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PostPosted: Wed May 02, 2012 2:59 am
by DiggingDogFarm
Nothing ventured, nothing gained!!
Too bad it didn't work, I'm an anchovy addict! :D



~Martin

PostPosted: Wed May 02, 2012 3:53 am
by vagreys
Dogfish wrote:...My thought was that any North American trade in salt before the horse would have been extremely small, and without any significant boat-building efforts by First Nations prior to the fur trade, the reach would be very small, even smaller than in the Old World, and therefore prohibitively expensive, even more so than in the Old World (where "salary" was a measure of trade in salt; soldiers got their "salary" and were "worth their salt").

Ah. My comments were less about trade and more about the availability of salt, inland, as well as at the coastal margins. We know that plains tribes traded in salt to some degree and used salt in the processing of some hides and meat, though whether they were using boiled salt from salt springs or surface deposits, I don't know. Four Corners tribes had access to salt mines. Eastern, Midwestern and Southern tribes boiled salt from salt springs. Sorry I wasn't clear.

I don't find much reference to other than dried and possibly cold-smoked freshwater fish, though.

PostPosted: Thu May 03, 2012 10:11 am
by grisell
I think I finally got it! :wink:

I posted the recipe with pictures in the Fish section. I also posted a recipe for Swedish style anchovies.