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Hardhead catfish are generally regarded as an undesirable catch by most anglers, largely due to the risk associated with handling the venomous fish, as well as its 'fishy' taste as opposed to desirable game fish.
As to why you hate the texture of seafood there has been a study released that suggests that depending on the type of enzyme that you have in your body you are able to tolerate certain textures better, but right now it's still a theory.
I suspect that many food preferences are a result of social learning (e.g., Mom and Dad hate fish so it must suck) or conditioned taste aversion (e.g., I got sick the first time I ate fish so now I associate it with bad things).
25 Φεβ 2020 · Both hardhead and gafftopsail catfish continue to hold the misaligned label of “trash fish,” that lackadaisical term applied to fishes with little perceived ecological, sporting, or culinary value. But saltwater catfish deserve a fair assessment unsullied by second hand slander.
While that is true to an extent, people have hated both for much longer than those 2 species were introduced. I've seen people toss native redhorse on the shore because they eat steelhead eggs, and people dislike bowfin because they aren't bass and bust lures up.
19 Απρ 2011 · Someone told me live hardhead make good yellowcat bait... I had heard from a few people that little channel catfish do (though illegal), but that's the first and last time I heard hardhead do...
The common name, hardhead catfish, is derived from the presence of a hard, bony plate extending rearward toward the dorsal fin from a line between the catfish's eyes. It is an elongated marine catfish that reaches up to 28 in (70 cm) in length and 12 lb (5.5 kg) in weight.