Tinned Fish

I went to my local fish store. They had the most amazing selection of fresh fish. It smelled like everything from the ocean was in the store – except for the rotting parts washed up on the shore. They had several kinds of dried fish, smoked fish and an amazing selection of frozen fish. The same way that most high end sushi shops or Japanese fish sellers do it. Keep it safe. Preserve the taste and texture. ( https://culturesgroup.substack.com)

The most stunning display of tinned fish from around the world. Expensive brands, not your average sardines or tuna in salt water or olive oil. 

But even those can be incredibly tasty, especially if you know to drain them and dress them before eating. All it takes is a little hot sauce. 

And few drops of shio koji, or amasake and herbs, oil, or seasoned shoyu can turn a very inexpensive product with lots of protein and usually lots of calcium into a feast. As can any citrus you have. 

Actually, some Vitamin C powder – yep, ascorbic acid – is not only functional but tasty too. As Sid natto and mustard. But I digress. 

Any of these can be a really exciting replacement for anchovies on a Caesar salad. Not that anchovies lack the umami cred to make everything taste better, but a tin of smoked salmon in extra virgin olive oil is what they serve for brunch in Heaven. 

Usually with hard boiled eggs on radicchio with a tarragon and mustard vinaigrette. Okay, dill if you’re not already having some half sours on the side. And sliced red onions. With lemon. And capers. 

The really tasty tinned fish can easily be turned into a miso type paste, or even become the stock or broth for a fish stew that uses cooked potatoes or hominy or yucca, celery and a little carrot. Yes, you may throw in a hot pepper if that’s your desire. But the little ones tend not to not be into that type of thing. 

Cook up some shiitake mushrooms or whatever you can find with cream or dashi or stock and whatever veg you’re using, then at the last minute mix in the tinned fish and let it heat up for just a minute off the heat before serving over a heavily toasted country style sourdough plank. 

Did I mention that fried potatoes soaked in vinegar or a citric acid Shio Koji before being fried are the tastiest. In fact, do that with the tinned fish for an amazing tempura. But, that is what God has for brunch.

Making fish jangs or misos or pastes is a little – but not much – more complicated. We have lots of videos on this using whatver you can catch. Sure, you can use expensive tinned fish. You can also use fish heads or even bottled fish sauce to make them. 

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Author: Cultures.Group

Cultures.Group shares information, educational resources, and unique experiences through online meetings and special events, and an extensive video library on fermentation, preservation, brewing, cooking, baking and how to use koji and other filamentous fungus to make tasty things. We are a collective of artists, scientists, educators, chefs, fermenters, bakers, students and advocates. One annual fee to access all the videos whenever you like, as well as any event we have during the year. Our library of digital materials serves as the foundation to create new videos and events, driven by what our members want to learn about. Our archives and events are not posted online, nor are they searchable using any search engine. You are invited to join our collective as a student, teacher, artisan, merchant, author, activist, scientist, philosopher - or someone that doesn’t consider themself especially noteworthy or knowledgeable. Want to know how fermentation, preservation, baking and cooking knowledge can help you feed your family and community during fat and lean times? Annual Membership and access to everything http://Paypal.me/FermentsandCultures https://www.instagram.com/cultures.group/ Website: https://Cultures.Group

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