How to Buy Fresh Seafood (What to Look For Every Time)
When it comes to seafood, freshness isnโt just taste โ itโs safety, texture, and whether dinner actually turns out the way you want. Hereโs the no-nonsense guide to buying better fish every single time.

1. Smell Is Your First Test
Fresh fish smells like the ocean โ clean, mild, cold. If it smells โfishy,โ sour, or sweet? Walk away. Thereโs no saving that fillet.
2. Look for Moist, Firm Flesh
The fillet should:
- Look glossy, not dull
- Bounce back when lightly pressed
- Have tightly connected muscle fibers
Mushy = old.
Dry edges = itโs been sitting out.
3. Check the Color
Different fish have different โfreshness cuesโ:
- Salmon: vibrant, even-toned orange or coral
- White fish: translucent, never chalky
- Tuna: deep ruby red (browning = oxidation)
If the color looks flat or uneven, skip it.
4. Inspect the Packaging
You want cold, clean, and intact.
Avoid:
- Fish sitting in its own liquid
- Vacuum packs with excess air
- Cloudy or broken ice
- Any package that feels warm to the touch
5. Ask the One Question That Matters
โIs this safe for raw preparations?โ
If the fishmonger hesitates, donโt buy it.
This one question instantly tells you whether itโs right for tartare, poke, or crudo.
If you want to see that in action, our Salmon Tartare recipe breaks down exactly what properly handled raw fish should look like.
6. Buy the Right Cut
Center-cut is king โ even thickness, better structure, cleaner dice. Tail pieces cook unevenly and turn mushy if diced.
7. Frozen Fish Isnโt Inferior
Flash-frozen seafood is often fresher than the โfreshโ stuff in the case.
If frozen is your best option, choose vacuum-sealed portions and thaw slowly in the fridge.
8. When in Doubt, Buy the Same Day You Cook
Seafood has a short lifespan. The best dishes start with the best timing โ buy it, cook it, enjoy it.
Level Up Your Seafood Game
Once you know how to shop, the cooking gets easier.
Browse all of our Seafood Recipes for techniques, temps, and dishes worth repeating.
If youโre ready to try a raw preparation, start with homemade ceviche โ a clean, bright introduction that shows exactly why good sourcing matters.













