Americans used to have few warm feelings for fish, eating on average about 20-30 nanograms of it per year. But then we had the '80s, and along with the leg warmers and the curiously colored denim came our love of salmon. It was a bizarre turnaround, with salmon sold as the unfishlike fish when its flavor is so strong and distinct. But there my mom was, big hair and all, at the suddenly popular FoodTown fish counter, picking up salmon steaks. David McRae, a sockeye salmon fisherman in Bristol Bay, Alaska, told me that in those days, the price of salmon was so high that tender boats would roam the bay, buying fishermen's catches with cash kept in stacks of hundreds. "It was like the Wild West," he said, "with as much cash as fish on those boats." The Cocaine '80s were the Salmon '80s.


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