Newsweek

Mislabeling Means Consumers Eat a Lot of Imposter Fish

About 30 percent of the world's seafood consists of cheaper fish being sold as a more expensive alternative.
There's no tracking system for the thousands of fish-ing boats, and as a catch goes from deck to dock to processing plant, at any point it could have its label switched.
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In a diminutive shack in Eugene, Oregon, in a neighborhood that until recently was a better place to find meth than a decent meal, Taro Kobayashi is carving into the pinkest block of tuna I’ve ever seen.

Kobayashi is the owner and head chef of a restaurant called Mamé. He seats no more than 19 people at once, and if you didn’t make a reservation, you might not squeeze in until after 10 p.m. The cramp and the call ahead are worth it, though, because Kobayashi buys fish only if he knows precisely where it came from—the fisherman, the boat and the body

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