Guest guest Posted March 26, 2006 Report Share Posted March 26, 2006 Nourishing Traditions has a recipe for fermented fish sauce using whey. I tried making it, and then I tried eating it - gave up. Acquired taste?? or just Nasty! Vicki kefir_king <kefir_king@...> wrote: Hi I am curious as to how fish is fermented. I have seen pictures of fish dug up in the groud. **************** The future belongs to those who believe in the beauty of their dreams. -Eleanor Roosevelt --------------------------------- New Messenger with Voice. Call regular phones from your PC and save big. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 26, 2006 Report Share Posted March 26, 2006 well aparently, if you decide to ferment fish...you will clear the whole neighbourhood very quick and you will be very unpopular.. I think I will just stick to brinning and pickling...that is much easier.... I think in the meat industry they use tenderising enzymes..maybe the same can be done with the fish... Vicki Mayes <vicmayes@...> wrote: Nourishing Traditions has a recipe for fermented fish sauce using whey. I tried making it, and then I tried eating it - gave up. Acquired taste?? or just Nasty! Vicki kefir_king <kefir_king@...> wrote: Hi I am curious as to how fish is fermented. I have seen pictures of fish dug up in the groud. **************** The future belongs to those who believe in the beauty of their dreams. -Eleanor Roosevelt --------------------------------- New Messenger with Voice. Call regular phones from your PC and save big. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 26, 2006 Report Share Posted March 26, 2006 Fish *sauce* is made by layering salt and (usually) anchovies, this is fermented for a good while, then the juice is pressed and bottled as fish sauce..mmm.. Used alot in thai food and korean food, it stinks pretty bad on it's own, but adds a really good flavor when used in almost " homeopathic " amounts LOL. The smell goes away during cooking.. a few drops'll do ya..Lasts a long time. I would think that an amount of salt bordering on being almost too much for any fermentation would be used, (the sauce is very salty) to ensure safety from pathogens and maybe even kill parasites..I also wouldn't be surprised if the sauce is pastuerised once in the bottle... Beau On 3/26/06, kefir king <kefir_king@...> wrote: > > well aparently, if you decide to ferment fish...you will clear the whole > neighbourhood very quick and you will be very unpopular.. > I think I will just stick to brinning and pickling...that is much > easier.... > I think in the meat industry they use tenderising enzymes..maybe the same > can be done with the fish... > > Vicki Mayes <vicmayes@...> wrote: > Nourishing Traditions has a recipe for fermented fish sauce using whey. I > tried making it, and then I tried eating it - gave up. Acquired taste?? or > just Nasty! > Vicki > > kefir_king <kefir_king@...> wrote: Hi > I am curious as to how fish is fermented. I have seen pictures of fish > dug up in the groud. > > > **************** > The future belongs to those who believe in the beauty of their dreams. > > -Eleanor Roosevelt > > --------------------------------- > New Messenger with Voice. Call regular phones from your PC and save > big. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 26, 2006 Report Share Posted March 26, 2006 it is dangerous to ferment fish if you don't know it well, you can get botulism bacteria and die I do make home made gravlax,though freeze fish first and never touch soi tove Re: Brined-fermented pickled fish well aparently, if you decide to ferment fish...you will clear the whole neighbourhood very quick and you will be very unpopular.. I think I will just stick to brinning and pickling...that is much easier.... I think in the meat industry they use tenderising enzymes..maybe the same can be done with the fish... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 26, 2006 Report Share Posted March 26, 2006 Beau I used Thai Fish salt..and I have seen pictures of how they make it...it aparently stinks...and yes very salty... You can buy salted and sun dried fish..they are quite a delicay..but you have to wash all the salt out before cooking them... Hi > > I am curious as to how fish is fermented. I have seen pictures of fish > > dug up in the groud. > > > > > > **************** > > The future belongs to those who believe in the beauty of their dreams. > > > > -Eleanor Roosevelt > > > > --------------------------------- > > New Messenger with Voice. Call regular phones from your PC and save > > big. > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 26, 2006 Report Share