answersLogoWhite

0


Best Answer

That's the skin. You can eat it or choose not to eat it, whichever appeals to you.

User Avatar

Wiki User

15y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: What is the dark layer on the bottom of salmon?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Related questions

Should you eat the dark layer on the bottom of salmon?

It's the skin, and it is certainly edible, though not everyone likes it.


Is the mantle the bottom layer?

no the mantle is not the bottom layer


How the upper layer of the atmosphere differ from bottom layer?

The upper layer is different from the bottom layer because the bottom layer has more gualities to a living thing than the upper layer.


How the upper layers of the atmosphere differ from the bottom layer?

The upper layer is different from the bottom layer because the bottom layer has more gualities to a living thing than the upper layer.


Is the bottom layer of the atmosphere?

The bottom layer of the atmosphere is called the troposphere.


Is the bottom layer the oldest layer?

no, the "your mom" layer is.


The bottom layer of the atmosphere is?

The bottom layer of the atmosphere is called the troposphere.


What is the name for the bottom oldest layer of rock?

The bottom layer of rock in a geologic sequence is usually called the basement layer.


Are dark spots on frozen salmon a sign of bad salmon?

Not nessesarally it doesn't it depends on how long you have had it in your fridge also.


Will black highlights look good on the bottom layer of brown hair?

If your hair is not to dark it will look fine. If it is i think red will look quite nic as that is what i had.


What is they layer of tissue underneath epidermis and hypodermis?

The skin layers from top to bottom are the epidermis (top layer), dermis (middle layer), and hypodermis (bottom layer).


Why does the bottom layer of the rainforest receive less sunlight than the top layer?

Because the leaves and branches of the top layer block sunlight from reaching the bottom layer.