Mar 232011
 

This is a copy of a posting I just made to my Food Blog. I’m reposting it here as the 88 market is in San Leandro.  I will probably not do that in the future (crosspost between blogs) and my reviews of San Leandro restaurants and the occasional store will stay in my foodblog.

A few weeks ago, the San Leandro Patch had a little “story” about the 88 market on East 14th St.  I’d been to the store once or twice before, in search of rare Asian ingredients, but it’s not a place I’d normally hit.  However, the Patch article mentioned that the 88 market has become a seafood emporium in the last few years, offering 150 varieties of fish, so when I needed some catfish earlier this week (to make Catfish a la Meuniere which was, btw, amazing), and Safeway was selling it at $9 lb (really? who are they kidding?), I thought we should give 88 market a try.

Fortunately or unfortunately I sent Mike to do the shopping. He was very impressed with the freshness of the fish. Indeed, it was alive and swimming in a tank until Mike ordered it, heard a big thump and a lot of flopping around.  He didn’t watch, and he was happy the kids didn’t go along.  He asked for the catfish to be filleted but again, declined to look at the process.  What can we say? He’s squeamish.

So he was not prepared, after he came home, for me to scream at him from the kitchen to come see what he bought: a bag of fish parts (head, tail, fins, whatever) with two very uneven, not fully descaled, bone-in fillets that would feed one person (if I chose to cook them, which I did not).  Moral of the story? Go to 88 market for very fresh, full fish – but if you want your fish neatly processed, go elsewhere.

I will try this place again, however, when I need some type of rare fish you can’t find at the supermarket – and I have time to learn how to fillet fish myself 🙂

88 Supermarket
14405 E 14th St
San Leandro, CA
(510) 351-8200

  2 Responses to “Buying a Catfish @ 88 Super Market”

  1. Fresh is always best. Marga, thank you for pointing out that these are available locally. You left off the cost per pound.

    Mike has a sweet deal. He is sent shopping, does not clearly ask for what he wanted, does not look at the result and gets out alive. More husbands should get that much slack.

    Fresh fish cannot be beat. What an opportunity was lost for children to learn where their food comes from, the lesson on anatomy that is not a bad thing, and the techniques of cooking that could have been improved.

  2. Sorry, Thomas, I forgot to put the price. Mike says it was $4/lb. Which is not that great, considering that half the fish is unusable (to me, at least). Actually, I’m thinking of using it to make some stock, not that I ever had done that before.

    Mike definitely got a earful when he got home, so he quickly drove to Lucky’s to get me some perfectly wonderful, boneless catfish fillets. I don’t know how much he paid for those, at that point I didn’t want to ask 🙂

    As for the kids, Mika (my 9 year old) asked whether the fish had been cleaned, otherwise, she suggested, she could dissect it 🙂

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