Posted March 26, 2006 how do you avoid the nasty stuff when making gravlax?... > > it is dangerous to ferment fish if you don't know it well, you can get botulism bacteria and die > I do make home made gravlax,though > freeze fish first and never touch soi > tove > Re: Brined-fermented pickled fish > > > well aparently, if you decide to ferment fish...you will clear the whole neighbourhood very quick and you will be very unpopular.. > I think I will just stick to brinning and pickling...that is much easier.... > I think in the meat industry they use tenderising enzymes..maybe the same can be done with the fish... > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 26, 2006 Report Share Posted March 26, 2006 KK, FWIW, and not the answer to your question, but...I once sliced calf's liver into one quarter inch slices that were several inches long and put them into a jar of kefir whey. They were cultured for a couple of weeks. I tried eating them straight from the jar, stir fried and breaded. Too bitter. Will look for another way. C R In a message dated 3/26/2006 12:52:04 PM Central Standard Time, kefir_king@... writes: > OK here is the question? By brinning the fish for 48 hours..then > pickling it...what fermentation goes on there...there is very little > carbohydrates, so i guess no lactic acid fermentation will take > place...has anyone done any experimentation with maybe putting some > kefir whey with the fish and see what happens...I notice that Heidi has > used a similar method to make Jerky... > thanks > KK Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 26, 2006 Report Share Posted March 26, 2006 I think you may be thinking of RAKFISH...which is where all the poisoning cases in your country happen with this home made Rakfish...Rakfish is a long (few weeks) fermentation process, and it has to be kept at 5-6 degrees. Gravlax is I understand 24 hours in the fridge...quite different from Rakfish... Have you had Rakfish? What does it taste like? > > it is dangerous to ferment fish if you don't know it well, you can get botulism bacteria and die > I do make home made gravlax,though > freeze fish first and never touch soi > tove > Re: Brined-fermented pickled fish > > > well aparently, if you decide to ferment fish...you will clear the whole neighbourhood very quick and you will be very unpopular.. > I think I will just stick to brinning and pickling...that is much easier.... > I think in the meat industry they use tenderising enzymes..maybe the same can be done with the fish... > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 26, 2006 Report Share Posted March 26, 2006 kefir_king wrote: > how do you avoid the nasty stuff when making gravlax?... Gravlax isn't fermented long enough to get botulism, and most of it is made under refrigeration these days. But it's layered in salt, and layering fish in salt is pretty safe. I do it with small fish to make anchovies. Works good. However, you DO want to make sure the salmon was frozen first. Seems wild salmon usually harbors roundworms. All the samples of sushi they sampled in Seattle had roundworms, but the farmed salmon sushi did not. However, the roundworms were all dead, because here you have to freeze the salmon before you make sushi. The danger in fermenting fish is when it's done NOT according to the " old ways " . Like, if you use tupperware instead of a seal skin or whatever. There are a lot of variables. The Roman recipe, which seems typical, is to take all the fish GUTS and put them in an open clay pot OUT IN THE SUN. They get really frothy and fermented. You take in the pot every night and stir it a couple of times during the day. It doesn't say how to keep the flies out: maybe they had a cloth on top. The fish guts have some carb in them, I think, (from whatever the fish was eating? glycogen in the liver?) which makes for a true ferment, and it's in the AIR which means botulism isn't likely to grow. Plus you got the sun beating on it, so it's pretty warm. And I'd guess they added a little salt. The cases that got botulism, in my reading, were all in sealed ferments (like buried in the dirt or in tupperware) and had few or no carbs or salt. The carbs seem to be key, because they get the right bacteria growing which crowd out the Clostridium. Clostridium doesn't seem to want to grow where there is competition, so it grows a lot in *mostly* sterile items (like garlic cloves and poorly sterilized canned green beans). Clostridium also doesn't like acid, so the lactic acid protects kimchi and kraut, even though they are anaerobic ferments. Other cases involved a salt-ferment, but the salt wasn't stirred