Many years ago, a friend of mine worked in a boatyard on the Maine coast. To save money for college, he lived on a boat and ate what he caught. He'd set his traps, go to work, come "home" and cook what was in the traps. He said he ate so much lobster and crab that he couldn't eat it for well over 10 years after. He did go to college and is now a marine biology professor.
I went to secret harbor school on Cypress Island north of Seattle. Wed fish for wild king salmon cod and halibut and use the guts for Dungeness crab traps and grab mussels right off the dock to aid an already pretty nice diet they fed us. Never eat that good again 😂
I grew up on the Gulf Coast with a father who was an attorney. When he did work for people on the bayou, they paid him in seafood: shrimp, crab, crawdads, and big croaker sacks of oysters. When those were delivered, it was a party!
Ryan, it is fine to see your work featured on the Townsends channel. You did the cod fillets perfectly: crispy breading and a flaky, yet moist interior! The entire episode was nicely produced and edited: kudos to that crew. I have cured salmon into gravlax with satisfactory success. My various ancestors were from families that came very early to New England. They included merchants and fishermen. At one point, a father and son were lost at sea while out fishing using a larger ship with a crew. Many families could tell the same tale (lost at sea.) As a child, my Mom periodically used Mary Anne brand salted cod that came in a wooden box. Even when rinsed a bit, the product was still salty. Mom made milk gravy and poured the cod and gravy over mashed or plain boiled and smashed potato to make a tastier use of the salt.
Even with refrigerators and freezers, I think learning how to preserve most foods the old fashioned way is important to learn. Never know when there's a power outage, the fridge/freezer breaking down, SHTF, or you have more food than you can easily store.
For most First World people, if you're worried about few-day power outages, it's simplest to just have a stock of canned and dried food, rather than getting into home preservation. Even if you grow a lot of fruit or veggies in your garden, or buy bulk food on sale, preservation is competing with buying a big freezer.
My son is taught almost nothing about history at his school. Especially American history. My wife and I have a lot of fun studying history with him at home. Your uploads are an important part of his (and ours too) education. Thank you, Townsend.
Did I hear you say "Joe Workaday" as a moniker for the Everyday Joe? If so I love it. If that's what I thought you said I love it anyway. I'm a WORDIE...gonna start saying that to refer to ME, someone who has spent their entire working life as a Temp Worker - clear up to 67 yes old. Love the content of this Channel. Always a history lesson.
This is the most wholesome channel on UA-cam. If you are feeling low, just watch a couple of Townsends videos and your mood will lift. There is just such a cozy vibe to this that is unparalleled anywhere else on the platform.
I grew up in the White Mountains of New Hampshire, and every year for my birthday, we'd go out for lobster dinner. What we paid to get a full meal, the grocery stores charge for just a tail here in Texas
I grew up out in west Texas, absolute desert, and Red Lobster was probably THE most expensive seafood in town back then lol! It's so interesting to learn how different seafood is regarded even today within our country.
whats really crazy is one of my teachers in school told me when he was young, (40-50 years ago now maybe?) lobster was considered poor mans food and they had to hide the shells so the neighbours wouldnt think they were poor
i should also point out that i'm from nova scotia canada and lobster is very plentiful here. still expensive nowadays but very plentiful to the point even subway and mcdonalds sells them occasionally
@@tylermabey3828 I remember my family ate alot of lobsters during the summers when I was younger. I asked my dad how did he afford it? He said lobster use to be cheaper than beef. New England area during the late 90's
@@ToxicSpinach64 Yea I'd say its a little more expensive than beef now but if you can get it from the right people you could get it cheaper than beef just hard to find. I think average price from a fish truck is $15ish per pound now and a pound of beef is $10-$20 depending on cut and quality.
I love seeing all the comments from people all over the world on these videos. Food cultures might vary, but they're also great ways to bring people together regardless of nationality as people talk and share. Food is one of the great unifers.
My mother grew up in a small fishing village in Nova Scotia and she always said that you could tell the social status of a family by the sandwiches the kids brought to school: mutton for the shop owners children, jam for the "middle class" kids and lobster for the poorer kids. Just boiled lobster on plain dry bread, no butter, no mayo.
