If you’re serving salmon this Christmas, should you play it safe with traditional oak-smoked or take a gamble on maple syrup, seaweed or even whisky and ‘gold’ varieties? We put this year’s supermarket offerings to the test.
Smoked salmon: a Christmas cracker or a slippery customer? Photograph: NightAndDayImages/Getty Images
Be it in a roulade, with blinis, partnering scrambled eggs or as a pâté, it is almost guaranteed that at some point this Christmas, you will eat smoked salmon. It is as traditional as turkey. Sadly, given the exorbitant cost of high-quality, traditionally smoked wild salmon (£20-£35 for 200g; enough to feed three or maybe four people as a starter), for the majority of us, that will mean eating farmed and industrially smoked salmon. It is a production process with significant ecological drawbacks that, in pure flavour terms, is prey to damaging shortcuts. But do any supermarket own-brands buck the trend? Which should you treat yourself to this Christmas?
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Sainsbury’s, Taste the Difference oak-smoked Scottish salmon, 120g, £3.50
“Previously frozen and defrosted without affecting the quality of the product,” declares the label, a claim hard to square with the cellular damage implicit in all freezing, and this salmon’s slippery and plasticised, jellified texture. The mouthfeel is more Haribo than fish protein. Sourced from “responsible” Scottish farms (whatever that means) and smoked over oak and whisky cask shavings, its flavour is more elegantly restrained than some but, fundamentally, it is all charred embers. The cure’s sweetness, much less the salmon’s flavour, are distant backnotes. A good pâté ingredient. 5/10