Scrod
Scrod or schrod (/ˈskrɒd/) is a small cod or haddock, and sometimes other whitefish, used as food. It is usually served as a fillet, though formerly it was often split instead. In the wholesale fish business, scrod is the smallest weight category of the major whitefish.[1] From smallest to largest, the categories are scrod, market, large, and whale. In the United States, scrod haddock or cusk weighs 1+1⁄2–3 pounds (0.7–1.4 kg); scrod cod 1+1⁄2–2+1⁄2 lb (0.7–1.1 kg); and scrod pollock 1+1⁄2–4 lb (0.7–1.8 kg).[2] The exact weight categories are somewhat different in Canada.[1] Scrod is common in many coastal New England and Atlantic Canadian fish markets and restaurants, although using the name 'scrod' without the species is in principle mislabeling.[2] Historically, scrod was simply a small cod or haddock, "too small to swallow a bait" or "too small to be filleted", which was usually prepared by being split and lightly salted ("corned"), and sometimes quickly air-dried. They were generally broiled and served with butter. Starting in the mid-20th century, it came to mean a small haddock or cod that is filleted or split.[3] EtymologyThe term "scrod" for a method of preparing fish, rather than a type or size of fish, is first attested in 1841. It is from the Anglo-Cornish dialect word scraw:[4]
A similar meaning is found in Scots scrae: "fish dried in the sun without being salted", attested in 1806.[6] This corresponds to its earliest documented meaning in American English: "a young or small cod fish, split and salted for cooking".[3][when?] Another theory derives it from the Dutch schrood, from Middle Dutch schrode 'a piece cut off', that is, cut up for drying or cooking.[7] There is a rare variant escrod.[8] FolkloreThe term has been credited to the Parker House Hotel in Boston.[9] The term has attracted a number of jocular false etymologies.[10] One treats it as short for the "Sacred Cod" carving that hangs in the Boston State House."[11] Various acronyms have been suggested, though acronyms were hardly ever used in the past:[12] "seaman’s catch received on deck,"[11] supposedly any whitefish of the day;[citation needed] for "small cod remaining on dock"; "select catch retrieved on [the] day."[citation needed] Scrod was apparently often used to mean simply fresh fish of the day, since menus were made up before the day's catch was brought in.[citation needed] Cuisine
Historically, scrod was as much a method of preparation as a kind of fish. An 1851 recipe calls for the fish to be salted and left overnight, then broiled, skin side down first.[14] Today, scrod is cooked in a variety of ways, including frying or broiling, after splitting or filleting; for example, "in famous Boston restaurants, scrod is simply a tail piece of filleted haddock or cod dipped in oil, then bread crumbs and broiled [sic] in a moderate oven" (1949).[15][16] As of the early years of the new millennium, scrod continues as a staple in many coastal New England and Atlantic Canadian fish markets and restaurants.[citation needed] In literature and historySeth Peterson, a boatman, fisherman, and friend of Daniel Webster, described the 19th century orator and statesman (per biographer George Curtis) as having greatly enjoyed scrawed cod:
"Scrod" has been used as a facetious past participle of the word "screw," slang for having sexual intercourse, since at least the 1960s, in jokes like "I got scrod in Boston."[18][19] References
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