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Arizona
yields Desert Sweet Shrimp
By Vern Lamplot
Special to the Arizona Daily Star
Tucson, Arizona
Fry them, boil them, grill
them, chop them into salads. Everybody
loves shrimp — tasty,
succulent and straight from the Arizona
desert.
Uh, that's right, some of the best-tasting
shrimp you can buy, according to its own
surveys, comes from a shrimp farm in Gila
Bend, which is southwest of Phoenix along
Interstate 8.
Shrimp in the desert? Sort of takes the sea
out of seafood.
The farm raises "desert sweet shrimp," a
product it shamelessly declares to be "the
world's best-tasting shrimp." Gary
Wood, whose family owns Desert Sweet Shrimp,
said
that in taste tests at fairs and exhibits,
their shrimp wins 95 percent of the time.
It is lower in iodine and contains less
salt and no additives, he said.
Shrimp is a good low-fat, low-calorie protein.
Four ounces serves up only 112 calories and
less than a gram of fat. An excellent source
of selenium and several vitamins, shrimp
is also the most popular seafood in the United
States, according to the Environmental News
Network, even if in this case it doesn't
come from the sea.
"
There's probably no better place to grow
them," said Craig Collins, the farm's
manager. According to Collins, the desert
heat speeds the shrimp's growth, and the
calcium in the area's aquifer allows the
exoskeleton to harden quickly, so they peel
easily. "We offer the finest quality
you can buy," he said while working
on a customer's 100-pound order for a wedding
in New York.
"
We sell mostly through the Internet," Wood
said. The farm used to sell its shrimp
to wholesale brokers and specialty markets
such
as AJ's Fine Foods, Whole Foods Market,
and Sprouts, but was losing out to foreign
suppliers.
"
The brokers tell us consumers don't know
the difference," Wood said. So the
farm cut back on the amount of shrimp it
produces
and eliminated the brokers in favor of
direct marketing through its Web site.
The farm
is hoping the brokers are wrong.
The Wood family farm is the last of four
Arizona farms that raise shrimp. One of the
four, a farm in Hyder, has had more success
converting to tilapia, a popular white fish,
Wood said.
"
We can't compete with the Chinese and Vietnamese
on price," Collins said.
Wood counts a Phoenix resort and a Maricopa
County restaurants as steady commercial customers.
He said the Shedd Aquarium in Chicago buys
his shrimp to feed its exhibit animals
because the product is pure. Some animals
practically
demand the desert shrimp. "Otters are
finicky eaters," Wood said.
The word has spread, and Wood is talking
about supplying other aquariums.
For its nonfurry consumers, Desert Sweet
Shrimp harvests shrimp from its ponds in
mid-October and packs it in ice. Then the
shrimp is trucked 60 miles to a Phoenix
processing plant. Although Wood says shrimp
with its
head intact is one criteria of high quality,
the plant processes his shrimp headless
and deveined "because that's what customers
want." Additives such as sodium tripolyphosphate
(STPP), which is used to retain moisture
and add weight, are not used. The shrimp
is then packed in dry ice and delivered
to customers by FedEx.
Both Collins and Wood managed shrimp farms
in Ecuador, but they said some of the techniques
used at the time were damaging to the environment.
Ten years ago, they started shrimp farming
on the Wood family farm, partly to prove
you could do it right.
"
Our niche is we're locally grown, and it's
sustainable aquaculture," Wood said. "We
don't ever discharge the water." The
water from the ponds is used to irrigate
other crops, alfalfa and olive trees.
"
We've shown the plants grow twice as fast
with this system," Collins said. That
led to two new products, a buttery-tasting
olive oil, also sold on the Internet, and
a thriving nursery trade in landscape olive
trees.
The smart water system used on the farm was
studied at the University of Arizona's Environmental
Research Laboratory, where researchers, including
Kevin Fitzsimmons, have been developing healthier
shrimp stocks and eco-friendly production
techniques.
He said when farms such as Desert Sweet
Shrimp use "best practices," farm-raised
shrimp is better for consumers. The shrimp
is fresher because it is processed immediately.
Ocean shrimp may be dragged along in nets
for hours and sit in the hold of a trawler
that may be two days away from shore.
Fitzsimmons claims environmental benefits
as well. He points to the ecological damage
from nets, the nonedible biological products
caught along with the shrimp and the waste
that it creates, and transportation costs
and the hydrocarbons burned in pursuit of
wild catch.
"
I think farm-raised wins, although ecological
improvements could be made (to the farm-raised
methods)," he said.
And you're probably eating more farm-raised
shrimp than you think, even from our neighbor
to the south. "Well over half the shrimp
exported from Mexico to the U.S. is farm-raised," Fitzsimmons
said.
But Collins and Wood hope you'll shop even
closer to home.
Vern Lamplot is a Tucson-based freelance
writer.
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