this post was submitted on 19 Oct 2025
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Is that because it’s starting to turn by then, or some other change? I know some chemicals change kinda quickly. Do some acids start turning into sugars, or do the fish wind up frozen or being marinated or injected something?
Thank you for answering!
It depends. The fishing industry and seafood isn't exactly my are of expertise in this arena, but there's a reason why fishing boats with freezers are more sought after than just "catch of the day" types. The latter has variances in time to market which may impact the freshnwss and taste, even if only by a difference of a day.
Seems lots of seafood just spoils really fast, which makes sense if you take into account the density of the meat. Things like Tuna or Salmon steaks are dense, and therefore would spoil slower than something like a whitefish or shrimp perhaps.