Surströmming
Place of origin | Sweden |
---|---|
Main ingredients | Baltic herring |
Surströmming (pronounced [ˈsʉ̂ːˌʂʈrœmːɪŋ]; Error: {{language with name/for}}: missing language tag or language name (help)) is lightly salted fermented Baltic Sea herring traditional to Swedish cuisine since at least the 16th century.
Known as strömming in Swedish, the Baltic herring is smaller than the Atlantic herring, found in the North Sea. Traditionally, strömming is defined as herring fished in the brackish waters of the Baltic north of the Kalmar Strait.[1] The herring used for surströmming are caught just prior to spawning in April and May.
During the production of surströmming, just enough salt is used to prevent the raw herring from rotting while allowing it to ferment. A fermentation process of at least six months gives the fish a characteristic strong smell and somewhat acidic taste.[2] A newly opened can of surströmming has one of the most putrid food smells in the world, even stronger than similarly fermented fish dishes such as the Korean hongeohoe or Japanese kusaya.[3]
At the end of the 1940s, surströmming producers in Sweden lobbied for a royal ordinance (Template:Lang-sv) that would prevent incompletely fermented fish from being sold. The decree that was issued forbade sales of the current year's production in Sweden prior to the third Thursday in August. While the ordinance is no longer on the books, retailers still maintain the date for the "premiere" of that year's catch.[4]
Origin
Surströmming has been part of northern Swedish cuisine since at least the 16th century.
Fermented fish is an old staple in European cuisines. The oldest archeological findings of fish fermentation are 9,200 years old and from the south of today's Sweden.[5] More recent examples include garum, a fermented fish sauce made by the ancient Greeks and Romans, and Worcestershire sauce, which also has a fermented fish ingredient.
Preservation of fish through fermentation in a weak brine may have developed when brining was still expensive due to the cost of salt.[6] In modern times, the fish are initially marinated in a strong brine solution that draws out the blood, and then fermented in a weaker brine in barrels prior to canning.
The canning procedure, introduced in the 19th century, enabled the product to be marketed in shops and stored at home, whereas at one time the final stage would have been storage in large wooden barrels and smaller, one-litre kegs. Canning also enabled the product to be marketed farther south in Sweden.
Chemical process
The fermentation happens through autolysis and starts from a lactic acid enzyme in the spine of the fish. Together with bacteria, pungent smelling acids are formed, such as propionic acid, butyric acid and acetic acid. Hydrogen sulfide is also produced. The salt raises the osmotic pressure of the brine above the zone where bacteria responsible for rotting can thrive and prevents decomposition of proteins into oligopeptides and amino acids.[citation needed] Instead, the osmotic conditions enable Halanaerobium bacteria such as H. praevalens to thrive and decompose the fish glycogen into organic acids, making it sour (acidic).[7][8]
Production
The herring are caught in April and May, when they are in prime condition and just about to spawn, and have not yet fattened. They are put into a strong brine for about 20 hours that draws out the blood, after which the heads are removed and the fish is gutted and put into a weaker brine solution. The barrels are placed in a temperature controlled room kept at 15–20 °C (59–68 °F). Canning takes place at the beginning of July and for five weeks thereafter. Ten days prior to the premiere the final product is distributed to wholesalers.[citation needed] The fermentation of the fish depends on a lactic acid enzyme in the spine that is activated if the conditions are right (temperature and brine concentration). The low temperature in Northern Sweden is one of the parameters that affects the character of the final product.[citation needed]
Prior to modern canning methods, surströmming was sold in wooden barrels for immediate consumption, as even the smaller one-litre kegs could leak.[9]
Fermentation continues in the can, causing it to bulge noticeably, which would usually be a sign of botulism or other food poisoning concern in non-fermented canned foods. Species of Halanaerobium bacteria are responsible for the in-can ripening. These bacteria produce carbon dioxide and a number of compounds that account for the unique odour: pungent (propionic acid), rotten-egg (hydrogen sulfide), rancid-butter (butyric acid), and vinegary (acetic acid).[7] Due to these gases, a thousand cans of surströmming exploded over a period of six hours during a fire at a Swedish warehouse in 2014.[10][11]
Surströmming is commonly sold in grocery stores all over Sweden.
Preparation
Swedes usually consume surströmming after the third Thursday of August, labeled as "Surströmming day", through early September.[12] Because of the strong smell, it is often eaten outdoors. The pressurized can is usually opened some distance away from the dining table and is often initially punctured while immersed in a bucket of water, or after tapping and angling it upwards at 45 degrees, to prevent escaping gas from spraying brine.
