No need to panic—what you saw is not worms. That white stuff that sometimes appears in cooked salmon is albumin, a natural protein in fish.
🐟 Why White Stuff Appears in Cooked Salmon
1️⃣ What It Is
- Albumin is a water-soluble protein
- When salmon is cooked, the muscle fibers contract
- This pushes the protein to the surface, forming white, pasty streaks
2️⃣ Is It Harmful?
- Completely safe to eat
- Just looks unusual, but it’s normal
3️⃣ Why It Appears More in Some Salmon
- High heat cooking → more albumin comes out
- Farmed salmon tends to have more visible albumin than wild salmon
- Thicker fillets show it more
4️⃣ How to Minimize It
- Cook salmon slowly at medium heat
- Use gentle methods: baking, poaching, steaming
- Don’t overcook—salmon is done at 125–130°F (52–54°C)
⚠️ Important
- Worms in fish are extremely rare in commercially sold salmon
- Freezing salmon at commercial temperatures kills parasites
- So the white protein is harmless, unlike worms, which would look like thin, thread-like worms
✅ Bottom Line
- White “explosions” on cooked salmon = albumin protein
- Safe, normal, and a sign you’re cooking real salmon
- Adjust cooking temperature if you want it less visible
If you want, I can show a simple method to cook salmon so the white stuff hardly appears, keeping it juicy and beautiful.