Author Topic: Does anybody make high-fish?  (Read 4042 times)

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Offline z2704186

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Does anybody make high-fish?
« on: January 27, 2013, 05:14:58 am »
I have some wild salmon in my fridge which has been in there for five days and its beginning to smell pretty bad.  Is there such a thing as high-fish, or only high-meat?   Is there greater risk in consuming high-fish? 

Offline jessica

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Re: Does anybody make high-fish?
« Reply #1 on: January 27, 2013, 05:50:20 am »
how is the fish stored?  if it has been open to the air it should be starting to dry out and will be delicious, if you have had it covered you might have suffocated any good bacteria and are just decomposing the fish

Offline z2704186

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Re: Does anybody make high-fish?
« Reply #2 on: January 27, 2013, 05:57:27 am »
It was a pound of fish in a half gallon-plus container that I opened daily because I kept planning to eat it but just never got around to it (it was refrigerated constantly).  How does the air make a difference in fostering the right bacteria when the gut is virtually airtight anyway?

Offline Alive

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Re: Does anybody make high-fish?
« Reply #3 on: January 27, 2013, 06:38:42 am »
You will be fine eating it. I made high fish by burying a week old fish in garden for a month and it ate it fine. Our guts have oxygen from circulation of blood.

Offline cherimoya_kid

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Re: Does anybody make high-fish?
« Reply #4 on: January 27, 2013, 08:24:12 am »
I make high fish. I have no problems from eating it.

Offline Iguana

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Re: Does anybody make high-fish?
« Reply #5 on: January 27, 2013, 02:14:21 pm »
If it smells bad for me, I wouldn't eat it. I doubt very much that an animal would ever eat something that smells bad to him.
« Last Edit: January 27, 2013, 02:23:18 pm by Iguana »
Cause and effect are distant in time and space in complex systems, while at the same time there’s a tendency to look for causes near the events sought to be explained. Time delays in feedback in systems result in the condition where the long-run response of a system to an action is often different from its short-run response. — Ronald J. Ziegler

 

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