Scottish salmon the best?

Scottish salmon is widely regarded as the best in the world. The impact of the collapse of the global restaurant trade caused by the coronavirus pandemic means there has never been a better time to increase our consumption of fish reared in the clean, nutrient-rich waters off the north and north-west of Scotland.

What is Scottish salmon called?

Scottish salmon is the same as Atlantic salmon. You can best recognise it by its Latin name 'Salmo salar'. This species is called Scottish salmon because it is caught or farmed near Scotland.

What is the highest quality salmon?

King (Chinook) There's a reason this species is at the top of the list and earned itself the royal moniker: King salmon is considered by many to be the best salmon money can buy. It's rich, high in fat, and big.




More answers regarding what is the difference between Alaskan King Salmon and Scottish Salmon?

Answer 2

There are five significant species of Pacific salmon, and only one species of Atlantic salmon, which actually runs into the east coast of North America as well as in Europe.

In terms of cooking, the same processes apply to all - you don't have to adjust for the species, the process works similarly.

For taste, wild salmon definitely tastes better, and the Atlantic salmon is mostly farmed, but you can buy wild Scottsh salmon.

There is a substantial industry in wild Scottish salmon, so if you know you are buying that type you are buying the best. Here in the UK Norwegian salmon sells for high prices which it does not warrant, they farm it just like the Scots.

For taste, go for wild Atlantic salmon, then fresh wild Pacific salmon. Beyond those considerations, the farmed stuff is worth having - balance the local price against what you are going to do with it. If you're going for one of those flavor-drowning salmon mousse recipes, a can of Cohoe goes a long way ...

Answer 3

Firstly, I'm British, so I may be biased, but in my experience, farmed Atlantic Salmon tastes just as good as wild. It's certainly cheaper, and they're not exactly farmed intensively like battery chickens.

Speaking from personal preference, my wife would not be happy if I brought Pacific salmon home. I did once, and the flakes were smaller, tighter and less succulent than the Atlantic we normally have. Never again. Curiously, if you buy cheap frozen salmon in the UK, it's Pacific, which has never made sense to me. It would do for a mousse or pie, but for a fillet or whole fish, we find it just too coarse.

In terms of cooking, you can do almost anything, although "gently" would be my keyword. You can marinate it in pretty much any spice/herb marinade, although dill is the classic herb to go with salmon. You can grill (broil) it, steam it, pan-fry it. I prefer to put it in a dish with some fish stock and bake for 15-20 minutes at about 300F (150C), with foil over the top. You can tell it's cooked when the shine has gone off the flesh throughout. Then a dill cream sauce over the top is divine. There are literally so many ways of cooking salmon, I couldn't choose a favourite!

Answer 4

With all due respect to the Brits and Scots (and certainly the Canadians), The Pacific salmon fishery is the largest producer of the best quality salmon. ( The Russian fishery I would consider as Pacific). I have never fished a Scottish Wild Run, I believe most of those fish are taken by the remains of the Aristocracy as sport fish. (read expensive). If you are NOT within 100 miles of the point of origin, the lowest cost salmon is Farmed. Almost all farmed salmon are Atlantic, dyed color or not.

  1. Farmed salmon have a milder flavor because of a limited diet, selective breeding, and antibiotics. 2.Wild salmon have flavor based on the type and size of salmon, (using USA terms, mild to strong flavor,) 'Steelhead'(rainbow trout returning from ocean), Chum, Coho (also called Silvers), Pinks (pink flesh), Kings (also called Chinook) (larger fish, redder color,stronger flavor), Sockeye, (deep red flesh, very strong flavor).

My Father grew up seining on the Columbia River Bar, sometimes when young I helped smoke salmon with local tribes. My mother hated cooking salmon because it "stunk up the house".

Cooking: Most chefs use heavy sauces (egg sauce, creamed dill type sauces) when cooking stronger flavor salmon. Milder pink fleshed, light red color salmon can use any French sauce for trout, simply use Escoffier or Larousse cookbooks. For smoking, the Scots and the Norwegians have techniques on the Internet. The American/Alaskan natives have theirs mostly secret. It is very suitable for outdoor,backyard grilling, oven baked pain with lemon and butter, maybe a bottled Chinese Oyster sauce. Great poached in wine, or poached and served later cold on a salad. Or bake a whole small fish stuffed with crab, shrimp or ? stuffing.

Answer 5

Wild Kings, Sockeye, are far superior to the Atlantic version. They spend more time gorging on krill and by extension, plankton, giving their flesh it's beautiful color, fatty oils, and silky texture. The farm-raised stuff is crap full of chemicals and bacteria. Atlantic stocks have been infiltrated by farmed fish for a century now, diluting the dna and spreading disease, Sea Lice, etc. The preponderence of lineolic acids and omega 3s set them apart from their Atlantic cousins and put them in a league with Iberico pigs and dry-aged grass-fed beef. When given the chance chefs always choose wild Pacific

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

Images: Ryutaro Tsukata, Rajesh TP, Pixabay, Dana Tentis