Surströmming comes both ungutted with just the heads removed and as fillets. Regarding the first version, the fish is gutted prior to eating, and the backbone and sometimes the skin are removed. The roe is commonly eaten along with the fish.
Surströmming is often eaten with tunnbröd, a thin, either soft or crispy bread (not to be confused with crispbread).[13] The use of tunnbröd originated in the High Coast area, where the tradition is to make a sandwich (known as a surströmmingsklämma) using two pieces of buttered hard tunnbröd. In addition to the fish, the two most common toppings are potatoes (either sliced or mashed, often almond potatoes) and finely diced red onion. Surströmming is also commonly eaten without bread together with the accompanying ingredients. To balance the strong flavour of the fish, Västerbotten cheese is sometimes added.[14]
In the southern part of Sweden, it is customary to use a variety of condiments such as diced red onion, gräddfil (fat fermented sour cream similar to smetana) or crème fraîche, chives, and sometimes even tomato and chopped dill.[15]
Surströmming is commonly served with snaps, light beers like pilsner or lager, svagdricka (a type of small beer), water, or cold milk. What to drink with surströmming is disputed among connoisseurs. Surströmming is usually served as the focus of a traditional festivity called a surströmmingsskiva.
Some people do not care for surströmming.[16] It is a food that is subject to strong passions, as is lutefisk.
International opinion
German food critic and author Wolfgang Fassbender wrote that "the biggest challenge when eating surströmming is to vomit only after the first bite, as opposed to before".[17]
European Union
Due to being made from herring from the Baltic Sea, surströmming today contains higher levels of dioxins and PCBs than permitted in the EU. Sweden was granted exceptions to these rules from 2002 to 2011, and a renewal of the exceptions was then applied for. Producers have said that if the application is denied they will only be allowed to use herring less than 17 centimetres (6.7 in) long, which contain lower levels, and which will affect the availability of herring.[18][needs update]
Surströmming challenge
Since gaining notoriety as one of the world's smelliest foods, surströmming has become the focus of a number of "challenge" videos on YouTube and other platforms where people uninitiated to the food show themselves opening a can for the first time, usually to visceral reaction, and then try to eat the fish without additional preparation. Often the videos show the participants gagging, swearing, holding their nose, or throwing up. The videos have been criticized for not following the normal preparation methods, which include opening the can outdoors and/or underwater, gutting the fish and removing the backbone, and serving with tunnbröd and other accoutrements to make a surströmmingsklämma.[19]
German eviction
In 1981, a German landlord evicted a tenant without notice after the tenant spread surströmming brine in the apartment building's stairwell. When the landlord was taken to court, the court ruled that the termination was justified when the landlord's party demonstrated their case by opening a can inside the courtroom. The court concluded that it "had convinced itself that the disgusting smell of the fish brine far exceeded the degree that fellow-tenants in the building could be expected to tolerate".[20]
Airline bans
In April 2006, several major airlines (such as Air France, British Airways, Finnair, and KLM) banned the fish,[21] claiming that the pressurised cans of fish are potentially explosive. The sale of the fish was subsequently discontinued in Stockholm's international airport. Those who produce the fish have called the airlines' decision "culturally illiterate", claiming that it is a "myth that the tinned fish can explode".[16]
Protests in Hong Kong
During March 2018 Hong Kong by-elections, the returning officer Amy Chan Yuen-man had disqualified two localist candidates Ventus Lau and James Chan Kwok-keung. Lau visited the Home Affairs Department of Sha Tin District Office in person asking for a meeting with Chan. Lau had brought a can of surströmming and opened it in public. Lau said that he would like Chan to sense that the Hong Kong people are facing an entirely rotten election system.[22][23] Lau launched an appeal to the Court, which ruled that Chan's decisions were not justified.[24]
Museum
On 4 June 2005, the first surströmming museum in the world was opened in Skeppsmalen, 20 km (12 mi) south-east of Örnsköldsvik, a town at the northern end of the High Coast.[25] The name of the museum is "Fiskevistet" (translated as 'The Fish Encampment').
See also
- List of delicacies
- Pickled herring – Traditional way of preserving herring
- Spekesild - herring pickled in salt
Other fermented fish dishes
- Cantonese salted fish
- Colatura di alici – typical sauce of Amalfi connected with garum
- Fesikh – Egyptian fermented fish
- Hákarl – Icelandic fermented shark
- Kusaya – Japanese fermented then dried fish
- Pla ra – Fermented fish and rice flour seasoning common throughout Southeast Asia
- Rakfisk – Norwegian fermented freshwater fish
- Shiokara – Japanese seafood fermented in highly salted viscera
Other strong-smelling foods
- Asafoetida – Indian spice derived from Ferula roots
- Century egg – Chinese egg-based culinary dish
- Durian – very pungent-smelling fruit from southeast Asia
- Kimchi – Korean side dish of fermented vegetables
- Kiviak – fermented birds in seal skin from Greenland
- Shrimp paste – prawn sauce or trasi, a fermented condiment used in Asian and Chinese cuisines.
