Gefilte fish

Gefilte fish topped with slices of carrot and served with red chrain (horseradish flavored with beetroot)

Gefilte fish (/ɡəˈfɪltə fɪʃ/; from Yiddish: געפֿילטע פֿיש, "stuffed fish") is a dish made from a poached mixture of ground deboned fish, such as carp, whitefish, or pike, which is typically eaten as an appetizer. It is a dish traditionally served by Ashkenazi Jewish households. In Poland, gefilte fish is also a traditional dish of Catholic homes to be served on Christmas Eve and Holy Sunday.[1]

Gefilte fish topped with carrot slices

Although the dish historically consisted of a minced-fish forcemeat stuffed inside the fish skin, as its name implies, since the 19th century the skin has commonly been omitted and the seasoned fish is formed into patties similar to quenelles or fish balls. They are popular on Shabbat and holidays such as Passover, although they may be consumed throughout the year.

Preparation and serving

Traditionally, carp, pike, mullet, or whitefish were used to make gefilte fish, but more recently other fish with white flesh such as Nile perch have been used, and there is a pink variation using salmon. There are even vegetarian variations.[2]

Fish fillets are ground with eggs, onion, bread or matza crumbs, and spices to produce a paste or dough which is then boiled in fish stock.[3]

Traditionally gefilte fish is cooked and served as egg-shaped patties, like quenelles, but sometimes it is cooked in large logs or blocks and then sliced for serving. It is usually served cold or at room temperature. Each piece may be topped with a slice of carrot, with a horseradish mixture called khreyn on the side.

Due to the previous general poverty of the Jewish population in Europe and especially Eastern Europe, where the dish originated, an economical recipe for the above also may have included extra ground and soaked matza meal or bread crumbs, thus creating extra fish balls. This form of preparation eliminated the need for picking out fish bones at the table, and "stretched" the (expensive) fish further, so that even poor, large families could enjoy fish on Shabbat. Not only is picking bones religiously prohibited on the Sabbath, but many of the commonly used fish such as carp are exceptionally bony and difficult to eat easily in whole form. The fish bones can be used in making the fish stock.

In Polish Catholic homes, Gefilte fish is a traditional dish to be eaten on Christmas Eve and Holy Sunday, as these are traditionally meatless feasts. Amongst Polish Catholics, the traditional dish of Gefilte fish is referred to as 'Jewish Karp'.[4] This follows a pattern in which a number Jewish dishes were also eaten on Catholic religious days in Poland.[5]

Variations

Gefilte fish: whole stuffed and garnished fish

Gefilte fish may be slightly sweet or savory. Preparation of gefilte fish with sugar or black pepper is considered an indicator of whether a Jewish community was Galitzianer (with sugar) or Litvak (with pepper); the boundary separating northern from southern East Yiddish has thus been dubbed "the Gefilte Fish Line".[6]

Ready-to-serve

Jars of gefilte fish

The post-WW2 method of making gefilte fish commercially takes the form of patties or balls, or utilizes a wax paper casing around a "log" of ground fish, which is then poached or baked. This product is sold in cans and glass jars, and packed in jelly made from fish broth. Sodium is a relatively high 220–290 mg/serving. Low-salt, low-carbohydrate, low-cholesterol, sugar-free, and kosher varieties are available. The U.S. Patent #3,108,882 "Method for Preparing an Edible Fish Product" for this jelly, which allowed mass-market distribution of gefilte fish, was granted on October 29, 1963 to Monroe Nash and Erich G. Freudenstein.[7] Gefilte fish are also sold frozen in "logs".

Symbolism

Among religiously observant Jews, gefilte fish has become a traditional Shabbat food to avoid borer, which is one of the 39 activities prohibited on Shabbat outlined in the Shulchan Aruch. Borer, literally "selection/choosing", would occur when one picks the bones out of the fish, taking "the chaff from within the food".[8] This interpretation, and the solution to it, however, are of relatively recent origin. Jews had been eating fish at least since the first century CE, and there is no mention of fish-eating in the famous communal ordinances against laxity in Sabbath observance.[9]

A less common belief is that fish are not subject to ayin hara ("evil eye") because they are submerged while alive, so that a dish prepared from several fish varieties brings good luck.[10]

Fish is parve, neither milk nor meat, and, according to kosher law, it may be eaten at both meat and dairy meals, although according to halakha fish and meat should not be eaten together.

See also

References

  1. Culinary Tourism, edited by Lucy M. Long, University Press of Kentucky, 18 Jul 2013, Chapter 4, Flavors of Memory, Eva Johnowitz
  2. Gefilte "Fish," Vegetarian Accessed November 10, 2010
  3. Попова, М. Ф., Секреты Одесской кухни, , Друк, Одесса, 2004, p.163 (Russian); Popova M.F., Secrets of Odessa kitchen, Druk, Odessa, 2004, p.163
  4. Culinary Tourism, edited by Lucy M. Long, University Press of Kentucky, 18 Jul 2013, Chapter 4, Flavors of Memory, Eva Johnowitz
  5. Culinary Tourism, edited by Lucy M. Long, University Press of Kentucky, 18 Jul 2013, Chapter 4, Flavors of Memory, Eva Johnowitz
  6. Bill Gladstone: This is no fish tale: Gefilte tastes tell story of ancestry. Jewish Telegraphic Agency, September 10, 1999. Accessed November 10, 2010
  7. Method of Preparing an Edible Fish Product. Accessed November 10, 2010
  8. Rabbi Zushe Blech: "The Fortunes of a Fish", Kashrut.com website. Accessed March 30, 2006.
  9. Haym Soloveitchik: Rupture and Reconstruction: The Transformation of Contemporary Orthodoxy Tradition, Vol. 28, No. 4 (Summer 1994).
  10. Gil Marks: "Something's fishy in the State of Israel", Orthodox Union website. Accessed March 30, 2006.

Media related to Gefilte fish at Wikimedia Commons

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 12/1/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.