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What Is Bacalao And How I Found Out That Scrambled Eggs Is The Best Thing To Have With It

bacalao specialist

bacalao specialist booth at the Mercado de San Miguel

 “‘You have heard people speak of the Hanseatic League, the merchants in Bergen?’
‘Indeed – we were there a few days ago.’
‘Then you’ll perhaps know it was these people, who were not Norwegian at all, who developed the business of the salt-cod trade?'”

Elizabeth Luard, Still Life

Bacalao is the Spanish word for ‘cod’ – it applies as much to simple fresh cod as to the more famous and popular salted cod – more popular (at least in Spain) because it has more flavour. This is particularly the case nowadays when most cod comes from fish farms. The cod, in fact, comes from Norway or Iceland. Bacalao was first enjoyed, centuries ago by the Basques, who, like the Vikings, had discovered the Americas long before Columbus. They also discovered the vast cod banks nearby.

In 1992 these cod banks collapsed, but stocks in the north-east Arctic and Iceland are now fished sustainable, and those in the UK’s northerly waters are also recovering.

In next-door Portugal, they also love their bacalhau. At a cooking evening at Rosa Et Al in Porto, owner, Emanuel de Sousa described how his mother…..

And on my last trip to Rome (see Gladiator Salad) I discovered that salted cod is also a big deal in Italy, particularly in Rome, where it is known as baccalà. It popularity, originally, arose because it was a cheap way of providing Catholic countries with fish for Fridays and during Lent. In Italy it’s usually ready-soaked (bagnati), and there is a skill in the soaking.

You will find the recipe for cooking bacalao at the bottom of this post.

Where to buy salted… and desalted cod

You can buy ready salted cod, but it needs quite a bit of rinsing and soaking to render it edible unless you buy desalted on-the-bone salt cod – which is available from The Fish Society.  The Fish Society also supplies still-salted bacalao, and it is also available from Melbury & Appleton.

How to desalt cod

To desalt bacalao rinse it in cold running water and then put it in a shallow dish and cover it with more water. Cover the dish with cling film and put it in the fridge for at least a day – two is probably better, changing the water at least three times a day. Taste it after 24 hours – if it’s still very salty, leave for another day. It will swell up to three times its original weight.

What to look for when buying salted cod

In terms of buying, select a whole piece of cod complete with skin and bones or get a cut from the whole fish as it has the most intense flavour and best texture. A good piece of bacalao will be slightly grey-white in colour, never yellow, and although it is dried it should not be stiff but slightly pliable.

How to salt your own cod

Alternatively you can salt it yourself. It’s important to use good quality sea salt (table salt won’t do). For four people you would need about 1Kg/just ove 2 lbs fresh cod and sprinkle it generously with sea salt. Leave for three or four hours to dehydrate and then rinse it and dry on kitchen paper.

What to do with salted cod

There are a lot of interesting things to be done with bacalao – a bit like bacon, its saltiness spices up a whole array of recipes. As with bacon, never salt the dish until you have tasted it at the end:

bacalao adds salty taste to a whole range of things – in the same way that bacon does.

The magic of bacalao al pil-pil

In Manuel Vázquez Montalbán’s Recetas Inmorales he describes the magic of the salt cod. A dry board of a fish, resuscitated by water and transformed into a luxurious malleable material, “like marble in the hands of Michaelangelo, or clay used by Guadix to make a glass…. two people who eat bacalao al pil pil have no choice but to become ‘communicating vessels'”…. a great dish which he says enables the partaker to navigate successfully through the vagaries of one’s love life.

Salted cod with scrambled eggs

And finally, best of all, with scrambled eggs. How do I know this? Last month I went on a long weekend with my daughter to Seville. We’d done all kinds of research into hotels, restaurants, what to do, with more or less success, and, as usual, rather overstuffing our minutes and days. However sometimes the best discoveries come entirely by chance. Running breathlessly between the giralda and a churreria my daughter spotted an interesting doorway, and noted it. The following day we thought we’d explore.

Ristorante San Marco is located in beautifully restored twelfth century Arabian baths. It is one of the best restaurants I have been to in Spain, and the best thing we tried on the menu was the scrambled eggs with bacalao. In the same way that the saltiness of bacon goes well with scrambled eggs, the saltiness of the cod also does, but it’s a bit more subtle.

Recipe for cooking bacalao in cider

For two people as a large tapa or a light lunch, make the salted cod as described above, rinsing well. then cook the fish by the method given below and keep warm. Then cook the scrambled eggs by this method. Flake the fish onto the scrambled eggs and serve on toasted ciabatta.

Ingredients

Method

  1. Preheat the oven to 180°C.
  2. Heat the stock cube, the cider, the water, and the saffron until boiling.
  3. Put the fish in a ceramic baking dish, pour over the liquid.
  4. Cook in the oven for about ten minutes – until the fish is no longer translucent.
  5. Drain the fish, de-skin and flake onto the scrambled eggs.
At the San Marco it was served on a sort of delicate wafer.
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