in properly. You can read all about botulinus and fish ferments on the CDC website. Anyway, the way I pickle fish is to add the chunks to kimchi. The other stuff makes sure the fish pickles correctly. I did one batch that was JUST salmon, a little kimchi juice, salt, and onions. It was fantastic, tasted like really good pickled herring, but it smelled like an open sewer so I didn't do it again. More on botulism: ============== http://www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/9339/10430.html In the United States, roughly 100 people become ill with botulism each year. More than two-thirds of botulism cases today occur in infants. Babies less than 1 year old, especially those that are breastfeeding, have a different intestinal system than adults. Spores swallowed by an adult with a mature digestive tract usually will remain in their hibernating, inactive state. But spores ingested by a young infant can reproduce and can form toxin that is absorbed into the bloodstream, causing botulism. In one out of five cases of botulism in infants, the infant has eaten raw honey. More rarely, botulism spores are found in corn syrup. Since the majority of cases of infant botulism can't be traced to a food source, experts suspect that babies are exposed simply by swallowing small amounts of dust or dirt. Rarely, botulism is the result of a contaminated wound. Most wound botulism today occurs in people who inject recreational drugs. ========== Which means, even though you ingest botulism spores constantly, very few people people ever get the disease. Most of the ones that do get it from home-canned foods or foil-wrapped baked potatoes that stayed too long in the fridge. One interesting take on this is that Clostridium seems to be able to grow in the intestine in some people, which means those people are maybe getting low levels of the toxin in their blood. Since the toxin causes stuff like blurred vision, THAT might be a cause of some weird syndromes. Which might also account for why some people get such dramatic results from probiotics. http://www.vorsoft.com/medical/botulism/descript.htm The spores of the botulism bacteria are found everywhere. Probably we ingest these every day of our lives, either on vegetables or from dust in the air. It might be different though to have a tick, for example, inject them under the skin. There may also be a new subspecies going around. Bell's palsy, in which one side of the face droops, is a common Lyme disease symptom. This is caused by some kind of nerve damage, resulting in temporary paralysis of the facial muscles. Cardiac problems, which are often associated with early Lyme disease, are due to nerve blockage in the nerves that control the beating of the heart. The Clostridium bacteria produce many toxins besides the neurotoxins. They produce enzymes that digest tissue, for example: protease which dissolves proteins, and collagenase which dissolves collagen. This could be related to the joint damage of people with Lyme disease and to the disappearing fingerprints of people with CFS. -- Heidi Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 26, 2006 Report Share Posted March 26, 2006 I dont think I will go down that route, there is really no need for me..just pickling is fine...and maybe I will experiment with some tenderizing enzymes all in the FRIDGE...2 Degrees C...Add some Papaya and Pineapel to the fish in the fridge for 12 hours...that will mash all the protein up... :-) > > how do you avoid the nasty stuff when making gravlax?... > > Gravlax isn't fermented long enough to get > botulism, and most of it is made under refrigeration > these days. But it's layered in salt, and layering > fish in salt is pretty safe. I do it with small > fish to make anchovies. Works good. > > However, you DO want to make sure the salmon > was frozen first. Seems wild salmon usually > harbors roundworms. All the samples of sushi > they sampled in Seattle had roundworms, but the > farmed salmon sushi did not. However, the roundworms > were all dead, because here you have to freeze > the salmon before you make sushi. > > The danger in fermenting fish is when it's > done NOT according to the " old ways " . Like, if > you use tupperware instead of a seal skin or > whatever. There are a lot of variables. > > The Roman recipe, which seems typical, is to > take all the fish GUTS and put them in an > open clay pot OUT IN THE SUN. They get > really frothy and fermented. You take in the > pot every night and stir it a couple of times > during the day. It doesn't say how to keep > the flies out: maybe they had a cloth on top. > > The fish guts have