Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
For this reason, in the US, cold-smoked fish is largely confined to specialty and ethnic shops. In the Netherlands, commonly available varieties include both hot- and cold-smoked mackerel, herring and Baltic sprats. Hot-smoked eel is a specialty in the Northern provinces, but is a popular deli item throughout the country.
Finnan has a long association with the traditional Scottish fish soup Cullen skink, and most old Scottish recipe books cite Finnan haddie as the smoked haddock to be used for this dish. [citation needed] The traditional preparation is to roast or grill the whole pieces of fish over high heat. [4]
The haddock (Melanogrammus aeglefinus) is a saltwater ray-finned fish from the family Gadidae, the true cods.It is the only species in the monotypic genus Melanogrammus.It is found in the North Atlantic Ocean and associated seas, where it is an important species for fisheries, especially in northern Europe, where it is marketed fresh, frozen and smoked; smoked varieties include the Finnan ...
Weselna – "wedding" sausage, medium thick, u-shaped smoked sausage; often eaten during parties, but not exclusively; Kaszanka or kiszka – traditional blood sausage or black pudding; MyĆliwska – smoked, dried pork sausage. Prasky
The UK's Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA), defines Traditional Grimsby smoked fish "as fillets of cod and haddock, weighing between 200 and 700 grams [7 and 25 oz], which have been cold smoked in accordance with the traditional method and within a defined geographical area around Grimsby. [2]
Gwamegi - Herring hung to freeze and dry on winter and intermittently smoked by cooking fires. Karasumi - salted and sun-dried mullet roe. Katsuobushi - Skipjack tuna filleted, simmered, smoked, fermented, and then sun-dried; also known as "bonito flakes". Po (food) - dried marine fish (especially Alaska pollock).
The Australian meat substitution scandal of 1981 involved the widespread substitution of horse meat and kangaroo meat for beef in Australia. [1] While the substitution primarily affected meat exported overseas, particularly to the United States, further investigations revealed that these, as well as donkey meat and pet food, had been packaged for human consumption and non-halal meat was sold ...
The product is known by a variety of names in different regions of Australia and New Zealand: [3] "luncheon" or “Belgium” - New Zealand "polony" - Western Australia “Belgium" or "devon" in Victoria, Tasmania, New South Wales and the Australian Capital Territory "Windsor" - Queensland [4] "fritz" - South Australia