No—what you’re seeing is almost certainly not worms.
When cooking salmon, that “white stuff” is usually one of two normal things:
🐟 1. Albumin (most common)
When salmon is heated, a protein called albumin gets squeezed out of the flesh and turns white and solid.
- Looks like white foam or curds
- Often appears when fish is cooked at high heat or overcooked
- Completely safe to eat
🐟 Salmon natural fat + protein coagulation
Sometimes the white material is also:
- Rendered fat
- Protein coagulation from muscle fibers
🪱 2. Why it’s NOT worms
Fish parasites:
- Usually look like thin, string-like organisms inside raw flesh
- Do NOT “explode out” when cooking
- Are typically killed during proper cooking temperatures (about 63°C / 145°F)
What you described (white stuff coming out during cooking) is not consistent with parasites.
🔥 Why it happened more in your fish
You’re more likely to see albumin if:
- Salmon is cooked at high heat
- Fish is slightly overcooked
- It wasn’t brined or rested before cooking
👍 How to reduce it next time
- Cook at medium or lower heat
- Don’t overcook (salmon should flake but stay moist)
- Lightly salt or brine before cooking
- Rest fish for a few minutes after cooking
🧾 Bottom line
That white “explosion” is normal protein (albumin), not worms, and it’s harmless.
If you want, I can tell you how to cook salmon so it stays juicy and doesn’t release that white stuff at all 👍