some carb in them, I think, > (from whatever the fish was eating? glycogen in the liver?) > which makes for a true ferment, and it's > in the AIR which means botulism isn't likely > to grow. Plus you got the sun beating on > it, so it's pretty warm. And I'd guess they > added a little salt. > > The cases that got botulism, in my reading, > were all in sealed ferments (like buried in the > dirt or in tupperware) and had few or no > carbs or salt. The carbs seem to be key, because > they get the right bacteria growing which > crowd out the Clostridium. Clostridium doesn't > seem to want to grow where there is competition, > so it grows a lot in *mostly* sterile items > (like garlic cloves and poorly sterilized > canned green beans). Clostridium also doesn't > like acid, so the lactic acid protects kimchi > and kraut, even though they are anaerobic ferments. > > Other cases involved a salt-ferment, but the > salt wasn't stirred in properly. > > You can read all about botulinus and > fish ferments on the CDC website. > > Anyway, the way I pickle fish is to add > the chunks to kimchi. The other stuff > makes sure the fish pickles correctly. I did > one batch that was JUST salmon, a little kimchi juice, > salt, and onions. It was fantastic, tasted like really > good pickled herring, but it smelled > like an open sewer so I didn't do it again. > > More on botulism: > ============== > http://www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/9339/10430.html > > In the United States, roughly 100 people become ill with botulism each year. More than two-thirds of botulism cases today occur in infants. Babies less than 1 year old, especially those that are breastfeeding, have a different intestinal system than adults. Spores swallowed by an adult with a mature digestive tract usually will remain in their hibernating, inactive state. But spores ingested by a young infant can reproduce and can form toxin that is absorbed into the bloodstream, causing botulism. > > In one out of five cases of botulism in infants, the infant has eaten raw honey. More rarely, botulism spores are found in corn syrup. Since the majority of cases of infant botulism can't be traced to a food source, experts suspect that babies are exposed simply by swallowing small amounts of dust or dirt. > > Rarely, botulism is the result of a contaminated wound. Most wound botulism today occurs in people who inject recreational drugs. > ========== > > Which means, even though you ingest botulism spores constantly, > very few people people ever get the disease. Most of the ones > that do get it from home-canned foods or foil-wrapped baked > potatoes that stayed too long in the fridge. > > One interesting take on this is that Clostridium > seems to be able to grow in the intestine in > some people, which means those people are maybe getting > low levels of the toxin in their blood. Since the > toxin causes stuff like blurred vision, THAT might > be a cause of some weird syndromes. Which might > also account for why some people get such dramatic > results from probiotics. > > http://www.vorsoft.com/medical/botulism/descript.htm > > The spores of the botulism bacteria are found everywhere. Probably we ingest these every day of our lives, either on vegetables or from dust in the air. It might be different though to have a tick, for example, inject them under the skin. There may also be a new subspecies going around. > > Bell's palsy, in which one side of the face droops, is a common Lyme disease symptom. This is caused by some kind of nerve damage, resulting in temporary paralysis of the facial muscles. > > Cardiac problems, which are often associated with early Lyme disease, are due to nerve blockage in the nerves that control the beating of the heart. > > The Clostridium bacteria produce many toxins besides the neurotoxins. They produce enzymes that digest tissue, for example: protease which dissolves proteins, and collagenase which dissolves collagen. This could be related to the joint damage of people with Lyme disease and to the disappearing fingerprints of people with CFS. > > > -- Heidi > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 26, 2006 Report Share Posted March 26, 2006 I should also add to my previous note ... it seems most fish DO have the spores in their guts, which is why fermented whole fish seem to be the cause of some botulism outbreaks. But fermented fish guts are what they use to make fish sauce, and fish sauce generally seems to be ok. My guess is that it's the long ferment. If they ferment for a long time and then go acidic, then that breaks down the toxin and kills the