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
2226Scientists figure out why fish look downwards when swimming in riversnews9live2022-11-06IN
2227Victory Farms donates tilapia fingerlings to small-scale producersThe Fish Site2022-11-25KE
2228New IoT sensor sheds light on shellfish growers’ farm conditionsThe Fish Site2022-11-28PT
2229FDA puts AquaBounty’s genetically engineered salmon back under the spotlightThe Fish Site2022-11-28US
2230Trial leverages AI and imaging technology to identify the best delousing cleaner fishThe Fish Site2022-11-28UK
2231Washington Bans Fish-Farming Net PensAssociated Press2022-11-18US
2232Lawsuit Looms Over Tiny Rare Fish in Drought-Stricken WestAssociated Press2022-11-23US
2233Пока не затвердела водаОхотники.ру2022-11-15RU
2234С фидером в период первых заморозковОхотники.ру2022-11-21RU
2235Fishermen take case against paying for monitors to Supreme Courtpressherald2022-11-10US
2236Sewage on the riverbed blamed for 'anglers catching more tampons than fish' in Shrewsburyshropshirestar2022-11-11UK
2237Mom shares photos of creature that 'startled' her and daughter on fishing tripyahoo2022-11-10US
2238Scientists Making a "Nightmarish Coffee" From Parasitic Fishbestlifeonline2022-11-04US
2239The 'Achilles Heel' Of Fish Farming: Trends In The Development Of Technology To Replace Fishmealforbes2022-11-07US
2240New Bizarre Fish With Glowing Eyes Found During Expedition To Cocos IslandsLive Science2022-11-11AU
2241A rare, brain-eating amoeba is spreading across the USinterestingengineering2022-11-25US
2242The business end of a wolf eeltwitter2022-11-22CA
2243British angler catches massive 30 kg goldfish, netizens are stunnedhindustantimes2022-11-22FR
2244Washington Bans Fish-Farming Net Pens, Citing Salmon ThreatAssociated Press2022-11-18US
2245Three-metre 'rare' tuna fish found washed up on Lincolnshire beach by dog walkerlincolnshirelive2022-10-28UK
2246Japanese restaurant lets customers catch their own fish to cookhindustantimes2022-10-29JP
2247Настоящий рыбацкий день рожденияОхотники.ру2022-11-09RU
2248At least 6% of global fishing ‘probably illegal’ as ships turn off tracking devicestheguardian2022-11-02UK
2249Diving family from Mathews helping with invasive lionfish—by eating themgazettejournal2022-11-02US
2250Experts struggling to save tiny 'bejeweled' fish from extinctionkxxv2022-10-30US

215 216 217 89 of [218 - pages.]