logo
                 
logo
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
26Controversial fish milk touted as a drink option with kids mealsnypost2024-11-25ID
27Man reveals what happens as he stings himself with most venomous fish in the worldunilad2024-11-26US
28Will this legendary Kansas catfish world record ever be beat?ksnt2024-11-27US
29Radio tags let scientists monitor muskies in the Missisquoivermontbiz2024-11-28US
30Fishing charter captain worries he'll lose livelihood after Helenewtsp2024-11-22US
31Whirling disease confirmed in Kootenay Lakegoldstreamgazette2024-12-09CA
32Oil Spill in Boston River Threatens Wildlifethenewstribune2024-12-09US
33AI fish counting app lands innovation awardthefishsite2024-12-09JP
34Flow-through salmon farmer secures 50,000 tonne permitthefishsite2024-12-06NO
35Plan to farm red drum fish off Sarasota coast brings controversywtsp2024-11-22US
36Tragic mass fish die-off devastates Amazon River channel amid historic droughtmongabay2024-11-27BZ
37is this the end of the line for Irish fishing?theguardian2024-11-28IR
38More Than 7,500 Fish Die In Truck Crash In Washington Stateibtimes2024-11-11US
39Thick-lipped creature found at bottom of canal in Uzbekistanmiamiherald2024-11-15UZ
40River creature with armored body and tall head discovered as new species in Brazilmiamiherald2024-11-22BZ
41Angler scoops up weakly electric creature from riverbedmiamiherald2024-12-04MZ
42Arctic fox found roaming Oregon falls ill with salmon poisoningthenewstribune2024-12-03US
43A father and son duo fight invasive lionfish on a Honduran reefmongabay2024-11-18HN
44How scientists claimed victory over an invasive Great Lakes bloodsuckernationalgeographic2024-11-18US
45Wild cavefish can somehow survive with almost no sleep at allnewscientist2024-11-19MX
46Whipsnade Zoo launches ambitious plan to save a rare fish from extinctionnationalworld2024-11-19UK
47Scottish salmon farms seek growth despite mounting fish deathsmongabay2024-11-20UK
48An environmental group files intent to sue a salmon farmer for pollution off Maines coastwhec2024-11-16US
49Enormous rare creature with stocky black body spotted off NJ coastislandpacket2024-11-18US
50Worlds loneliest fish to be saved from extinction by British Zooexpress2024-11-19UK

136 137 138 1 of [139 - pages.]