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  2. I Tried 5 Brands of Frozen Fish Sticks, and This Was My ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/tried-5-brands-frozen-fish-155400790...

    3. Trader Joe's Breaded Fish Sticks. $5.49 in-store from Trader Joe's. Trader Joe’s is sort of a yin and yang of good and bad. Much like the StarFish sticks, these appear to be larger pieces of ...

  3. We Ranked 10 Popular Frozen Fish Sticks and You Can Get ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/ranked-10-popular-frozen...

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  4. Gorton's of Gloucester - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gorton's_of_Gloucester

    This company was the first to package salt-dried fish in barrels. In 1899, the company patented the "Original Gorton Fish Cake". In 1905, the Slade Gorton Company adopted the fisherman at the helm of a schooner (the "Man at the Wheel") as the company trademark. Today, he is known as the Gorton's Fisherman.

  5. Crab stick - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crab_stick

    Crab sticks, krab sticks, snow legs, imitation crab meat, or seafood sticks are a Japanese seafood product made of surimi (pulverized white fish) and starch, then shaped and cured to resemble the leg meat of snow crab or Japanese spider crab. [1] It is a product that uses fish meat to imitate shellfish meat.

  6. Fish finger - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fish_finger

    [3] [4] The commercialization of fish fingers may be traced to 1953 when the American company Gorton-Pew Fisheries, now known as Gorton's, was the first company to introduce a frozen ready-to-cook fish finger; the product, named Gorton's Fish Sticks, won the Parents magazine Seal of Approval in 1956.

  7. Durkee (food brand) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Durkee_(food_brand)

    Durkee's was established by Eugene R. Durkee, the founder of E. R. Durkee & Co. Spice dealers in Buffalo, New York, in 1857.By 1917, the company had built a four-story industrial structure in Elmhurst, Queens.

  8. Fish sauce - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fish_sauce

    A fish sauce, called kôechiap in Hokkien Chinese, might be the precursor of ketchup. [9] [1]: 233 By 50-100 BC, demand for fish sauces and fish pastes in China had fallen drastically, with fermented bean products becoming a major trade commodity. Fish sauce, however, developed massive popularity in Southeast Asia.

  9. Surimi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surimi

    Chinese fish tofu, made of ground fish. Fish pastes have been a popular food in East Asia. In China, the food is used to make fish balls (魚蛋/魚丸) and ingredients in a thick soup known as geng (羹), common in Fujian cuisine. In Japan, the earliest surimi production was in 1115 for making kamaboko.