Submitted by MarcoNoPollo t3_10lagst in mildlyinteresting
KS_HasRead t1_j5vu7up wrote
Reply to comment by RNW1215 in The British aisle in my American grocery story (Publix, North Carolina) by MarcoNoPollo
Every Publix has one aisle that has sections of all sorts of things... The 'international foods' aisle. Indian, Asian with subsections for thai, chinese, and japanese. You name it. I'm Jewish. But I live in the mid-south with an insanely small Jewish population. Yet they have a Jewish section on the aisle for all things gefilte fish and matzah. IDK why. Even I don't buy any of it. Who likes gefilte fish??
[deleted] t1_j5w9pp2 wrote
Does your Publix also have the Jewish frozen section with the blitzes and schmaltz and the big loaf style gefilte fish?
KS_HasRead t1_j5yu03z wrote
I've not seen it but I don't really buy much frozen food so I can't say I've ever looked. They keep the frozen dino nuggets on the corner of the frozen aisle, so I can just grab those for my toddler and bounce without passing the rest (which is great because I can't deal with an 'i want ice cream' tantrum in Publix again. The manager came out to comfort me last time since I was basically in tears haha.)
MaxMMXXI t1_j5xqxyn wrote
I simply do not understand how gefilte fish survived into the age of refrigeration.
KS_HasRead t1_j5yv7yi wrote
Well the one you know now (mysterious lump in a jar) was actually made in the age of refrigeration. the original type of gefilte fish was interesting (if you like fish). Gefilte means stuffed in yiddish. You'd take a whole fish with skin on. You'd flay it open and pull out all the insides and carefully de-bone it. But you'd keep the skin intact. Then you'd add veg (onion, garlic, matzah etc) to the fish meat you'd pulled out. Then stuff it back in the skin. Then roast the whole thing. So when you put it on the table it was a very elaborate presentation of a complete fish. But the inside was basically fish meatloaf.
The jar goop came around during the 1940s and 50s along with tv dinners. No more laboriously flaying out a fish. You could just grab it from a jar. So modern!
(In the spirit of the real story of gefilte fish, I make a fish croquette mix from fresh fish basically and use a cookie cutter to shape them like fish. Then deep fry it.)
MaxMMXXI t1_j5zh990 wrote
So it wasn't a preserved fish until it was unnecessary to preserve it as grey lumps in a jar of glop? I wondered why those were called "gefilte" too, so thanks for answering that mystery.
KS_HasRead t1_j5zhkc1 wrote
>So it wasn't a preserved fish until it was unnecessary to preserve it as grey lumps in a jar of glop?
yep. lol. It originally was something you might make ahead. But it also was very pretty and tasty. https://memod.com/BabiesBriefsAndBooks/putting-the-gefilte-back-in-gefilte-fish-5890
Then the 1940s f*d it up.
MaxMMXXI t1_j601g6h wrote
As the writer in your link rightly said, gefilte fish has been done a disservice by modernity. I can check this one-of-those-things-I-wonder-about off my list.
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