






Wild Planetのワイルド カツオマグロは、持続可能な方法で収穫された大きなマグロの風味を提供します。 各缶は、オメガ3、タンパク質、その他必要な栄養成分を提供します。フィラーや追加した水や油は省きます。 さらに、当社の缶詰マグロはグルテンフリー、遺伝子組み換え作物不使用、OUコーシャパレーブなので、家族に何を食べているかについて気分を良くすることができます。 油、水、フィラーは追加されていません - 缶を排水する必要はありません! -太平洋中央部または北部太平洋で100%ポールとラインがキャッチ。 -タンパク質とオメガ3の優れた供給源。 -古風にやさしく、ケトに優しい。 グルテンフリー -非遺伝子組み換え検証済み -OU コーシャパレーブ 当社のマグロは、中央または北太平洋で100%ポール&ラインで捕獲されています。 ポールとラインフィッシングは、自然の魚の個体数と海の生息地を維持するのに役立ちます。 Wild Planet Foodsは、美味しく健康的で持続可能な野生のシーフードを共有しながら、海の自然の生態系を維持することに専念しています。 Review: Wild Skipjack may be my favorite FOOD! - Here's a thank you to Smashing Wool's [and another one] review for noting the can lining for this tuna is BPA-free. I was wondering about that; I'm glad I took time to reread that review prior to posting mine. [As will be evident, I read and benefited from each of the reviews here when I posted mine. Thank you!] I was sparked by SW's reminder of different ways to use tuna besides immediately snarfing it out of the can [one of the reasons I was curious about BPA]. Sometimes I leave some in the can and dump the rest into a pretty glass bowl, then snarf it after setting the can down for Arzel, my godly cat. She has to wait for what I leave in the can for her when I use the first method [I don't like to torture my cat with that type of wait]. I love this tuna so much and have missed real tuna for so many years of increasing takeover of soybean ooze, I dropped back to inhaling this TUNA unadulterated, after I [thank God, Jeff Bezos, and desertcart Customer Reviews] discovered this divine presentation. In my first purchase I bought the Wild Planet Wild Albacore Tuna No Salt . It sold me on all counts of its advertised positives, including the fact that the can is packed with big chunks of tuna MEAT which hasn't been smashed down into mush with lots of limp water and/or tons of soybean oil sludge. The Albacore was PRIME, but I missed the uniquely natural, intensely healthy saltiness which identifies tuna to me [anyone interested could read Dr. Batmanghelidj's book, Obesity Cancer & Depression , if he wants to know about the healing qualities of the right type of salt]. So I tried this Skipjack version to see if it had more of the SALTY tuna taste I crave. A habit suddenly dissipated, a habit I had worked into with the Albacore, after a few cans of Skipjack had been digested unadulterated, with YUM in every bite. In my long ago history of a sort of youth, when I could still see what tuna MEAT looked like in the can by evidence of it from a few un-smashed chunks big enough for human vision to register... way back then, I relished mixing mayo, chopped onions, garlic, celery, and sweet Gerkin's, etc., into canned tuna, for a sandwich or salad. Yeah, as a 1947 born Baby Boomer I also made curried tuna casseroles and fresh dill laced pot pies; I prepared tuna in black-olive-and-mushroom studded, black-peppered gravy [or topped with chopped onions and melted Swiss cheese], and generously slipped it over a fully toasted bun or bagel, etc. With this new dozen can collection of this Skipjack tuna, I found myself wanting to renew and expand that almost sacred recipe-rhapsody, minus soy, plus old-days healthy mayo; minus freshly-conjured, GMO-miasma-dredged additives; minus waste products declared illegal to touch or breathe being dumped into food products; you know, minus all that crud intelligent insects crawl away from when they'll live and flourish on genetically unmodified crude oils. Other much older living Kindoms like bacteria, viruses, fungi, insects, etc., maybe have developed a type of sentience, even wisdom we might not ever achieve, though I do have hope [not the fake-hype type]. Oops. I may have turned over the tuna box and set my feet onto it, lol. Maybe that's a hint I should look for some organic, non GMO, no soy soap? ANYway. I searched desertcart for an organic, no GMO, NO SOY mayo so I could begin to reconnect with my yums of youth, which I may have never actually had... I did have honest "yums"; it's the youth I question. I may be getting one of those now, an attitude of youth, even though I'm dying from anti-nutrients not only passed off as, but pushed as "food"? Let the blessings begin, though they probably began with this Slipjack tuna. Here's the blessing I discovered and bought [which I hope I live long enough to review with high level rapture]: Wilderness Family Mayonnaise, Certified Organic, 16 fl. oz. jar That mayo and its family of producers is clearly blessed. But this Skipjack tuna is so good, I finally quit adding even this mayo to it [not to worry, this type of mayo has a universe full of yum-and-yell "yes!" uses]. I take time to scoop the solid tuna meat out of the can and into a cut-glass, fancy dish only to leave some of it in the can for Arzel, though sometimes I put hers in cut-glass, too... until I realized she likes the can method because she can lick the tuna juice clean off the inside... which brings us back to what inspired this comment turned review: Thank you, SW, for each detail in your