What is jack salmon, and is it a St. Louis thing? —Jason L., St. Louis
When I was a youngster, I remember marveling at the sight of jack salmon, a skinny, foot-long, batter-fried, bone-in/tail-on fin fish sitting in a grocery store hot case along with a dozen near-similar specimens…and swearing I’d never eat one. And I didn’t, until decades later.
You are viewing: What Is A Jack Salmon
As with sardines and sushi, I had been missing out on some good eating.
Read more : What Happens If You Overfill Brake Fluid
Technically, a “jack” is a male salmon that returns to spawn one year sooner than other adult salmon and therefore is smaller in size. Realistically, jack salmon aren’t salmon at all, but most often refer to the Midwestern name given to the Pacific whiting, a saltwater fish also known as hake.
At this point, the discussion gets murky. In Baltimore, whiting is called lake trout. Merriam-Webster equates jack salmon with the freshwater walleye, which are found in the Mississippi and Missouri river systems and its tributaries. So despite its ties to the Pacific Ocean, it’s also possible for anglers in the Ozarks to legitimately bring home a stringer of jack salmon (or its cousin, the sauger). All of that confusion aside, if you see a jack salmon on a local menu, chances are it’s a Pacific whiting, a mild whitefish that’s similar to cod in taste, but with a smaller flake.
As to whether jack salmon is “a St. Louis thing,” that answer is most likely. According to this article on Dr. Harley Hammerman’s Lost Tables website, a menu from the legendary Dohack’s claimed that jack salmon had been “a Dohack’s specialty since 1923.” The assumption was that “when the restaurant called whiting ‘jack salmon’ on its menu, the name became a tradition in St. Louis restaurants.”
Read more : What To Wear In The Hamptons
Nowadays, jack salmon can be found on everyday menus at most of the local chicken and fish houses, sometimes offered as fried fillets but more often served whole, which shouldn’t be a deterrent. Bone-in fish tends to be moister and more flavorful than fillets, and whiting pulls very easily off the firm, hard bone.
Should you see it at a fish fry in the next few weeks—and you will—I suggest you pass on the cod and ask for some “jack.”
Follow dining editor George Mahe on Twitter and Instagram, or send him an “Ask George” email at [email protected]. For more from St. Louis Magazine, subscribe or follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.
Source: https://t-tees.com
Category: WHAT