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A tub of uncured fish surimi ready for processing. Surimi (Japanese: 擂り身 / すり身, ' ground meat ') is a paste made from fish or other meat. It can also be any of a number of East Asian foods that use that paste as their primary ingredient. It is available in many shapes, forms, and textures, and is often used to mimic the texture and ...
Karelian Industrial Complex is the only manufacturer of surimi in Russia. [1] Before 2006 the plant was called the Sortavalsky Fish Factory. The biggest fish processing plant in the region. [2] Production volume - 24 000 tons a year. [3] Karelian Industrial Complex has more than 450 employees.
Fujimitsu Corporation (フジミツ株式会社, Fujimitsu Kabushiki-gaisha) is a manufacturer of fish surimi products based in the city of Nagato, Yamaguchi Prefecture, Japan. [2] In 2008, it was Japan's eighth largest surimi manufacturer in terms of sales. [3] The company's products include surimi standards such as kamaboko, chikuwa, and ...
A medieval view of fish processing, by Peter Brueghel the Elder (1556). There is evidence humans have been processing fish since the early Holocene. For example, fishbones (c. 8140–7550 BP, uncalibrated) at Atlit-Yam, a submerged Neolithic site off Israel, have been analysed. What emerged was a picture of "a pile of fish gutted and processed ...
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A fish fillet processor processes fish into a fillet. Fish processing starts from the time the fish is caught. Popular species processed include cod, hake, haddock, tuna, herring, mackerel, salmon and pollock . Commercial fish processing is a global practice. Processing varies regionally in productivity, type of operation, yield and regulation.
Ozark Cavefish National Wildlife Refuge. / 37.567°N 93.383°W / 37.567; -93.383. The Ozark Cavefish National Wildlife Refuge is a 40-acre (16-ha) National Wildlife Refuge located in Lawrence County, Missouri, 20 mi (32 km) west of Springfield. The United States Fish and Wildlife Service acquired the land in 1991 to protect the ...
Gyoniku soseji unwrapped. Gyoniku sausage (魚肉ソーセージ,Gyoniku sōsēji) is a Japanese fish sausage made from surimi. It is sold in a plastic casing as a snack. Gyoniku soseji is similar to the traditional fish cake, kamaboko. [1] [2] Gyoniku soseji and kamaboko together constitute 26% of Japanese fish consumption. [3]