What kind of fish is served in Russian cafes

Published 2023년 7월 2일

Tridge summary

Russian restaurants are facing difficulties with the supply and cost of salmon, as the country sells its suitable salmon for restaurants to Asia while relying on imports from Norway, Chile, and the Faroe Islands. Russian restaurants are unable to obtain domestic salmon suitable for restaurant use due to a lack of internal supply chains and logistics. Although Murmansk produces some salmon, it is in insufficient quantities and not cheaper than imported salmon.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

Pike cutlets, halibut, cod and, of course, pollock - this Russian fish is enough in our restaurants. But a difficult situation is developing with salmon, shares the chairman of the Coordinating Council of the Federation of Restaurateurs and Hoteliers (FRiO) Sergey Mironov. "Russia sells its salmon, which are suitable for restaurants - large sockeye salmon, coho salmon, salmon, chinook salmon to Asia. And we still buy Norwegian, Chilean, Faroese salmon," he says. According to him, there are no problems with its supplies - it's just that now it costs more. Moreover, Norwegian salmon is often "chemical" - with nitrates, pesticides and antibiotics, says Mironov. Pink salmon is available among domestic red fish. But it is "useless" for restaurants, the expert says. In our market, small coho salmon or sockeye salmon remain unclaimed abroad. Such fish is in stores, but it is also not suitable for restaurants - you cannot cut it into steaks. "We have not built internal supply chains - ...
Source: RG

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