A History of Salt Cod 
By Alexander Lee US Source: Published in History Today 11/11/2019
Alexander Lee
Credit: Bridgeman Images.
Just below the church of São Francisco – not far from the Maria Pia bridge – Porto’s medieval walls descend from the hills and run along the banks of the River Douro. Known locally as the muro dos bacalhoeiros (wall of the cod-fishers), this short, salt flecked stretch is bounded by the quays where, in centuries gone by, fishing boats docked on their return from the North Atlantic. For almost 600 years, sailors bustled hither and thither, unloading cargoes of salted cod, merchants haggled over prices and stallholders sliced up the freshly arrived fish for eager customers, using the guillotine-like blades attached to their benches. Today, the quays may be quieter, but salt cod (bacalhau) is a no less conspicuous presence.
 

A culinary embodiment of Porto’s maritime past, it can be found for sale in countless shop windows along the riverfront, and dominates the menus of restaurants perched atop the walls.

Often said to be Portugal’s national dish, the bacalhau here is prepared in many different ways. It can be stewed with cream and potatoes (bacalhau com natas), baked into balls (bolinhos de bacalhau), or even cooked into a comforting casserole with eggs, olives and onion (bacalhau à Gomes de Sá). But, however you take your salt cod, its rich flavours conceal an even richer history. Reaching from Norway to Newfoundland and from the Arctic to Africa, it is a tale populated by Vikings and Basques, colonists, traders and explorers – and haunted by the spectre of slavery and extinction.

 
Atlantic cod Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
4176Southern California waters are teeming with Mola molaspetethomasoutdoors2012-08-08US
4177Warm water results in small fish kill in Barriere River tributaryclearwatertimes2015-07-25CA
4178Морская звезда-робот поможет изучать глубины океанаhightech2021-04-09RU
4179Fishing kids haul in succulent seafood from the deep as parents watch onstuff2021-03-22NZ
4180Fish leaps out of a bowl of water on pavement before flip-flopping down road and into a drain in extraordinary getawaydailymail2021-03-23UK
4181Scientists to spend $450,000 on bait for halibut surveythe arctic sounder2012-08-03CA
4182Fatal virus found in more B.C. salmon farmsCTVNews2012-08-03CA
4183Scientists discover new species of 'blind snake' in Brazilian river that looks remarkably like a piece of the human anatomydailymail2012-08-01UK
4184Deadly Salmon Virus In Canadian Freshwater Fish; 'A Major Concern For B.c.'s Salmon'Underwatertimes2012-07-19CA
4185Infected salmon will not be eaten by humansCBC News2012-07-17CA
4186Report says Asian carp could reach all 5 Great Lakes in 20 yearsChicago Tribune2012-07-12US
4187That Salmon on Your Plate Might Have Been a Vegetariannytimes2021-03-24US
4188New study triples estimate of red snapper in Gulf of MexicoAJC2021-03-24US
4189'Distant cousin' of Covid-19 virus found in threatened NZ fishnzherald2021-03-25NZ
4190Tiny chip tracks fish movementsCBC News2012-07-09CA
4191Families warned to stay out of popular rural lake after discovery of deadly fish 'that eats male genitals'dailymail2012-07-07UK
4192Copper in water makes salmon vulnerableScience News2012-07-10US
4193CNY Outdoors Angler’s tale: ‘I caught a 14 1/2- inch goldfish in Onondaga Lake with my fly rod’syracuse2021-03-29US
41941 dead, another presumed dead after fishing boat capsizes off Cape Breton coastCBC News2021-04-04CA
4195Zoologger: The fish with its genitals on its headnewscientist2012-07-05VN
4196Video Shows Men Catching Protected Sturgeon On Deltasacramento cbslocal2012-07-02US
4197Cod stocks in North Sea 'increasing' says Ices reportbbc2012-06-29CA
419820 years later, cod recovery off Newfoundland finally evidentThe Canadian Press2012-06-30CA
4199Just gorgeous: A blue-eyed triplefin fish from New Zealand features in amazing pictures from beneath the wavesdailymail2012-06-20NZ
4200Video Captures Fishing Rage: Mate Goes Berserk After Angler Loses Fishsportfishingmag2012-06-14UK

215 216 217 167 of [218 - pages.]