@@adventureguy4119 YES. i cannot see them in any other way. I'll eat 'em if i have to but it is NOT my first choice. crab is soooooo much better. even crawfish is better.
What about freshwater fish, from lakes and rivers? Regardless, Mongolia looks like a beautiful country. I live in Liverpool, UK so we can get some local fish on the coast, but most of our seafood is still imported.
Being from Maine, shellfish was a regular weeknight meal. Lobster was (and still is when compared to other meats) cheap, and shellfish was common. Having fish such as bluefish, flounder, or haddock was a treat. I suppose I never really noticed it wasn’t normal in other parts of the country and took it for granted when I was growing up.
It's a beautiful state, and if you like seafood you can eat like like a king or queen without breaking the bank, I've lived all over the East Coast of the USA and I will go to my grave saying that Portland Maine is the most beautiful place in the country
Man this channel is seriously one of the best on UA-cam hands down. Well made, fascinating content, that keeps you watching. Hard to believe I would want to watch how people salted fish in the 1800's but now I just want to know more! Amazing stuff. Thank you Townsends.
also this is the definition of a scottish kipper A kipper is a whole herring, a small, oily fish, that has been split in a butterfly fashion from tail to head along the dorsal ridge, gutted, salted or pickled, and cold-smoked over smouldering wood chips (typically oak).
Cod was a very big thing in Newfoundland and Labrador, in Canada, long ago. It sustained so many people. It still is important. In other parts of Canada, such as Atlantic Canada, and British Columbia, salmon is very abundant, and was important for Native peoples. Saskatchewan, and Manitoba, in Canada, have many freshwater lakes, and fishing was very important for people in these parts of Canada. It is an abundant source of food, year round. Fish was also used for barter, in exchange for other foods, in North America, long ago. I have heard of different preserving methods for fish, and different methods of preparing fish. Cedar planked salmon is very good. Also, I recall hearing about pemmican made from fish, but I've never see it done. This is a very informative series. Cheers!
In Sweden there's tons of traditional dishes based on various kinds of preserved fish. Salted, dried, smoked, brine pickled and then last but not least: the notorious fermented herring (Surströmming). I'll admit that I avoid the last one. It's a very acquired taste to say the least.
Great video, thank you! I know a family who grew up in the 50s in Tucson, AZ & their parents would take the kids to the small lake nearby, Momma would tie a string on her finger & would catch fish to feed their kids. Gotta love the love & ingenuity of the poor!
The way you prepared the cod is pretty much how my grandma used to cook (and still does) most fish! I remember that on Fridays after school she'd often make some sort of fish, floured and fried in butter. It's to this day my favourite way to eat fish :)
salted herring was a huge part of the swedish working man's and farmer's diet for quite a long time. the herring trade was hugely important and the fattest catch made for excellent pickled herring for the rich man's table, which lives on in modern sweden. home-made pickled herring is a fundamental part of christmas and midsummer festivities. i've made my own recipe where i season it with orange zest, toasted sichuan pepper, black peppercorns and thinly sliced yellow onion. it's perfect on buttered hard bread. seafood is so important yet so ravaged and neglected. soon we won't have any left. it's a tragedy on multiple levels. a decent man would be driven to despair and madness over less
During the time of the 13 colonies the Royal Navy had precedence over the supply of limes and lemons---to stock it's ships to ward of scurvy for it's sailors---grown in Britan's Caribbean colonies and anything left over was imported into it's North American colonies seasonally and they were expensive, especially in it's most Northen 13 Colonies; lemons and limes on a working class man's plate would have been seen very rarely.
What a lovely way to start a Sunday morning n.n It's always so interesting to see not only how our foods have changed, but how our narrative around foods have changed! It makes one wonder how the "lobster used to only be sea-bugs for the poor" story got started and popularized!
My understanding is that when you hear stories about lobsters and crabs being seen as a poverty food (prisoners protesting being fed lobster, etc.) the significant context is that these would have been bigger, tougher lobsters that wouldn't be marketable today, in addition to likely being overcooked and underseasoned. Something more akin to the infamous stewed crab that everybody hated.