clostridium. Kind of like, LONG fermented cheese is safer than short fermented cheese. Anyway, they say it doesn't grow in anything acidic (under 4.5 ph) so I'd go with the kimchi method. -- Heidi Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 26, 2006 Report Share Posted March 26, 2006 Have you tried putting fish filletts in Kefir (not grains)...aparently it is a great tenderizer... > > > I should also add to my previous note ... > it seems most fish DO have the spores in their > guts, which is why fermented whole fish seem > to be the cause of some botulism outbreaks. > But fermented fish guts are what they > use to make fish sauce, and fish sauce generally > seems to be ok. My guess is that it's the > long ferment. If they ferment for a long time > and then go acidic, then that breaks down the > toxin and kills the clostridium. Kind of like, > LONG fermented cheese is safer than short fermented > cheese. > > Anyway, they say it doesn't grow in anything acidic > (under 4.5 ph) so I'd go with the kimchi method. > > -- Heidi > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 26, 2006 Report Share Posted March 26, 2006 It is interesting what you say about the need for carbohydrates when fermenting fish...The pickling recipes that I have for brine pickling of fish all require that you add 1 Cup of Sugar...I guess that is what its for ...Carbs.. > > > I should also add to my previous note ... > it seems most fish DO have the spores in their > guts, which is why fermented whole fish seem > to be the cause of some botulism outbreaks. > But fermented fish guts are what they > use to make fish sauce, and fish sauce generally > seems to be ok. My guess is that it's the > long ferment. If they ferment for a long time > and then go acidic, then that breaks down the > toxin and kills the clostridium. Kind of like, > LONG fermented cheese is safer than short fermented > cheese. > > Anyway, they say it doesn't grow in anything acidic > (under 4.5 ph) so I'd go with the kimchi method. > > -- Heidi > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 26, 2006 Report Share Posted March 26, 2006 kefir_king wrote: > Have you tried putting fish filletts in Kefir (not > grains)...aparently it is a great tenderizer... Yes, I have. The problem is, it is SUCH a good tenderizer that if you aren't careful you end up with fish-mush! Kefir is great for tenderizing meat though. -- Heidi Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 26, 2006 Report Share Posted March 26, 2006 kefir_king wrote: > It is interesting what you say about the need for carbohydrates when > fermenting fish...The pickling recipes that I have for brine pickling > of fish all require that you add 1 Cup of Sugar...I guess that is > what its for ...Carbs.. Right. The low-carb ferments are the dangerous ones. If there is carb, the yeast and LAB eat it and lower the PH (and produce alcohol, in the case of yeast). Most " pickled fish " though isn't fermented, it's just soaked in vinegar. So probably the sugar there is to offset the sourness of the vinegar. Vinegar IS a ferment, so I don't think it's a bad thing to do, but I prefer the taste of kimchi-juice. If you soak fish in kimchi juice, you get a nice pickled fish. However, it has the same problem as kefir-soaked fish ... fish ferments and falls apart. Soaking the fish in vinegar doesn't have that problem. Fish pickled in vinegar isn't dangerous either, I think (though from what I've read, you should remove the fish guts first: using fish fillets would likely be the way to go). -- Heidi Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 26, 2006 Report Share Posted March 26, 2006 Kefir is great for tenderizing some of the cheaper/tougher cuts of beef.. On 3/26/06, Heidi <heidis@...> wrote: > > > > kefir_king wrote: > > It is interesting what you say about the need for carbohydrates when > > fermenting fish...The pickling recipes that I have for brine pickling > > of fish all require that you add 1 Cup of Sugar...I guess that is > > what its for ...Carbs.. > > Right. The low-carb ferments are the dangerous > ones. If there is carb, the yeast and LAB eat it > and lower the PH (and produce alcohol, in the case > of yeast). > > Most " pickled fish " though isn't fermented, > it's just soaked in vinegar. So probably the > sugar there is to offset the sourness of > the vinegar. > > Vinegar IS a ferment, > so I don't think it's a bad thing to do, > but I prefer the taste of kimchi-juice. If you > soak fish in kimchi juice, you get a nice > pickled fish. > > However, it has the same problem as kefir-soaked > fish ... fish ferments and falls apart. Soaking > the fish