Natural Color in Farmed Fish?

July 17, 2007

Another question today: “I BUY FARM RAISED SALMON FROM SUPERMARKET IT IS FROM ASIA. DOESN’T SAY COLOR ADDED. I SEE ATLANTIC FISH SO CALLED, NATURAL COLOR ADDED. WHY WOULD THEY SAY THAT IF IT IS NATURAL?? DO YOU HAVE AN ANSWER FOR THAT ONE.. THANKS.
LOVE YOUR ARTICLES. AL.”

Weird, no? I discuss this problem in the Fish Quandaries chapter of What to Eat in the section called Label Quandary #3: Artificial Color. The bottom line: all farmed salmon is colored pink because otherwise it would be an unappetizing gray and nobody would buy it. The color, which is fed to fish in the food pellets, usually is a synthetic version of the natural pigment (which originates from krill) but is sometimes isolated from yeast. Is either “natural?” This could be argued either way but the real point is that the FDA has not produced a regulatory definition for “Natural.” It should, if for no other reason than to end the confusion. Food companies want everything to appear “natural” because they know it sells. The fish section is the wild west of the supermarket. Caveat emptor!


2 Comments

  1. Hello Ms. Nestle!

    I was wondering what you recommend regarding giving fish to children? Should children not each fish until they’re teenagers? Does buying fish from a farmers market help?

    Thank you and I love your book What to Eat!

    Comment by Nina — December 10, 2007 @ 2:41 pm

  2. If you love What to Eat, take a look at the fish chapters where I talk about fish recommendations for pregnant women and children. Remember: these are easy–just avoid shark, swordfish, king mackerel, tilefish, and albacore tuna. The rest aren’t a problem if eaten in reasonable amounts. I hope this helps!

    Comment by Marion — December 10, 2007 @ 3:51 pm

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