Showing posts with label wild planet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wild planet. Show all posts

Saturday, December 13, 2014

Simply balanced- 135

 SIMPLY BALANCED: IN EXTRA VIRGIN OLIVE OIL




APPEARANCE:

NUTRITION:
Calories- 100
Fat Calories- 50
Total Fat- 6g
Sat. Fat- 1.5g
Cholesterol- 30mg
Sodium- 200mg
Protein- 12g

PRODUCT OF:
The Pacific Ocean, processed in Vietnam

INGREDIENTS:
Sardines, Extra Virgin Olive Oil, Water, Salt, Aqueous Natural Smoke,

PRICE:

OVERALL:
A faint smoke aroma upon opening, Three large fish to the tin. A good textured fish, the smoke flavor is subtle; no strong taste or aftertaste. Not a spiny fish; these are in a BPA-free tin. If you are a fan of Wild Planet, you may want to switch to these. I would and will eat again. 5 Sardines.


Saturday, February 23, 2013

Mail Bag

Hello,
I just found your sea of sardine love. The Sardine Society blog has gone dormant and may have been schooling around my area.
On the weekend my dad will eat a cheap tin of sardines and I’d watch. It was only as I got toward my Wrinkley years did an interest and obsession take hold. Cases of Saltines and the gallon version of Franks Red Hot.
The shelf usually has 50-100 cans for emergency back-up, that being every day usually, but slowing recently.
My German mother got us to Germany and I continue to go. Not sardine country in the southern part where my cousins live but close to France and the giant Carrefour HyperMarket. 
That takes us to England for John West (well known brand) , Cornish sardines, and the love of mackerel.  Google Kraster Kippers.
On the way to the coast (Astoria: Kindergarten Cop, The Goonies both filmed there)  taking the Columbia River route we stopped at a history marker about John West.
Astoria was once a huge fishing community of Scandinavians and Finns. Tuna and salmon that ran so thick it was scooped out with what looked like  water wheels. Not much left today except that sardine have been running more northerly. Caught mostly for bait and frozen but some fresh does show up. I’ve canned Albacore several times while camping.


Riga Gold has mackerel also.  Very good.
The Germans have herring in various canned forms with their Baltic Sea border.  Alstertor, Ruegenfisch, …
While at  a big Korean store here I see their canned fish is Saury. The can states Pike Mackerel but it is not a mackerel. The Russians have in also, which in Cyrilic looks like ‘Caupa.’ I like this with a little slather of Best Foods Mayo.  We’re not salad dressing people in the Northwest.   The Japanese eat it also.

Wild Planet’s sardines used to be “sustainably caught off the California coast”;  now it is ”north pacific ocean.” But packed in Vietnam. I wonder if they didn’t take large blocks of frozen bait sardines from here and can them there?

Thank you for the blog and ratings.  Would it be possible to put your sardine rating next to the tin named  being reviewed so that the reader can see the highest ratings without having to go to each review?

I’ll talk about Matjes sometime. Wow vee.

Thanks again,
Eric Goranson
Portland , Oregon






Travel Channel show inquiry

My name is Jeff Mandell and I’m a producer for the Travel Channel show Bizarre Foods with Andrew Zimmern. We are planning an upcoming episode in Lisbon and I came across your website while doing some research on sardines.

I have a few questions and am thinking you might have some insight. Do you have any time this week to chat?

Please let me know!

Thanks,

Jeff Mandell



Jeff Mandell  —  Segment Producer
BIZARRE FOODS AMERICA WITH ANDREW ZIMMERN Travel Channel






________________________________________________________________________

We can smell you from over here ..

Hello!

This is D.L. Anderson, a fellow lover of the tinned fish up the road in Durham. I've been thoroughly enjoying your compendium of all things sardine, especially the tasting notes. I'm a proud member of The Grand Order of The Sardinier, which is a men's civic league dedicated to the discrete enjoyment of tinned sea creatures and spiritous libations. We have gatherings once every quarter at various well-ventilated locations and have the following, humble requirements for entry; one or two tins of fish and a story of their source (real or imagined) or a poem or both, plus respectable attire (sport coats, blazers, clip-on) and a cordial disposition. 

"I want to go quick like a seedless olive into the mouth of a fool, 
as young girls keep arriving from Des Moines wiggling like sardines in a striped dress, 
what does it mean, listening to Beethoven now?"
- Charles Bukowski (the rest of the story)

We appreciate all the work you're doing to catalog and celebrate sardines and we would be honored to host you for one of our events if you're ever planning a trip to the area. 

We are also quite interested in attending the sardine fest in Aberdeen. 

All the best,

DLA
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Thank you to sardine eater Gina for another great tin of fish. That was truly a wonderful surprise.


Some of you sardine eaters have started looking for BPA free sardines. Along with Vital Choice having BPA free cans, there are a few more out there . Wild Planet, Rain Coast , King Oscar, and certain tins of Ocean Prince are BPA free tins. Trader Joe's does have BPA free canned goods, but sardines are not one of them. From a letter they put out last year, they are attempting to move more of their canned goods to BPA free. Sardines may be on the list.
The French just put into effect a law banning BPA in any products intended for children under three. That law took effect in Dec. 26th 2012. 

