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Smoked fish is a prominent item in Russian cuisine, Ashkenazi Jewish cuisine, and Scandinavian cuisine, as well as several Eastern and Central European cuisines and the Pacific Northwest cuisine. In Israeli cuisine, smoked trout is traditionally eaten as part of meze, especially at breakfast. Sometimes rosemary leaves are added.
Smoking (cooking) Meat hanging inside a smokehouse in Switzerland. A Montreal smoked meat sandwich. Hot-smoked chum salmon. Smoking is the process of flavoring, browning, cooking, or preserving food, particularly meat, fish and tea, by exposing it to smoke from burning or smoldering material, most often wood. In Europe, alder is the traditional ...
Jallab – a Middle-Eastern fruit and rose syrup smoked with Arabic incense. Smoked egg – smoked quail or other fowl eggs. Smoked garlic – popular in several areas of the world. Smoked plum – an East Asian smoked fruit also used to make the Korean medicinal tea, Jeho-tang.
6 oz skinless smoked-trout fillet, flaked into 1-inch pieces (1 cup) 3 oz pitted Picholine olives, chopped (1/2 cup) 1 / 4 cup drained capers; 1 cup grated Pecorino Sardo cheese, plus more for garnish
Directions. I n a bowl, combine the cream cheese, shallot, chopped chives, capers and lemon juice. Season with salt and pepper. Spread the English muffins with the caper cream cheese. Top with the ...
Spread 1/2 tablespoon of the lemon-caper mayonnaise on each side of each trout; season with salt and pepper. Grill the fish over high heat, turning once, until lightly charred and cooked through ...
As trout are predatory fish, lure fishing (which use replica baits called lures to imitate live prey) is the predominant form of sport fishing involving trout, although traditional bait fishing techniques using floats and/or sinkers (particularly with moving live baits such as baitfish, crayfish or aquatic insects) are also successful ...
Cured fish is fish which has been cured by subjecting it to fermentation, pickling, smoking, or some combination of these before it is eaten. These food preservation processes can include adding salt, nitrates, nitrite [1] or sugar, can involve smoking and flavoring the fish, and may include cooking it. The earliest form of curing fish was ...