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  2. Salted fish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salted_fish

    Salted fish, such as kippered herring or dried and salted cod, is fish cured with dry salt and thus preserved for later eating. Drying or salting , either with dry salt or with brine , was the only widely available method of preserving fish until the 19th century.

  3. Dried and salted cod - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dried_and_salted_cod

    Salt-dried cod for sale in Porto, Portugal. Dried and salted cod, sometimes referred to as salt cod or saltfish or salt dolly, is cod which has been preserved by drying after salting. Cod which has been dried without the addition of salt is stockfish. Salt cod was long a major export of the North Atlantic region, and has become an ingredient of ...

  4. Dried fish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dried_fish

    A type of wind-dried fish, called skreið, also dried but including the head, is no longer eaten domestically in modern times but is sold mostly to Nigeria where it is used in soup. Hwangtae refers to Alaska pollock dried in winter undergoing freeze-thaw cycle. Ikan asin is a dried and salted fish.

  5. Salting (food) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salting_(food)

    Drying or salting, either with dry salt or with brine, was the only widely available method of preserving fish until the 19th century. Dried fish and salted fish (or fish both dried and salted) are a staple of diets in the Caribbean, West Africa, North Africa, South Asia, Southeast Asia, Southern China, Scandinavia, parts of Canada including ...

  6. Lutefisk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lutefisk

    Preserved fish provided protein for generations in a part of the world with a strong fishing tradition. It is not known when people first started treating dried fish with lye. The reason was probably that the lack of major salt deposits in the area favored the drying process for the preservation of whitefish, a process known for millennia. [3] [4]

  7. Cured fish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cured_fish

    As early as 3,000 BC in Mesopotamia, cooked meats and fish were preserved in sesame oil and dried salted meat and fish were part of the Sumerian diet. Salt from the Dead Sea was in use by Jewish inhabitants around 1,600 BC, and by 1,200 BC, the Phoenicians were trading salted fish in the Eastern Mediterranean region.