review, especially for answering the BPA question I had in the back of my mind when I took time to reread. As has been becoming a new habit, I meant to make a brief, off the top comment under a review I particularly appreciated, and ended up with more than the review I intended to write next. Maybe there's some type of magic in a comment box which works for me even better than the review form, though I like the ease of that setup, too. I opened a can of Skipjack before heading out to a local cafe for breakfast this morning; forked lifted some of the thick, lusciously dense meat into my cut-glass bowl, and left a good portion in the can for Arzel. I snarfed up several bites [from my bowl] before storing the remainder in the fridge. I considered eating a Larabar Ginger Snap , too, in defense against the varieties of soy I would be eating next, but didn't want to upset my appetite for a DENNY'S senior omelet. Hey! DENNY's is an icon from my youth. I wouldn't abandon it in its struggle through the dark ages of soy. [During one of my Dark Ages in February 1985 in Portland, Oregon, a Denny's ambiance, one-egg-breakfast helped lift my spirit out of a black hole. I began writing my first novel there, that morning, truly on the back of an envelop.] I believe in getting a healthy core of food into me whenever possible, to counteract the soybean overwhelm I always try to work my soul around when eating in cherished restaurants of various types and locations, where I set up my Samsung NF210-A03 10.1-Inch Netbook and type, type, type. [Actually my beloved do-everything netbook, which I bought from desertcart, is a Samsung N220 Plus, but it's not available here currently, so I linked a comparable one above.] Someday maybe GM enhanced Organisms will connect their significant intelligence with some of the innocent good people residing within the GMO soybean pushers paradigm... and communicate to them what REAL FOOD is and precisely why it's real. Maybe that core of realism will spread... like a good virus? Maybe the trick would be to have the good guys [caught in the soybean web con] alternate bites from a regular can of smashed soy tuna, with bites from this offering of WILD SKIPJACK. YES!!!! Taste buds do have sentience. I'm just saying... I'm too old to use that expression, LOL! Linda Shelnutt Review: High quality - Great quality. Little bit pricey





| ASIN | B001SB8AZC |
| Brand | Wild Planet |
| Brand Name | Wild Planet |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 out of 5 stars 3,925 Your Review |
| Global Trade Identification Number | 10829696000708 |
| Item Package Weight | 2.25 Kilograms |
| Item Weight | 0.01 Ounces |
| Number of Pieces | 12 |
| Package Weight | 2.25 Kilograms |
| Specialty | GMO, Genetically, Natural |
L**T
Wild Skipjack may be my favorite FOOD!
Here's a thank you to Smashing Wool's [and another one] review for noting the can lining for this tuna is BPA-free. I was wondering about that; I'm glad I took time to reread that review prior to posting mine. [As will be evident, I read and benefited from each of the reviews here when I posted mine. Thank you!] I was sparked by SW's reminder of different ways to use tuna besides immediately snarfing it out of the can [one of the reasons I was curious about BPA]. Sometimes I leave some in the can and dump the rest into a pretty glass bowl, then snarf it after setting the can down for Arzel, my godly cat. She has to wait for what I leave in the can for her when I use the first method [I don't like to torture my cat with that type of wait]. I love this tuna so much and have missed real tuna for so many years of increasing takeover of soybean ooze, I dropped back to inhaling this TUNA unadulterated, after I [thank God, Jeff Bezos, and Amazon Customer Reviews] discovered this divine presentation. In my first purchase I bought the Wild Planet Wild Albacore Tuna No Salt . It sold me on all counts of its advertised positives, including the fact that the can is packed with big chunks of tuna MEAT which hasn't been smashed down into mush with lots of limp water and/or tons of soybean oil sludge. The Albacore was PRIME, but I missed the uniquely natural, intensely healthy saltiness which identifies tuna to me [anyone interested could read Dr. Batmanghelidj's book, Obesity Cancer & Depression , if he wants to know about the healing qualities of the right type of salt]. So I tried this Skipjack version to see if it had more of the SALTY tuna taste I crave. A habit suddenly dissipated, a habit I had worked into with the Albacore, after a few cans of Skipjack had been digested unadulterated, with YUM in every bite. In my long ago history of a sort of youth, when I could still see what tuna MEAT looked like in the can by evidence of it from a few un-smashed chunks big enough for human vision to register... way back then, I relished mixing mayo, chopped onions, garlic, celery, and sweet Gerkin's, etc., into canned tuna, for a sandwich or salad. Yeah, as a 1947 born Baby Boomer I also made curried tuna casseroles