- Tyrolean grey cheese – a strongly flavoured cheese made in the Tyrolean Alp valleys of Austria
Notes
- ^ They are about one third the size of North Sea herring (Swedish sill) that is adapted to salt water. UNEP (United Nations Environment Programme)
- ^ "Hákarl: Surströmming: The Swedish Stinky Fish Delicacy". Travel Food Atlas. 8 July 2019. Retrieved 2020-12-29.
- ^ Excerpt from Hakkou ha chikara Nari, Takeo Koizumi, NHK Ningen Kouza 2002 ISBN 4-14-084183-4
- ^ "Surströmmingspremiären". Nordiska museet. February 26, 2013.
- ^ Signs of early settlement in the Nordic region date back to the cradle of civilization, EurekAlert! 8 Feb 2016
- ^ Kurlansky M (2003). "Chapter 8. A Nordic Dream". Salt: A World History. London: Vintage Books. p. 138. ISBN 978-0-09-928199-3.
- ^ a b McGee, Harold (2004). On Food and Cooking (Revised ed.). Scribner. p. 236. ISBN 0-684-80001-2.
- ^ Kobayashi, T.; Kimura, B.; Fujii, T. (2000-03-10). "Strictly anaerobic halophiles isolated from canned Swedish fermented herrings (Surströmming)" (PDF). International Journal of Food Microbiology. 54 (1–2). Elsevier: 81–89. doi:10.1016/s0168-1605(99)00172-5. PMID 10746577. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2022-03-22. Retrieved 2022-03-22.
{{cite journal}}
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timestamp mismatch; 2022-03-23 suggested (help) - ^ "Surströmmingens historia - 1800-talet". www.surstromming.se.
- ^ "Sweden fire turns cans of rotten fish into exploding missiles". BBC News. BBC. May 2, 2014.
- ^ "Surströmmingsburkar exploderade när sjöbod brann" [Fermented herring cans exploded when boathouse burned]. helahälsingland (in Swedish). MittMedia. May 1, 2014.
- ^ "Surströmming or Sour Herring". Retrieved April 25, 2019.
- ^ "Olika sätt att äta surströmming". www.aftonbladet.se. Aftonbladet. Retrieved 24 May 2015.
- ^ Lyregård, Berit (11 August 2005). "Surströmming ska ätas med finess". www.dn.se. Dagens Nyheter. Retrieved 24 May 2015.
- ^ Schmidt, Claes; Lund, Sara. "Kulturkrock!". www.allas.se. Allas. Archived from the original on 2017-02-24. Retrieved 2015-05-24.
- ^ a b Bevanger, Lars (1 April 2006). "Airlines ban 'foul' Swedish fish". BBC News. BBC. Retrieved 2007-09-24.
- ^ "Wolfgang Fassbender in Swiss newspaper Neue Zürcher Zeitung, August 2011". Archived from the original on 2011-11-24. Retrieved 2011-09-25.
- ^ "Surströmmingen är räddad". Västerbottens-kuriren. 8 April 2011. Retrieved 2011-09-06.
- ^ Dahllöf, Åke (August 28, 2016). "How to eat Surströmming" – via YouTube.
- ^ "Störung des Mietgebrauchs durch Mieter" (PDF). March 29, 2017. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 29, 2017.
- ^ "Swedish fermented herring dish considered safety risk on airlines". September 22, 2014. Archived from the original on April 25, 2019. Retrieved April 25, 2019.
- ^ 彭毅詩 (2018-02-05). "【立會補選】劉頴匡再出動「臭魚 促選舉主任解釋DQ原因". 香港01 (in Chinese (Hong Kong)). Retrieved 2020-01-03.
- ^ "劉頴匡開臭魚罐頭促退按金". Apple Daily 蘋果日報. Retrieved 2020-01-03.
- ^ "劉頴匡歡迎裁決 雖有利建制派亦不能令法庭確立案例 – RTHK". news.rthk.hk (in Chinese (Taiwan)). Retrieved 2020-01-03.
- ^ "Ta en tur med vädret". www.expressen.se. Expressen. 18 July 2005. Retrieved 24 May 2015.
References
- Ringblom, Fredrik and Westerlund, Örjan (2009) Surströmming: En handbok. Grenadine. ISBN 978-91-85329-81-6. (Swedish)
External links
- Surströmming.se (in Swedish)