I asked in a restaurant the other day, "Where is this Barramundi from?"
The reply: The other dish is from Taiwan but the dish you are asking about, the fish is from Australia. ($30)
Great chips, great Aioli, salad of no consequence, and the fish was not Australian Barra.
I wanted to know if you could tell the difference using look and smell so I contacted the Australian Fisheries Management Authority and their reply follows:
(I have deleted the signature because I think it is polite to do so, although, the heading on the email did state - Unclassified)
The Australian Fisheries Management Authority do not manage the Barramundi fishery. Barramundi is a state/territory managed fishery. Though, I can provide some information which may be assistance.
As a consumer, I dont believe you would be able to identify the difference from the look and smell of Barramundi. However, State and Federal Governments have introduced a number of measures regarding national labelling to assist the consumer in identifying seafood
In 2008 it became mandatory for all States & Territories in Australia to introduce country of origin labelling for packaged seafood. However, the food service industry (restaurants, cafes etc) are exempt from country of origin labelling; except for the Northern Territory.
Compliance with food codes is monitored by authorities in the states and territories. You do not identify in which state you reside, so I have attached links to agencies which may be able to assist you further.
Hi Naomi, I too like the old Barrumundi but very cautious where I get it from. Try to catch it myself.....from the local fish monger I will not buy imitation frozen stuff and usually only buy whole Barra. I used to get it from a Barra farm in VIC but was never the same as the real thing. Freshly caught wild Barra is my favourite but then again is it real cos I would be wild if I ended up on a hook then someones plate
It's readily available in your local supermarket if you get stuck. Thawed for your convenience they say, nice of them, NOT.
Seriously though, if it is a well respected Restaurant or Fish Monger, then you should have a better chance of getting the real thing.
Happy Barra eating and keep safe.
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Hi Naomi. Its so, so wrong that food standards are set (and usually managed) by the food industry itself in Aust and NZ. Akin to giving a burglar a key to a bullion vault I would have thought.
Although there are some State regulations, the States leave it to Council and Shire health inspectors to enforce - so guess what - they don't get enforced! These inspectors are busy checking the conditions of new food outlets, applications for new ones and the occasional inspection of existing ones, and of course the complaints from the eating public about critters in their food, dangerous or objectionable objects (glass, sticking plasters, metal) or sickness caused by out of code food being served up
As for asking the restaurant the country of origin, you got lied to with your, not doubt, expensive meal of Basa, salad and chips, even though it was listed as Barra and you were told it was from Aust. So you are reliant on the honesty of the restaurant staff - not much hope if theyre advertising junk fish as Barra
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Cheers Bruce
The amazing things you see when nomading Australia
Now I can't eat fish when I go out because I embarrass the company I am with because I ask.
I can't eat pork because most of it is coming from overseas and chicken well, who knows what they do with that, they wouldn't be using organic chicken that's for sure.
Leaves me with Beef, I can cook a great steak at home, why would I eat that when out?
Unfortunately none of the government organisations have our back, they only become involved if enough of us complain.
Why did I become so freaked out about food?
I have spent the last 12 months getting over Breast Cancer and to help myself I decided to change my entire diet and during my research I looked at food and nutrition found out lots of stuff I never knew.
I feel fantastic now but would like to go out sometimes and know what I am eating is local, fresh and hormone/pesticide and additive free.
Yes we are largely unable to either be informed of ie in restaurants or decipher Aust food standards/labelling.
After 25 years in the NT and loving Barra,,, I NEVER touch it now EXCEPT IN THE NT.
Tried in Adelaide several times and it was very watery, incipient and tasted muddy. Now all Barra fishermen know the muddy taste from upstream creeks/ flood plain runoffs etc, as opposed to salt water Barra, the shiny silver one that tastes like Barra.
I hope the labelling improves and the awareness of staff serving it, however, I'm not holding my breath. Lobbyists are flourishing in Oz at the moment and the food industry by all accounts is only trailing drug manufacturers in influence.
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The best thing to do is buy the fish from supermarket or Fish monger and cook it at home , Under Australia Laws fresh fish must be label country of origin , But cooked fish do not have to so eat at home and know what your eating and save lots of money
Yep, my dad had a fish and chip shop at Holland Park back in the 70's. He'd buy the big blocks of flake and cut it to shape... whiting, bream, flathead, cod.... you name it :) That was the done thing back then, but to his credit, everything was cooked to perfection. He even had regular customers that would tell him he had the best whiting they'd ever tasted lol.
Most barra is farmed these days, but it still tastes like barra, though wild caught from clean coastal estuaries is by far the best IMO. If you like and know your barra, you know if you're looking at a barra fillet, and you'll never confuse it with basa for looks or taste.
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Cheers, Steve.
"Any day above ground is a good day... unless you're a spelunker :)"
Fresh fish is fine, it has to state Country of Origin, but when overseas farmed Barra is passed off as Aussie Barra in restaurants and cafes, I am very concerned.
I can catagorily state.........75% of barra you eat, is farm fish, australia and asia origin. ( farm fish....ie, ponds in the ground ). "wild caught"...ie, silver barra, is like comparing chalk to cheese.
Your fish mongers / restauranters .....will 99% of the time, tell you their fish ( barra ) is Ozy, wild caught............( load of garbage )
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DD, I reckon barra caught in muddy water tastes like soggy cardboard... but a nice silver fish caught in clean water is delicious. Having said that, I'm with you on the flathead tails... yummmo.
It just happens to be the start of flatty season in SQ, so I'll be out flicking soft plastic lures around the canals pretty soon
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Cheers, Steve.
"Any day above ground is a good day... unless you're a spelunker :)"
Even when catching it fresh onn Cape York, I've never thought Barra was such a good eating fish. The very best I've tasted, [about 30 years ago,] was Maori Wrasse, but you're not allowed to take them anymore.
Smaller Reef fish, Coral Trout, Barracuta, or Mullet are much better in my humble opinion.
Even when catching it fresh on Cape York, I've never thought Barra was such a good eating fish. The very best I've tasted, [about 30 years ago,] was Maori Wrasse, but you're not allowed to take them anymore.
Smaller Reef fish, Coral Trout, Barracuta, or Mullet are much better in my humble opinion.
Now I can't eat fish when I go out because I embarrass the company I am with because I ask.....
...................... Cheers, Naomi Hi Naomi, You have EVERY RIGHT to ask questions at a food outlet. As for the company ....... bad luck for the company. How non supportive they seem, I'd keep asking and as for the company......ditch them........find new REAL friends ....and KEEP ASKING QUESTIONS .
It's your health and your life and if someone can't answer to your satisfaction, then go elsewhere.
Sure Phantom. It is not going to change the laws, although I am involved in a public campaign to change the current laws of Country of Origin Labelling which includes restaurants and cafes declaring origin on their menus.
In Sydney everyone is so into money grabbing you don't get what you pay for. When I ask the country of origin in these establishments, I am being lied to. I do not want to eat crap seafood from other countries, I live on an island.
On the road, perhaps I can catch my own fish and I know from my previous travels that food is much better out of the city.