Search Results for: Squid salted
sources: seafood, fruits, vegetables and wild game. the sea is the principal source of food. hence, the filipino diet is based on fish, crustaceans, and other seafood. milkfish, tilapia, catfish, grouper (lapu-lapu,) mackerel (galunggong,) swordfish, game fish, sablefish, tuna, cod, blue marlin and squid
shellfish include oysters (talaba,) mussels (tahong,) clams (halaan and tulya,) large and small crabs (alimango and alimasag respectively,) prawns (sugpo,) and shrimp. dried and smoked fish are also popular. also popular are seaweeds, abalone, and eel. the most common way of having fish is to have it salted...
http://filipinofoodaficionado.blogspot.com/2011/10/philippine-cuisine-common-ingredients.html
with delivery or shipping our products to retail sporting good locations, recreational businesses bait shops and campgrounds. we specialize in and carry year-round supplies of bait - fresh live worms, night crawlers, nitro-glow, trout worms, mealworms, maggots, leeches, live leeches, frozen minnow, salted
minnow, anchovies, sardines smelts, herring, shrimp, preserved baits, cured baits, fishing tackle, custom lures, as well as outdoor seasonal products and novelty goods. forman tech co ltd korea - we are a factory of commercial fishing gears and longline fishing gears and metal halide fishing lamps and squid...
http://www.trade-seafood.com/directory/suppliers/fishing-tackle.htm
norway lobsters (nephrops norvegicus), haddock fish (melanogrammus aeglefinus), greenland halibut (reinhardtius hippoglossoides), cod fish maw, hake fish, black tiger shrimp, grey mullet (mugilidae), king fish, stock fish, mullet (red fish), dungeness crab (metacarcinus magister), brown crab, octopus, squid
we have top quality frozen products, among others: australis hake hgt & fillets, king-klip hgt & fillets, whole round cuttlefish, savorin, tiger sole, brama australis fillets, monkfish tails from south-africa, sea-frozen monkfish tails from uk vessel, silver bream, hoki minced, hoki fish block, fao squid...
http://www.trade-seafood.com/directory/seafood/aquaculture/index.htm