Biology:Pickled herring
Pickled herring is a traditional way of preserving herring as food by pickling or curing.
Most cured herring uses a two-step curing process: it is first cured with salt to extract water; then the salt is removed and the herring is brined in vinegar, salt, and sugar solution, often with peppercorn, bay leaves, raw onions, and so on. Additional flavourings include sherry, mustard and dill, while other non-traditional ingredients have also begun being included in recent years.
Pickled herring remains a popular food or ingredient to dishes in many parts of Europe including Scandinavia, Great Britain, the Baltic, Eastern and Central Europe, as well as the Netherlands. It is also popular in parts of Canada such as British Columbia and Newfoundland. It is also associated with Ashkenazi Jewish cuisine, becoming a staple at kiddushes and social gatherings. Pickled herring is one of the twelve dishes traditionally served at Christmas Eve in Poland, Lithuania, and Ukraine. Pickled herring is also eaten at the stroke of midnight on New Year's Eve to symbolize a prosperous New Year in Poland, the Czech Republic, Germany, and parts of Scandinavia.[1]
History
Pickled herrings have been a staple in Northern Europe since Medieval times, being a way to store and transport fish, especially necessary in meatless periods like Lent. The herrings would be prepared, then packed in barrels for storage or transportation.
Geographic distribution
In the Nordic countries, once the pickling process is finished and depending on which of the dozens of herring flavourings (mustard, onion, garlic, lingonberries etc.) are selected, it is eaten with dark rye bread, crisp bread, sour cream, or potatoes. This dish is common at Christmas, Easter and Midsummer, where it is frequently accompanied by spirits like akvavit.
Soused herring (maatjesharing or just maatjes in Dutch) is an especially mild salt herring, which is made from young, immature herrings. The herrings are ripened for a couple of days in oak barrels in a salty solution, or brine. In English, a "soused herring" can also be a cooked marinated herring.[2]
Rollmops are pickled herring fillets rolled (hence the name) into a cylindrical shape around a piece of pickled gherkin or an onion. They are thought to have developed as a special treat in 19th century Berlin,[3] and the word borrowed from the German.
Fish cured through pickling or salting have long been consumed in the British Isles. Like jellied eel, it was primarily eaten by, and is sometimes associated with, the working-class. Kipper, sometimes called red herring, is a dish eaten in Great Britain, Ireland, and parts of Canada. It consists of a split open herring, pickled or salted, and cold-smoked.
Pickled herring, especially brined herring, is common in Russia and Ukraine, where it is served cut into pieces and seasoned with sunflower oil and onions, or can be part of herring salads, such as dressed herring (Russian: Сельдь под шубой, Ukrainian: Оселедець під шубою, lit. 'herring under a fur coat'), which are usually prepared with vegetables and seasoned with mayonnaise dressing.
Brined herring is common in Ashkenazi Jewish cuisine, perhaps best known for vorschmack salad known in English simply as "chopped herring" and as schmaltz herring in Yiddish. In Israel it is commonly known as dag maluach which means "salted fish".
Pickled herring can also be found in the cuisine of Hokkaidō in Japan, where families traditionally preserved large quantities for winter.
In Nova Scotia, Canada, pickled herring with onions is called "solomon gundy" and is quite popular. (Not to be confused with the Jamaican pickled fish pâté of the same name, or the DC character).
"Bismarck herring" (German Bismarckhering) is the common name for pickled herring in Germany, and is sometimes sold elsewhere under that name. There are various theories as to why the product is associated with Bismarck.
Nutritional content
Pickled herring is rich in tyramine and thus should be avoided in the diet of people being treated with an antidepressant monoamine oxidase inhibitor.[4] That organic compound has also been associated with headaches, and so migraine sufferers should be aware.
As with fresh herring, pickled herring is an excellent natural source of both vitamin D3 and omega-3 fatty acids.[5][6] It is also a good source of selenium and vitamin B12. Just 100 grams may provide 680 IU of vitamin D, or 170% of the DV, as well as 84% of the DV for selenium, and 71% of the DV for vitamin B12.[7][8]
See also
Notes
- ↑ "Lucky Foods for the New Year". Smithsonian.com. https://www.smithsonianmag.com/arts-culture/lucky-foods-for-the-new-year-77891531/. Retrieved 2019-10-18.
- ↑ Slater, Nigel (2011-04-09). "Classic Soused mackerel". The Guardian. https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2011/apr/10/nigel-slaters-classic-soused-mackerel-recipe. Retrieved 10 April 2011.
- ↑ Erich Urban, Das Alphabet der Küche, Berlin 1929, Artikel Rollmops, S. 201
- ↑ Brown, Candace S.; Bryant, Stephen G. (March 1988). "Monoamine Oxidase Inhibitors: Safety and Efficacy Issues". Drug Intelligence & Clinical Pharmacy 22 (3): 232–235. doi:10.1177/106002808802200311. ISSN 0012-6578. PMID 3284731.
- ↑ Holub, B. J. (2002). "Clinical nutrition: 4. Omega-3 fatty acids in cardiovascular care". Canadian Medical Association Journal 166 (5): 608–615. PMID 11898942.
- ↑ Aro, T. L.; Larmo, P. S.; Bäckman, C. H.; Kallio, H. P.; Tahvonen, R. L. (2005). "Fatty acids and fat-soluble vitamins in salted herring (Clupea harengus) products". Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry 53 (5): 1482–88. doi:10.1021/jf0401221. PMID 15740028.
- ↑ "Fish, herring, Atlantic, pickled Nutrition Facts & Calories". http://nutritiondata.self.com/facts/finfish-and-shellfish-products/4067/2. Retrieved 23 March 2017.
- ↑ "Foods highest in Vitamin D". http://nutritiondata.self.com/foods-000102000000000000000.html. Retrieved 23 March 2017.
References
- Froese, Rainer and Pauly, Daniel, eds. (2006). Species of Clupea in FishBase. January 2006 version.
- O'Clair, Rita M. and O'Clair, Charles E., "Pacific herring," Southeast Alaska's Rocky Shores: Animals. pp. 343–46. Plant Press: Auke Bay, Alaska (1998). ISBN:0-9664245-0-6