Studies toward a sustainable future conducted by international organizations uniformly agree about having to change some of our present consumer behaviors. Regarding food, suggestions include eating locally farmed, less industrialized and renewable food to promote health and circularity, and limiting waste. Jellyfish are frequently sorted and discarded after being caught with fish in fishing nets and gear. In contrast, we propose utilizing this by-catch as food. This review discusses the economic value and sustainability of jellyfish, the technologies used to prepare them for human consumption, their nutritional profile and health impacts and, finally, consumer acceptability and sensory evaluation of jellyfish food products. This discussion is critical for promoting jellyfish as an important aquatic resource to support blue and circular economies.

    • @Number1SummerJamOP
      link
      English
      11 year ago

      Excess jellyfish is a product of climate change. If we don’t start finding a way to deal with them they’ll kill off other species.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        1
        edit-2
        1 year ago

        Ecosystems tend to find equilibriums on their own, intervening will not help it and most likely makes it worse. Probably, a growing population of jellyfish is already a solution, the ecosystem came up with to a problem we might not even see yet.

  • spinnetrouble
    link
    fedilink
    31 year ago

    I’m totally on board–I grew up eating jellyfish at every “nice” Chinese restaurant my parents took us to when I was little. At the very, very least, we should be exploring potential uses for jellyfish bycatch rather than sorting and tossing them to start.

      • tiredofsametab
        link
        fedilink
        31 year ago

        I’ve had it in Japan a few times. Usually a bit chewy for texture. I’m not sure how to describe the flavor, really. I don’t have strong opinions on it either way.

      • spinnetrouble
        link
        fedilink
        31 year ago

        The texture is closest to “wood ear,” a kind of edible fungus that’s used in Chinese (maybe Taiwanese?) cooking. It’s like a mushroom with more “rubbery crunch” to it. Flavorwise, I didn’t notice any unique flavor to the jellyfish itself, it just tasted like whatever it was brined in and didn’t have any fishiness to it.