Showing posts with label Seafood. Show all posts

National Aquarium hosts seafood forum to bridge gaps between watermen, consumers

National Aquarium hosts seafood forum to bridge gaps between watermen, consumers – Baltimore Business Journal






Stunning Waterfront home in the Downs







The National Aquarium hosted its first East Coast Seafood Forum on Monday.




The National Aquarium took a step Monday to connect the dots between seafood consumers and local watermen.


The Inner Harbor institution brought together about 140 stakeholders for the first East Coast Seafood Forum, an event the aquarium hopes to hold annually. The full day of panel discussions and roundtable talks included voices from watermen to retailers — representatives from every point in the seafood supply chain — who spent the day touching on aquaculture, branding seafood, the challenges of promoting sustainable seafood and the benefits of buying locally.






The National Aquarium hosted its first East Coast Seafood Forum on Monday.







TJ Tate, the aquarium’s seafood sustainability director, has been working since she joined the aquarium in January to make sustainable fish and shellfish a priority for the organization. Monday’s forum brought together groups of stakeholders in the region’s seafood industry that she’s been working with, but until now they’ve been somewhat siloed.






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“We can create a program, but if we don’t have buy-in from every one of these stakeholders, it’s not going to work,” she said. “We’re going to celebrate the good things that are happening in this region, but we’re also going to figure out how to be a little bit smarter.”


Using the feedback from the forum, Tate will work to bridge gaps between watermen, consumers and everyone in between to promote local, sustainable seafood.


Getting the seafood program right was the most difficult part of getting Woodberry Kitchen up and running, chef Spike Gjerde said. Woodberry Kitchen made a commitment from the start to source its ingredients locally, and while meat and produce were easy, seafood gave him a tough time.


Eight years ago, when the restaurant opened, there was little transparency and no conversation around sustainable seafood. Now, that’s starting to change.


“The industry has shifted so dramatically so quickly,” he said.


“For me the biggest relief and the most gratitude goes to our guests who get it, who don’t press us for things that aren’t on our menu,” Gjerde said. “We have a tremendous opportunity to talk to our gusts to educate our guests when that makes sense, but also to do the right thing.”







Stunning Waterfront home in the Downs







National Aquarium hosts seafood forum to bridge gaps between watermen, consumers

Sustainable Seafood Tastings At Bluewater Boathouse In September


Bluewater Boathouse, Coronado’s newest restaurant, is part of a family of six Bluewater restaurants specializing in sustainable seafood. Since taking over the historic Coronado Boathouse in July, Bluewater continues to spread its passion for the freshest sustainable seafood available for lunch and dinner at the 1887 Boathouse.


Beginning Tuesday, September 9, Bluewater will feature a sampling of seafood and shellfish that has been sustainably caught or farmed to standards established by the Monterey Bay Aquarium Seafood Watch program, the Aquarium of the Pacific in Long Beach Seafood for the Future program or the Marine Stewardship Council.


The special September menu will allow guests to select three courses, including a raw shellfish or hot seafood starter, their signature New England clam chowder, an entrée, and all-you-can eat sourdough bread and butter. Valued at $60, the special $34.95 menu includes a chosen tasting of Oregon’s Acrobat wines – voted best wine to pair with seafood and oysters.


The Sustainable Seafood Feast menu includes a wide variety of oysters, sea scallops, arugula crab and avocado salads, crab cakes and a variety of fresh fish from which to choose. Additionally, the menu will include New England clam chowder, cedar plank Atlantic salmon, Manila clams, grilled swordfish and many more fresh, sustainable seafood items.


Bluewater works closely with industry experts to ensure best-practice standards for sustainable fishing and harvesting. Extremely popular throughout Orange County, Arizona and Catalina, the sustainable tasting events make their debut in Coronado this month. The restaurant family’s annual tribute to sustainable seafood and shellfish is one of the most popular tasting and pairing celebrations of the year. 


Beyond the Sept. 9 event, which includes the wine pairing, customers at all six Bluewater restaurants can order the special meal all month long and add the highlighted Acrobat wines at regular prices.


“We hosted a sustainable seafood feast in 2012 to show our customers just how easy it is to make responsible seafood choices – and it was such a hit, we made it a permanent part of our monthly tasting series,” said Jimmy Ulcickas, Bluewater Grill co-founder.  “In addition to tasting the freshest sustainably caught or harvested fish, participants can learn tips on cooking and serving fish, menu-planning and wine-pairing. The result is a seafood celebration that is fun, flavorful, educational and completely fascinating at the same time.”


To date, more than 90 percent of seafood offerings at the Bluewater restaurants are sustainably caught or farmed – among the highest of any seafood restaurants in California. To be deemed sustainable, the seafood or shellfish must be certified by the Aquarium of the Pacific Seafood for the Future program; be designated a “Best Or Good Alternative Choice” by the Monterey Bay Aquarium’s Seafood Watch program; or adhere to strict Marine Stewardship Council best-practice standards for sustainable harvesting.


Bluewater Grill locations include Newport Beach, in Cannery Village; Tustin, at the District at Tustin Legacy; Redondo Beach, at King Harbor; and Phoenix, in the Camelback neighborhood of central Phoenix. Recent additions to the growing family include Bluewater Avalon on the Avalon waterfront on Santa Catalina Island, and Bluewater Boathouse Seafood Grill, in the iconic former Hotel del Coronado Boathouse on Coronado Island. Bluewater has announced plans to open a seventh Bluewater restaurant in fall 2014 in Temecula Wine County. 


Coronado’s Bluewater Boathouse is located at 1701 Strand Way, across the street from the historic Hotel del Coronado. The restaurant serves lunch and dinner daily and is open from 11:30 a.m.-9:30 p.m. To make reservations call (619) 435-0155.


For more info, go to www.bluewatergrill.com, or follow Bluewater Grill on Facebook at www.facebook.com/pages/Bluewater-Grill-and-Bluewater-Avalon or Bluewater Boathouse Seafood Grill at  www.facebook.com/bluewaterboathousegrill.




Sustainable Seafood Tastings At Bluewater Boathouse In September