If any of you sardine eaters know of any or run across other BPA free sardines, let us know.

Keep popping those tins Sardine Eaters!

BPA free Sardine tins

OCEAN PRINCE
KING OSCAR
SIMPLY BALANCED
HENRY & LISA'S




Saturday, February 4, 2012

WILD PLANET- 60

WILD PLANET: IN WATER



APPEARANCE:

NUTRITION:

Calories- 73
Fat Calories- 19
Sat Fat- 1g
Cholesterol- 48mg
Sodium- 194mg
Protein- 13g

PRODUCT OF:
California, processed in Vietnam

INGREDIENTS:
Sardines, Water, Sea Salt

PRICE:

OVERALL:
Pleasant aroma upon opening. Three and a half medium round fish to the tin. They possess a good firm texture, very meaty. Salt is very noticeable, a tad dry. They have an aftertaste I just can't place. Not fishy at all. I would eat again. These guys get four Sardines.



WILD PLANET: IN MARINARA SAUCE



APPEARANCE:


NUTRITION:
Calories- 60
Fat Calories- 15
Cholesterol- 25mg
Sodium- 220mg
Protein- 11g

PRODUCT OF:
California, processed in Vietnam

INGREDIENTS:
Sardines, Water, Tomato paste, Garlic, Sugar, Salt, Oregano, Pepper Powder, Basil

PRICE:

OVERALL:
A very tomatoey aroma upon opening. Four fish to the tin. The sauce is on the runny side. A very meaty fish, semi-dry. The sauce doesn't overpower the fish. Not a spiny fish. I would eat again. Four sardines.





WILD PLANET: IN EXTRA VIRGIN OLIVE OIL



APPEARANCE:


NUTRITION:
Calories- 110
Fat Calories- 70
Total Fat- 8g
Sat. Fat- 1.5g
Cholesterol- 25mg
Sodium- 260mg
Protein- 10g

PRODUCT OF:
California, processed in Vietnam

INGREDIENTS:
Sardines, Extra Virgin Olive Oil, Water Sea Salt, Aqueous Natural Smoke,

PRICE:

OVERALL:
A very mild pleasant aroma upon popping. Five fish to the tin. A very meaty dry fish, the smoke flavor is present. It gives the fish a tad of a sour taste. Not a spiny fish. Not a bad tin, would eat again. 4 Sardines






WILD PLANET: IN EXTRA VIRGIN OLIVE OIL WITH LEMON



APPEARANCE:


NUTRITION:
Calories- 110
Fat Calories- 70
Total Fat- 8g
Sat Fat- 1.5g
Cholesterol- 25mg
Sodium- 260mg
Protein- 10g

PRODUCT OF:
California, processed in Vietnam

INGREDIENTS:
Sardines, Extra Virgin Olive Oil, Water, Lemon, Aqueous Natural Smoke.

PRICE:

OVERALL:
A very faint lemon aroma upon opening. Five fish to the tin. A big slice of lemon stuck to the tin lid. I was expecting soggy, mushy fish in this tin because of the lemon. They are indeed the opposite. Even with the lemon, a good textured fish, smoke flavor is still known in this tin. A slightly dry fish. I would eat again. I could really see this tin of fish used in a salad. A tad on the sour side. I would eat again. 4 Sardines.



 WILD PLANET: IN WATER






APPEARANCE:
 NUTRITION:
Calories- 110
Fat Calories- 70
Total Fat- 8g
Sat Fat- 1.5g
Cholesterol- 25mg
Sodium- 260mg
Protein- 10g

PRODUCT OF:
California, processed in Vietnam

INGREDIENTS:
Sardines,

PRICE:

OVERALL:








WILD PLANET: S&B IN EVOO


APPEARANCE:
NUTRITION:
Calories- 110
Fat Calories- 70
Total Fat- 8g
Sat Fat- 1.5g
Cholesterol- 25mg
Sodium- 260mg
Protein- 10g

PRODUCT OF:
California, processed in Vietnam

INGREDIENTS:
Sardines,

PRICE:

OVERALL:

Tuesday, January 3, 2012

The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly 2012


THE QUEEN OF THE COAST




























































GAMMA-A






RIGA GOLD








PERDIZ





COFISA



Tricana








HADDON HOUSE









CHICKEN OF THE SEA





WILD PLANET











TRATA










BELA








TRADER JOE'S







JOHN WEST












Tub of fish. Some of the tins for the upcoming year




Happy New year every one. I'm starting The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly Page off with a pic of a dish of dried sardines. I know these guys are not in a tin, but I couldn't let a sardine tradition slip by. I made these guys up for the New Year's feast. The Japanese eat several types of fish for New Year's. I'm only focusing on the Dried Sardine aspect. I picked up a bag of Niboshi, sauteed them with some soy sauce, butter, and other spices, and laid them on a bed of rice with some Duck sauce. Very good stuff. The fish were used historically to fertilize rice fields. The symbolism is of an abundant harvest. Here's wishing every one an abundant harvest in the upcoming year, what ever you may sow. Now let's pop open some tins.