and fresh dill laced pot pies; I prepared tuna in black-olive-and-mushroom studded, black-peppered gravy [or topped with chopped onions and melted Swiss cheese], and generously slipped it over a fully toasted bun or bagel, etc. With this new dozen can collection of this Skipjack tuna, I found myself wanting to renew and expand that almost sacred recipe-rhapsody, minus soy, plus old-days healthy mayo; minus freshly-conjured, GMO-miasma-dredged additives; minus waste products declared illegal to touch or breathe being dumped into food products; you know, minus all that crud intelligent insects crawl away from when they'll live and flourish on genetically unmodified crude oils. Other much older living Kindoms like bacteria, viruses, fungi, insects, etc., maybe have developed a type of sentience, even wisdom we might not ever achieve, though I do have hope [not the fake-hype type]. Oops. I may have turned over the tuna box and set my feet onto it, lol. Maybe that's a hint I should look for some organic, non GMO, no soy soap? ANYway. I searched Amazon for an organic, no GMO, NO SOY mayo so I could begin to reconnect with my yums of youth, which I may have never actually had... I did have honest "yums"; it's the youth I question. I may be getting one of those now, an attitude of youth, even though I'm dying from anti-nutrients not only passed off as, but pushed as "food"? Let the blessings begin, though they probably began with this Slipjack tuna. Here's the blessing I discovered and bought [which I hope I live long enough to review with high level rapture]: Wilderness Family Mayonnaise, Certified Organic, 16 fl. oz. jar That mayo and its family of producers is clearly blessed. But this Skipjack tuna is so good, I finally quit adding even this mayo to it [not to worry, this type of mayo has a universe full of yum-and-yell "yes!" uses]. I take time to scoop the solid tuna meat out of the can and into a cut-glass, fancy dish only to leave some of it in the can for Arzel, though sometimes I put hers in cut-glass, too... until I realized she likes the can method because she can lick the tuna juice clean off the inside... which brings us back to what inspired this comment turned review: Thank you, SW, for each detail in your review, especially for answering the BPA question I had in the back of my mind when I took time to reread. As has been becoming a new habit, I meant to make a brief, off the top comment under a review I particularly appreciated, and ended up with more than the review I intended to write next. Maybe there's some type of magic in a comment box which works for me even better than the review form, though I like the ease of that setup, too. I opened a can of Skipjack before heading out to a local cafe for breakfast this morning; forked lifted some of the thick, lusciously dense meat into my cut-glass bowl, and left a good portion in the can for Arzel. I snarfed up several bites [from my bowl] before storing the remainder in the fridge. I considered eating a Larabar Ginger Snap , too, in defense against the varieties of soy I would be eating next, but didn't want to upset my appetite for a DENNY'S senior omelet. Hey! DENNY's is an icon from my youth. I wouldn't abandon it in its struggle through the dark ages of soy. [During one of my Dark Ages in February 1985 in Portland, Oregon, a Denny's ambiance, one-egg-breakfast helped lift my spirit out of a black hole. I began writing my first novel there, that morning, truly on the back of an envelop.] I believe in getting a healthy core of food into me whenever possible, to counteract the soybean overwhelm I always try to work my soul around when eating in cherished restaurants of various types and locations, where I set up my Samsung NF210-A03 10.1-Inch Netbook and type, type, type. [Actually my beloved do-everything netbook, which I bought from Amazon, is a Samsung N220 Plus, but it's not available here currently, so I linked a comparable one above.] Someday maybe GM enhanced Organisms will connect their significant intelligence with some of the innocent good people residing within the GMO soybean pushers paradigm... and communicate to them what REAL FOOD is and precisely why it's real. Maybe that core of realism will spread... like a good virus? Maybe the trick would be to have the good guys [caught in the soybean web con] alternate bites from a regular can of smashed soy tuna, with bites from this offering of WILD SKIPJACK. YES!!!! Taste buds do have sentience. I'm just saying... I'm too old to use that expression, LOL! Linda Shelnutt
Z**M
High quality
Great quality. Little bit pricey
G**E
La eficiencia del servicio y la calidad del producto
Me gusto porque resultó ser mejor que mis expectativas
ا**ف
ماشي حاله
زين بس مو على سعره وبدون زيت
M**E
Wild Planet Skipjack Wild Tuna, Sea Salt, Canned Tuna, Pole & Line Sustainably Wild-Caught
Because it is a quality product, I purchased multiple items. QUALITY-VALUE-PRICE... it's all good. Especially, for PREPPING/SURVIVAL.
Trustpilot
1 month ago
3 weeks ago