Rob
The fish farm was in Wiltshire
"Should you buy organic?
There is debate about whether fish can ever really be classified as organic due to the nature of their environment, but if you want assurances that the trout have space to swim in and aren’t given antibiotics, and that their food doesn’t contain anything artificial, organic is the way to go. Non-organic feed contains a colouring so that the flesh turns deep pink, organic fish have much paler flesh – within the trade they are known as “white” trout, says Tony Free of Purely Organic, based at Deverill Trout Farm in Wiltshire. Free farms rainbow trout, and some brown trout, in pristine waters that flow through his neighbour’s organic watercress farm. On its way through the watercress beds, it collects freshwater shrimps, which the trout eat, giving a pale pinkness to their flesh. “It’s much more natural to eat this than pellets containing carbohydrates,” says Free. He believes it helps give the fish profound flavour, redolent of trout as it would have been 50 years ago, when the population was mainly wild."
Jim