A hand holding a Caviar Kitchen Kaluga Hybrid tin with its species name on the label.

Honest sourcing

Where our caviar actually comes from.

No mystique, no vague "imported" label — just farmed sturgeon, named by species.

Why farmed

Sturgeon take years to mature and most wild populations are protected or banned from harvest. Modern caviar farming lets us enjoy the real thing while taking pressure off wild fish — it's both the responsible choice and the consistent one.

Named by species, on purpose

Most brands tell you a country. We tell you the species — Kaluga Hybrid, Siberian (Baerii), Ossetra — because that's what actually shapes how the caviar tastes. Some of those names overlap (a Kaluga Hybrid is a cross), so we built a guide to keep it honest.

See the species ↔ tin guide →

Farmed vs wild caviar

The short version of why we only sell farmed — side by side.

Farmed caviar Wild caviar
Source Sturgeon raised in managed aquaculture Sturgeon caught from rivers and seas
Sustainability Sustainable; eases pressure on wild stocks Most species endangered; harvest largely banned
Legality Legal and traceable Restricted or illegal for most species
Consistency Consistent flavour and supply year-round Variable by catch and season
What we sell Every Caviar Kitchen tin Never

Frequently asked

Is farmed caviar sustainable?

Yes — responsibly farmed sturgeon caviar is the sustainable choice. Wild sturgeon are endangered and most wild harvest is banned, so reputable caviar today comes from aquaculture, which takes pressure off wild populations.

Where does Caviar Kitchen caviar come from?

From farmed sturgeon, never wild-caught endangered fish. We name the species on every tin so you know exactly what you are eating.