{"id":1830,"date":"2020-09-18t08:06:44","date_gmt":"2020-09-18t08:06:44","guid":{"rendered":"\/\/www.bulkreeftv.com\/?p=1830"},"modified":"2020-09-18t21:03:53","modified_gmt":"2020-09-18t21:03:53","slug":"lavraki-weve-got-the-scoop-bronzino-is-tasty","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"\/\/www.bulkreeftv.com\/lavraki-weve-got-the-scoop-bronzino-is-tasty\/","title":{"rendered":"lavraki: we’ve got the scoop, bronzino is tasty!"},"content":{"rendered":"
in greece the european sea bass is called lavraki, it is also a term greek journalists use when they snag an exclusive story, referring to how lucky you are if you catch one. if you get a chance, you’d be lucky to taste one. in france they’re called loup or bar. the spanish call them robalo, northern italians call them bronzino and elsewhere in italy they’re called spigola. marketed in the u.s. as bronzini or bronzino\u2014they’re widely distributed from norway to western sahara, the meditteranean and black seas\u2014these fish are loved wherever they’re found and have been since early roman days.<\/strong><\/p>\n due to intense fishing pressure, wild stocks have dwindled worldwide and the price of available wild bronzino is astronomical. fortunately, the cultivation of these european favorites has been evolving for a couple thousand years;<\/strong> from the ancient times of trapping them in lagoons to fatten them up, to the pioneering israelis, french and greeks\u2014who in the ’60s mastered the farming techniques that enabled the european bass to become the second biggest in production of farmed fish in europe next to salmon.<\/p>\n