Catch the Wave of Wellness! 🌊
Chicken of the Sea Alaskan Pink Salmon offers a nutritious and delicious option for health-conscious consumers. Each 14.75-ounce can contains wild-caught salmon, providing 20 grams of protein per serving, while being gluten-free and preservative-free. This bulk pack of 12 ensures you have a sustainable, high-quality protein source on hand, perfect for various diets.
P**Y
hits the spot, tastes good hot or cold, pantry staple for me, love it
Yum so good. Really hits the spot. It arrived as expected, no surprises, no issues. Quality and taste is as anticipated.I love love love salmon, but don't often buy it fresh due to lack of ability, lack of it looking good, sometimes price, and more often the store I usually go to doesn't carry it. Also, sometimes I just want it on a whim and dont want to have to plan ahead for it. Canned salmon is delicious to me. So while I am not serving this up like a plank of salmon, it works so well when I have the craving for this delicious fish.Good direct from can. Has just enough salt to give it a lovely enhanced flavor. Not too much drain off. I either use the broth in the dish I am preparing, or I will give it to my dogs or cats to enjoy.I often eat it without much doctoring up. I have made patties and loafs, but sometimes I just break it up over salad or rice, as a side to some eggs and toast, as sandwich filling. Good hot or cold.For my review, I made a simple salmon and rice dish. Can use any rice, but I had added a packet of Tasty Bites Organic Sticky Rice to one of my beloved electric hot pots along with a full can of this salmon, some of the juice, then let it cook for a few minutes. Then I added some left over vegetables (great stir fry blend from $tree) and some whole baby corn a drizzle of Kadoya sesame oil and a couple packets of soy sauce *. I had some seasoned salt (also from $tree), garlic powder, and sunflower seeds that I sprinkled on top. Lightly mixed, plated, and ate up. YUM. Super simple, and pretty much all pantry items. I use fresh and such when I can, but it is sure nice to make a nice meal from just opening a few cans. Could turn it into a broth bowl with some added water and use remainder of "juice" or other broth and seasonings.Figured I would link to all that I use once I realized I bought most of it from Amazon. Shop around for best price.I dont use a lot of soy sauce, and I am rather enamored with buying a box of packets that I can pull from as needed. Tastes better than bottled to me.
A**Y
Buy it
Cheapest and best way to get your Omega 3 fatty acid....As a canned salmon.... Has the edge on all the rest
R**R
Very good
Very good
K**T
Great nourishing additive to meals
Sooooo it doesn’t really taste like salmon. To me it tastes more like tuna BUT I love that it’s large flake and not minced up like tuna often is. I love the amount of protein and good fat this adds to a dish and it feels really nourishing. There are definitely bones but they are soft and I tell myself it’s good calcium haha. I dislike the texture of the bony bits but I just kinda push through that part for the other benefits.
T**L
Fixed my dog’s dry skin and dull coat. And she loves it!
I give this to my German shepherd for her dry skin and full coat. It’s cheaper than dog food and has better ingredients.,
R**N
Ms
Received my order it wad packed good for the price and came fast.
C**D
Excellent quality!
Excellent quality and a perfect size for one/two people!
E**A
Trader Joes Pink Salmon is a bit better
Trader Joes pink Salmon is seasonal. So when they stopped carrying it for a few months this summer i looked for other options. Did not want to pay $4+ dollars at the store so found these in muti-packs online. The TJ's pink salmon seems more solid. This Chicken of the Sea variety is slighly more mushy. Taste wises it is good. I've tasted it but I don't usually eat this. I prefer Sockeye or King Salmon. The canned pink is for my dog. I add a few tablespoons of this with her kibbles (Salmon and potatoes) to make it moist. What can I say I love my pup! Next year I will stock up on the TJs salmon by May/June.A little about Salmon and Omega 3's:I think all wild salmon choices are good choices, Some cost more, others taste better, some have lower calories, others have more protein, and last but not least some have more Omega-3. The Omega 6 content and ratios sometimes shown are both insignifcant and negligible as a salmon selection criteria. So don't pay to much attention to these ratios. Let me explain why:I do agree higher Omega-3 and lower Omega-6 is considered healthier. The average American diet is estimated to have a ratio of 1 to 15 Omega-3 to Omega-6 . Researchers have found a ratio of 1 to 4 has some significant health benefits. Some even have suggested a ratio of 1 to 1 Omega-3 to omega-6. Every type of wild salmon far surpass this 1 to 4 ratio; even with the lox with 75% of its Omega-3s denatured by the smoking process. So again don't worry about Omega 3 to omega 6 ratios when it comes to salmon (which has abundance of Omega 3s and small amounts of Omega 6s)As far as Omega-3 Wild King Salmon is the best at 1.7gms for a 3oz serving. Wild King Salmon is also the highest in calories and the highest in cost compared to the other salmons, e.g. Sockeye, Coho, Pink, Chum. These other salmons have 30-50% less Omega-3, 30-50% fewer calories, and cost less. The way I figure you'll have to eat a larger portion of these other salmon tupes to get an equivalent amount of Omega-3 compared to the superior Wild King Salmon. By then the calorie and cost factors end up being a wash. I personally prefer a smaller tastier portion of Wild King Salmon instead of double the portion of any of the others. My second favorite as far as taste would be sockeye or Coho.Fresh wild salmon is best, followed by frozen, and then followed by canned. Farmed would be my last choice. Out of all the farmed salmons - Atlantic is the best. Most farmed salmons have inferior Omega-3 profiles compared to their wild cousins. Farmed Atlantic Salmon is an exception it has large amounts of Omega-3s. Even with that in mind, I try to stay away from farmed salmon or all farmed fish for that matter. There are other compleiing reasons to do so like lower nutrient levels, i.e., Vitamin D and higher PCBs (polychlorinated byphenyls) found in the farmed varietals.
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