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 --- A GOPHER-LIKE INTERFACE FOR HIVE BLOCKCHAIN ---

When in Arbroath.

BY: @andrewmckenna | CREATED: March 31, 2018, 3:21 p.m. | VOTES: 5 | PAYOUT: $0.64 | [ VOTE ]

When I was up North we took a little detour through Abroath.
This is a lovely coastal town. It has a few places of interest, things to do, a football club and an ancient ruined abbey.
There is a pretty little harbour too, a working one at that.

https://farm1.staticflickr.com/880/27211626908_44cb98cf61_c.jpg

https://farm1.staticflickr.com/786/26212744047_a022e9d41a_c.jpg

All good things but that wasn't the purpose of our visit

We were here for one piece of business.

We came to buy smokies.

https://farm1.staticflickr.com/876/26212652957_9fe9e54a80_c.jpg

The Arbroath Smokie is a protected food.
Which means if it wasn't smoked within 4km of Arbroath harbour it's not a smokie
These are Haddock, caught by line, salted and dried and then smoked over a barrel with the smoke from beach and oak wood.
They originated in the nearby village of Auchmithie and there's a definite Scandinavian connection to their production.

Serve them with whatever you want or eat them on their own.
They make a great ingredient for fish soups and I've tried them made into pâté.

https://farm1.staticflickr.com/902/40190242195_4425fc182e_c.jpg

Now I grant you, they're not the most visually appealing things to photograph.

They taste out of this world.

I always warm them up in the oven.
Warm! Not cook.
They're already cooked. You could eat them cold.
The drawback is that it does make your kitchen smell of smokie.

They have bones but are pretty easy to prepare.
The middle will come out in one piece. There are smaller bones near the head end that need a little care to remove.

There are a few little places scattered around the harbour that smoke and sell these delicacies.
I find it warming that there are still so many and that they are still small.
This is a cottage industry not mass prodoction.
And that means quality.

https://farm1.staticflickr.com/808/40374688134_2028cf6c1e_c.jpg

There was a fish & chip shop that I saw offering a smokie in batter or fried in breadcrumbs
(which in Glasgow would be called a Special Fish)
It sounded decedant but couldn't work out how it would be put together.
Take the bones out and remove the skin it falls to bits.
The skin isn't really that pleasant to eat.

https://farm1.staticflickr.com/804/40190259095_4b0e356c90_c.jpg

You can get these occasionally in supermarkets and specialist fishmongers.
Though those are becoming rarer these days.
Some of the producers also offer mail order services and send them vacume packed.

TAGS: [ #food ] [ #blog ] [ #travel ] [ #scotland ] [ #photography ]

Replies

@booster | March 31, 2018, 5:11 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

This post has received a 0.37 % upvote from @booster thanks to: @andrewmckenna.

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