File:Unfinished cutting of swordfish, Cefalù, Sicily.jpg|Swordfish in seafood shop File:Marinated grill swordfish.jpeg|
Marinated swordfish File:Fried Swordfish collar.jpg|Fried swordfish collars File:Swordfish in Limnionas, Kos, Greece (5653643083).jpg|Swordfish dish in
Kos Swordfish are classified as
oily fish. Many sources, including the
United States Food and Drug Administration, warn about potential toxicity from high levels of
methylmercury in swordfish. The FDA recommends that young children, pregnant women, and women planning to become pregnant not eat swordfish. The flesh of some swordfish can acquire an orange tint, reportedly from their diet of shrimp or other prey. Such fish are sold as "pumpkin swordfish" and command a premium over their whitish counterparts. Swordfish is a particularly popular fish for cooking. Since swordfish are large, the meat is usually sold as steaks, which are often
grilled. Swordfish meat is relatively firm and can be cooked in ways that more fragile types of fish cannot (such as over a grill on skewers). The color of the flesh varies by diet, with fish caught on the East Coast of
North America often being rosier.
Kashrut A dispute exists as to whether swordfish should be considered a
kosher fish according to the laws of
kashrut. Standard
Orthodox opinion is that swordfish is not kosher, while
Conservative Judaism does consider swordfish kosher. All kosher fish must have both fins and scales. The
Talmud and the
Tosefta are believed by some to present swordfish ("achsaftias") as an example of a kosher fish without scales because swordfish are born with scales, they later shed once attaining a length of about 1 meter. The 17th-century
Turkish Sephardi halakhic authority Rabbi
Chaim ben Yisrael Benvenisti wrote that "It is a widespread custom among all Jews to eat the fish with the sword, known in vernacular as fishei espada, even though it does not have any scales. Because it is said that when it comes out of the water, due to its anger, it shakes and throws off its scales." A 1933 list of kosher fish published by the
Agudas HaRabbonim includes swordfish. The following year, Rabbi Yosef Kanowitz published the same list of kosher fish with swordfish still included. Swordfish was widely considered kosher by halakhic authorities until the 1950s. Orthodox opinion began to shift in 1951, when Rabbi
Moshe Tendler examined swordfish and decided it was not kosher due to the lack of scales. Tendler's opinion provoked strong debate among halakhic authorities during the 1960s. Among Mediterranean Jews there was a longstanding
minhag of considering swordfish kosher. Swordfish was and possibly still is consumed by Jews in Italy, Turkey, Gibraltar, Morocco, Tunisia, and England. Due to Tendler's opinion, swordfish are generally not considered kosher by "Orthodox" Jews in the United States and Israel. == Conservation status ==