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Ohrid Trout | Local Trout From Ohrid Municipality, North Macedonia | TasteAtlas
Ohrid Trout | Local Trout From Ohrid Municipality, North Macedonia | TasteAtlas
Ohrid Trout | Local Trout From Ohrid Municipality, North Macedonia | TasteAtlas
Ohrid Trout | Local Trout From Ohrid Municipality, North Macedonia | TasteAtlas
Ohrid Trout | Local Trout From Ohrid Municipality, North Macedonia | TasteAtlas

Ohrid Trout

Ohrid trout is an endangered salmonoid fish that is praised for its delicately-flavored pink flesh. It inhabits the waters of Lake Ohrid, shared by Albania and North Macedonia, and the rivers leading to and from the lake. Although it is held in high esteem, it would be a crime against nature to eat the trout.


Due to overfishing, poaching, and poor conservation methods, as of recently, the fish has been in danger of extinction. Four varieties of the trout have been distinguished, including Salmo balcanicus, Salmo lumi, Salmo aphelios, and Salmo letnica.


The trout is considered a culinary delicacy, usually enjoyed on its own or used in a variety of hearty fish soups or other fish dishes. Dubbed as a living fossil, the fish has supposedly survived the ice age period due to the favorable microclimate of Lake Ohrid.  Read more

Until 1991, the annual catch of trout was 220 tons, but since then, the numbers have significantly fallen. In 2005, the Macedonian government introduced a ban on catching Ohrid trout in their waters until 2014, but despite the legislation, in reality, not much was changed.


Mainly, because similar conservation methods did not exist in the neighboring Albania where Ohrid trout was legally caught and sold, usually for an unreasonably low price. This opened up a new set of problems, including smuggling operations that made the trout available in Ohrid and other Macedonian cities.