I didn't care for the taste of Blue Ice Fermented Cod Liver Oil. It tasted bad, rancid. I had to force myself to eat it, which I did until I used it all up.
The taste of my fermented 100% grass-fed cattle and sheep liver isn't bad at all. It has the sharp tangy bite I would expect from a fermented food with overtones of liver, but doesn't taste bad or rancid at all. I eat a few cubes of it with other raw organs or meats as well as fermented vegetables every day, and look forward to it.
It would be my expectation also that fermented fish should be similar to pickled herring (which I love, though thats used with white wine vinegar from costco, doubt thats healthy
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as far as I know blue ice fclo is the only legitimately raw fclo on the market.
a bad experience is to be expected with all other brands
as far as I can tell their problem with it is that it smelled and tasted horrible...all I can say is welcome to the world of fermented organs.
If I get benefits, then I'm game.
After buying a few bottles of the Blue Ice fermented cod liver oil some years back I stopped also. My reasons were more practical though: I found it to be too pricey for the benefits it offered. I'm also afraid of the high amount of pollutants in cod liver oil, or fish more generally. I know others insist that they get the pollutants out somehow, or that they don't matter, but I don't buy either of these assertions for even one second.
I have ready access to 100% grass-fed cattle and sheep liver, so I eat plenty of liver and actively experiment with different ways of fermenting it to get some probiotic benefits too. After going this route for a few years, I think I'll stick with livers from land animals from here on. No cod liver oil for me.
Wouldnt there be a bit of different nutrients, phytonutrients, trace minerals, anything else in a sea liver though? compared to land liver? Maybe its not enough to be important.
I'm trying to go as small on supplements myself, moving that money towards higher quality foods, so I can see your reasoning for sure.