Baccala Soup for Christmas Eve – Italian Grandma’ Gina

Baccala Soup for Christmas Eve

Italian Grandma Gina

 

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I love Baccala whether its in a soup or salad if done correctly it is out of this world. Now with the Christmas Season upon us it’s time to revisit a few of the Baccala recipes. This is just one of them. 

Enjoy Italian Grandma Gina as she explains her method of makeing Baccala Soup for the holidays.

YUM

Problem is that most people don’t know the first thing about what to do with Baccala. Let Grandma Gina explain in this video below done in her adorable Broken English.

 

Broken English Spoken Here

 

 

The drying of food is the world’s oldest known preservation method, and dried fish has a storage life of several years. Traditionally, salt cod was dried only by the wind and the sun, hanging on wooden scaffolding or lying on clean cliffs or rocks near the seaside.

Baccala – Cod Fish hung up to dry

 

Dried and salted cod, sometimes referred to simply as salt cod, is cod which has been preserved by drying after salting. Cod which has been dried without the addition of salt is stock fish. Salt cod was long a major export of the North Atlantic region, and has become an ingredient of many cuisines around the Atlantic and in the Mediterranean. With the sharp decline in the world stocks of cod, other salted and dried white fish are sometimes marketed as “salt cod”, and the term has become to some extent a generic name.

Dried Cod – Baccala

 

Dried and salted cod has been produced for over 500 years in NewfoundlandIceland, and the Faroe Islands, and most particularly inNorway where it is called klippfisk, literally “cliff-fish”. Traditionally it was dried outdoors by the wind and sun, often on cliffs and other bare rock-faces. Today klippfisk is usually dried indoors with the aid of electric heaters.

 

Baccala Salad

Drying preserves many nutrients, and the process of salting and drying codfish is said to make it tastier. Salting became economically feasible during the 17th century, when cheap salt from southern Europe became available to the maritime nations of northern Europe. The method was cheap and the work could be done by the fisherman or his family. The resulting product was easily transported to market, and salt cod became a staple item in the diet of the populations of Catholic countries on ‘meatless’ Fridays and during Lent.

 

 

 

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