Times Colonist

The new ugly delicacy: Industry touts monkfish

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PORTLAND, Maine — Now serving sea monsters.

That’s the message from members of the fishing industry, environmen­talists and regulators who are trying to persuade consumers to eat more of a particular­ly weirdlooki­ng creature from the deep — monkfish.

Monkfish have been commercial­ly fished for years, but recent analyses by the U.S. government show the monster-like bottom dweller can withstand more fishing pressure. However, U.S. fishermen often fall short of their quota for the fish.

A lack of reliable markets for the fish and convoluted fishing regulation­s make it difficult to catch the full quota, fishermen said. Neverthele­ss, the U.S. government is upping harvesters’ limits for monkfish for the next three years.

Some New England fishermen switched to targeting monkfish in recent decades when traditiona­l species such as cod began to decline, said Jan Margeson, a Chatham, Massachuse­tts, fisherman who made such a switch himself. He said the availabili­ty of monkfish represents an opportunit­y for the industry.

“It is healthy. We can’t even catch the quota,” he said. “We had to find an alternativ­e species once groundfish died years ago.”

Monkfish, also known as goosefish, are predatory fish that camouflage themselves on the ocean bottom and can grow to be about five feet long. With a gaping maw and uneven, jagged teeth, its appearance is the stuff of nightmares.

But proponents often say the taste and texture of its flesh is similar to lobster. And monkfish, which is often sold as a whole fish or as steaks of tail meat, frequently is often more affordable than other domestic seafood.

Tails typically sell for about $7 US per pound at New England fish markets where popular items such as lobsters and flounder sell for $10 per pound or more.

The fish is brought to shore from Maine to North Carolina.

Fishermen have caught more than 15 million pounds of the fish every year since 1987. They were allowed to catch 32.5 million pounds of monkfish each year from 2013 to 2015, but typically caught less than two thirds of that amount. The U.S. government increased that limit to about 33.8 million pounds for the 2017-18 fishing year, and that number will hold until 2020.

 ?? AP ?? A Monkfish dwarfs other fish offered for sale.
AP A Monkfish dwarfs other fish offered for sale.

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