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smoked salmon |
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HISTORY OF
SMOKED SALMON
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Origins
Its name basically says it all. Smoking is a process of preserving
meat that has been in place for centuries. It is said that
people from ancient times first discovered the benefits of
smoking food. To prepare for the long winters, people smoked
their salmon in order to preserve the fish. So basically,
smoked salmon is freshly caught salmon that undergoes salting
and smoking at high temperatures in order to keep it edible
for an extended period of time.
The Native Americans held salmon in high respect, and they
believed that if someone were to mishandle the fish, the great
spirits of the sea would drive the salmon away from the waters.
The Greeks and the Romans also enjoyed Smoked Salmon, having
it served at their lavish festivals. Smoked Salmon is a dish
that has always called for a celebration. Today, it is an
integral part of our diet, and although it is considered a
luxury item, steady supply has maintained the prices at relatively
the same levels they were years ago, making it an accessible
food item. Highly versatile, this is an easy product to enjoy,
one of the reasons being its resiliency.
The Birth of Lox
Gourmet smoked salmon consumption remained successful for
thousands of years, reaching its height during the middle
Ages. During this time, people served them in soups and salads,
which was thoroughly enjoyed by almost every citizen.
The 19th Century saw the beginnings of the American smoked
salmon industry, first in the West Coast, where wild Pacific
salmon from Alaska and Oregon were caught from spring to fall.
During WWII a method of smoking was developed in order to
further preserve salted fish, so it could travel longer. This
kind of smoked salmon, which was called Lox, cemented the
association between Pacific smoked salmon as the ‘classic’
kind of smoked salmon, and became so popular that even today
people refer to smoked salmon as ‘lox’ - even
though this old method of smoking has gone to disuse- and
most smoked salmon primarily comes from the North Atlantic.
The development of the railroad and other forms of long distance
transportation created a greatly expanded market for Pacific
smoked salmon, which could now be carried as far the East
Coast. After the wars, a boom of European immigration to America
brought with it many cultures with long and ancient traditions
of fish-smoking, which further helped develop and perfect
this new technique. New York City, especially Brooklyn, emerged
as the fish-smoking capital of America, with the apparition
of many now traditional smokehouses, especially in Brooklyn.
The Hudson Bay Company opened in 1835 and became the nation’s
first large importer of salmon, soon joined by other giants
like Nova Scotia Food Products, Marshall Smoked Fish Co.,
amongst others, which brought their Pacific salmon from the
West and smoked it in Lower Manhattan, and pioneered the importation
of Nova Scotia or North Atlantic salmon. In the 1960s the
industry received an even greater push, with the commercialization
of refrigerated rail cars. The rest, as they say, is history.
Smoked salmon has become an integral part of the American
diet, and a most popular breakfast and brunch item.
A different type of farming
Soon, commercial fishing of salmon became so prevalent and
out of control, wild salmon became nearly extinct due to over
fishing and pollution. Once this occurred, people began to
consider it a luxury item and prices went up.
In order to protect the species, laws were put in place that
regulated the fishing of salmon, which is why wild smoked
salmon today is usually more expensive than the farmed variety.
Overall, salmon is more commonly farmed, that is, big and
small entrepreneurs will “grow” salmon in lakes,
and then smoke it on premises or sell them to smokehouses.
Only a connoisseur will be able to tell the difference between
farmed or wild smoked salmon, although many will argue that
the latter is superior in taste (those who love the higher-fat
content of smoked salmon are better off with the farmed variety,
since wild salmon tends to be leaner). Most of North America’s
smoked salmon usually comes from the Pacific Northwest, the
North Atlantic (usually labeled Scottish smoked salmon, or
Nova salmon), or is imported from Norway, although Chile has
now risen as a huge competitor.
Smoking
Salmon is smoked when it is under three years of age, which
preserves the full freshness and flavor of the fish. There
are two ways of curing salmon (which basically means salting
it), the process that precedes smoking: wet cure or dry cure.
Today, most of the consumer smoked salmon undergoes wet curing,
where the salmon is submerged in brine (salty) solution. The
smoking process can vary, and two techniques are used: hot-smoking
or cold-smoking (which both fall under the wet cure process),
although cold-smoking is the more predominant. These traditional
methods are very similar; the salmon is placed in a brine
solution (a mixture of salt and pepper, sugar and spices),
and then taken to the smokehouse. The main variation lies
in the length of the smoking, and the temperature used. Depending
on the size of the fish, the salmon will be smoked for a longer
or shorter period of time. Flavor will vary according to the
type of salmon used (wild or farmed, Atlantic or Pacific species,
etc), and smoking techniques. Cold smoked salmon tends to
be more subtly smoky, and more oily and smooth, while the
hot-smoked variety is much more “smoky” and much
drier. The popular Scottish smoked salmon uses wood chips
from old whisky or sherry casks, for a very distinctive flavor.
Most salmon that you find in supermarkets is typically cold-smoked
from farmed salmon. |
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Once you've tried it, you may not eat other smoked salmon again.
4.5 oz - $16.25
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