No, that weird white stuff is not worms. What you’re seeing is a protein called albumin that naturally oozes out of salmon when it’s cooked. Here’s the explanation:
What the White Stuff on Cooked Salmon Is
- It’s Albumin
- Albumin is a water-soluble protein found in fish (and eggs).
- When salmon cooks, the protein coagulates and rises to the surface as white streaks or blobs.
- Why It Appears More in Some Fish
- Happens most in wild salmon or high-protein cuts.
- Overcooking or cooking at too high heat pushes more albumin out.
- Safe to Eat
- Completely safe, edible, and harmless.
- Some people scrape it off for appearance, but it’s not dangerous.
- How to Minimize Albumin
- Cook salmon slowly at lower temperatures (around 275–325°F / 135–160°C).
- Brining the fish briefly before cooking can reduce albumin.
- Avoid overcooking; salmon should be slightly pink in the center.
Quick Tip: White streaks on salmon = perfectly normal protein, not worms or parasites.
If you want, I can give a step-by-step method to cook salmon perfectly so it never “explodes” albumin and stays moist and pink every time. Do you want me to do that?