It’s very unlikely those are worms.
What you’re probably seeing is a normal and well-known thing that happens when cooking salmon or other fish: albumin.
🐟 What that white stuff actually is
The “white substance” is usually albumin, a harmless protein found in fish muscle.
When salmon is heated:
- The proteins in the flesh tighten and squeeze out moisture
- That moisture carries dissolved proteins to the surface
- It solidifies into white, sometimes stringy or clumpy patches
👉 It can look strange, but it is completely safe to eat.
🍳 Why it “explodes” or comes out suddenly
This happens more when:
- The salmon is cooked at high heat
- It is overcooked
- It is a thicker cut of fish
High heat forces moisture out quickly, making the albumin more noticeable.
❌ Are they worms?
Almost certainly no.
Fish parasites:
- are not usually visible as white “juice-like” substance while cooking
- are rare in properly sourced and frozen salmon
- are killed during proper cooking anyway
What you saw is:
cooked protein, not living organisms
👍 How to reduce it (if you don’t like the look)
- Cook at lower heat
- Don’t overcook (salmon is done when it flakes easily)
- Brine or salt lightly before cooking
- Let it rest at room temperature briefly before cooking
🧠 Bottom line
That white substance is just natural fish protein (albumin) being pushed out during cooking—not worms and not something dangerous.
If you want, I can also tell you the perfect way to cook salmon so it stays juicy and doesn’t produce that white coating.