in vinegar doesn't have that problem. > Fish pickled in vinegar isn't dangerous either, > I think (though from what I've read, you should > remove the fish guts first: using fish fillets > would likely be the way to go). > > -- Heidi > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 26, 2006 Report Share Posted March 26, 2006 Heidi wrote: >... >The Roman recipe, which seems typical, is to >take all the fish GUTS and put them in an >open clay pot OUT IN THE SUN. They get >really frothy and fermented. You take in the >pot every night and stir it a couple of times >during the day. It doesn't say how to keep >the flies out: maybe they had a cloth on top. I think they had a weight to press the fish *and* fish guts down (NB: not just guts, but also whole fish). I think they also used sealed containers. Unfortunately, I have lent out my book on Salt: A World History, which talked about garum, liquamen and other Roman salt / fish delicacies, so I can't look it up. >The fish guts have some carb in them, I think, >(from whatever the fish was eating? glycogen in the liver?) >which makes for a true ferment, and it's >in the AIR which means botulism isn't likely >to grow. Plus you got the sun beating on >it, so it's pretty warm. And I'd guess they >added a little salt. Not in the air; pressed into vessels, so quite anoxic. As for salt, probably as much as there was fish! This is part of the reason that salt was as good as currency in Roman days, and why the soldiers got a salt ration (salary). No Roman soldier " worth his salt " would go anywhere without garum Actually, thinking about it, what you're talking about is probably not garum, but one of the other Roman fish ferments. They did like their fermented fish... -- Ross McKay, Toronto, NSW Australia " Nobody ever rioted for austerity " - Monbiot Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 26, 2006 Report Share Posted March 26, 2006 Heidi wrote: >I should also add to my previous note ... >it seems most fish DO have the spores in their >guts, which is why fermented whole fish seem >to be the cause of some botulism outbreaks. >But fermented fish guts are what they >use to make fish sauce, and fish sauce generally >seems to be ok. My guess is that it's the >long ferment. If they ferment for a long time >and then go acidic, then that breaks down the >toxin and kills the clostridium. It's the lactic acid ferment. Just like sauerkraut and kimchi, the salt and lack of oxygen inhibit most of the bad guys, and the rising lactic acid levels (plus other organic acids) inhibit the rest. -- Ross McKay, Toronto, NSW Australia " There is more to life than simply increasing its speed. " - Mahatma Gandhi Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 26, 2006 Report Share Posted March 26, 2006 I'm not sure what it was: the recipe was in an old cookbook and was a direct quote from the Romans. The recipe was a lot like the fermented tomatoes in Keeping Food Fresh ... you set a pot out in the sun full of fish guts. I'm sure they had lots of other recipes though! Hm. There is a similar one in my Korean cookbook, tho they don't ferment it as long. I'll have to look it up and post it. -- Heidi > Actually, thinking about it, what you're talking about is probably not > garum, but one of the other Roman fish ferments. They did like their > fermented fish... > -- > Ross McKay, Toronto, NSW Australia > " Nobody ever rioted for austerity " - Monbiot Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 27, 2006 Report Share Posted March 27, 2006 rakfisk is an aqcuired taste.... Re: Brined-fermented pickled fish I think you may be thinking of RAKFISH...which is where all the poisoning cases in your country happen with this home made Rakfish...Rakfish is a long (few weeks) fermentation process, and it has to be kept at 5-6 degrees. Gravlax is I understand 24 hours in the fridge...quite different from Rakfish... Have you had Rakfish? What does it taste like? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 27, 2006 Report Share Posted March 27, 2006 can you describe the taste? Tove Stenersen <tove.stenersen@...> wrote: rakfisk is an aqcuired taste.... Re: Brined-fermented pickled fish I think you may be thinking of RAKFISH...which is where all the poisoning cases in your country happen with this home made Rakfish...Rakfish is a long (few weeks) fermentation process, and it has to be kept at 5-6 degrees. Gravlax is I understand 24 hours in the fridge...quite different from Rakfish... Have you had Rakfish? What does it taste like? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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