enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. 26 Best Cod Fish Recipes to Make Tonight - AOL

    www.aol.com/26-best-cod-fish-recipes-150020668.html

    Get the recipe: Potato Chip Fish. Mark Boughton. Spread store-bought hummus on cod and roast with broccoli, olives and cherry tomatoes for an easy, flavorful (and fast) sheet pan dinner. Get the ...

  3. Best and worst things to order at a seafood restaurant ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/best-worst-things-order-seafood...

    Black cod is also known as sablefish and can often be found at Japanese seafood restaurants. Spot prawns are pricey but worth it. Spot prawns are on the pricier side, but worth every penny.

  4. Cod as food - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cod_as_food

    Haddock is a very popular food fish, sold fresh, smoked, frozen, dried, and, to a small extent, canned. Haddock, along with cod and plaice, is one of the most popular fish used in British fish and chips. Fresh haddock has a clean white flesh and can be cooked in the same ways as cod. Freshness of a haddock fillet can be determined by how well ...

  5. Dried and salted cod - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dried_and_salted_cod

    Dried and salted cod. Dried and salted cod, sometimes referred to as salt cod or saltfish or salt dolly, is cod which has been preserved by drying after salting. Cod which has been dried without the addition of salt is stockfish. Salt cod was long a major export of the North Atlantic region, and has become an ingredient of many cuisines around ...

  6. Scrod - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scrod

    Scrod. Scrod or schrod (/ ˈskrɒd /) is a small cod or haddock, and sometimes other whitefish, used as food. It is usually served as a fillet, though formerly it was often split instead. In the wholesale fish business, scrod is the smallest weight category of the major whitefish. [1] From smallest to largest, the categories are scrod, market ...

  7. Roe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roe

    Roe, (/ roʊ / ROH) or hard roe, is the fully ripe internal egg masses in the ovaries, or the released external egg masses, of fish and certain marine animals such as shrimp, scallop, sea urchins and squid. As a seafood, roe is used both as a cooked ingredient in many dishes, and as a raw ingredient for delicacies such as caviar.

  8. Milt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milt

    Milt as food. Milt (sometimes spelled melt[1][2]) or soft roe also refers to the male genitalia of fish when they contain sperm, used as food. Many cultures eat milt, often fried, though not usually as a dish by itself. As a food item, milt is farmed year-round in nitrogen tanks, through hormone induction or photoperiod control.

  9. Alaska pollock as food - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alaska_pollock_as_food

    Alaska pollock (Gadus chalcogrammus), a species of cod (Gadus) found in the North Pacific Ocean, is used as food globally. Compared with common pollock, Alaska pollock is milder in taste, whiter in color, and lower in oil content. Alaska pollock fillets are commonly packaged into block molds that are deep frozen and used throughout Europe and ...