In Sweden in the 17th and 18th century it wasn't uncommon for workers to demand or even have it stipulated in their contracts that they wouldn't be served salmon more than three times per week since it was such a cheap staple food.
All the Townsend videos are fascinating and a joy to watch. Your deadpan humor at 9:31 had me literally laughing out loud. Y'all are great. What you folks do is important and appreciated.
They wouldn't have boiled just the lobster tail. Theyd have plunged the whole thing, live, into a pot of boiling water, as we do in Maine today. The head has quite a bit of edible meat and the tamallay - the green paste inside the body is edible as well. They wouldn't have wastes it.
In the early days of the city of Sydney: The convicts ate salted beef (because beef was expensive) and fresh fish (which they caught themselves). The gentry ate fresh beef (because beef was expensive) and salted fish (because convicts ate fresh fish).
I just have to mention something. I was a young lad living in Key West back in the 60's. We would have shrimp, fish and what you know as lobster almost every day of the week because it was basically free for our family. We would beg our mom to have something special like chili dogs on Saturdays. LOL.
Having grown up in Oregon I can agree with you about everyday foods becoming more elevated over time. Geoduck used to be the cheapest seafood one could buy, but in the early 1980's it was marketed to Japan and is now among the most expensive due to the demand for it there. It's only on the menu at high-end restaurants in the U.S. now, though it used to be considered bar food decades ago.
I read about a poor fisherman (1800's?). He would filet his catch on the spot for each customer. The heads went into a bucket to take home. Some fish have a small bit of meat in their cheeks. Several nights a week his wife would cook 'fish cheek stew' with veggies from their garden. The family had a hearty meal for almost no cost.
I've solved the problem of shellfish being expensive by not liking any kind of shellfish or most seafood besides fish really. Really working out well for me.
I live in Manitoba myself, and despite being practically in the centre of North America, fresh water fish is very common here with all our rivers and lakes. Head a few hours east into Northwestern Ontario, it's the same thing with all the lakes. I don't think I could live anywhere that was more than 5 minutes from a body of water to fish on.
12:10 Yes, Salmon are migratory and in Europe they used to swim up big Rivers like Rhein some of them making it as fare up as Lake Constance. After we started building dams for hydroelectric power plants, that stopped. The coming of the Salmon was a important thing in the past, and many towns along tho Rhein even have it in their (old) coats of arms.
I made a fish trap using native materials for a local museum. Hardest thing about it was finding, processing and drying the mule fat saplings… As kids we would fish for bluegill and crappie and get enough to feed the whole family in a couple of hours. Fun times.
A fine assortment from the sea I'd gladly dig into, I commend your choices! Thank you for exploring the connection between the ocean, occupations, and food resources. Cheers to your research, and warm wishes from New England!
I grew up in a very small town right on Barnegat Bay in NJ. It was originally founded in the 17th century, with the local industry centered around fishing, ship building, and, harvesting salt grass. It still had an active fishing industry while I was growing up there, in the 80s.
3:09 - The correct terminology you were looking for is _'bartering.'_ He traded a fish for other goods or services that he needed. Bartering was quite a thing in olden days.
Salmon is pretty big in Canada, as well as freshwater fish like you know. In Canada we learnt about candied salmon and salmon jerky, and even New York considers Canadian salmon the go to for lox.
Fish was, and is such an important food source around the world. Likely the first harvested meat source for primitive cultures. Fish is so easy to get, often times like with salmon it comes to you, all that is needed is some sort of fish trap, or dip net and you got all the fish you need.
Limpets, whelks, snails, and other mollusks/bivalves are likely the first (easy to forage just walking along coastlines) but the minute we learned how to fish, it became a staple for sure. Most early cultures also enjoyed seaweed, even in Europe
Idk what it is but im always drawn in as soon as i start watching an episode of yours . Growing up on Vancouver Island the plate looks vary familiar other then the lobster you could put oysters on to substitute lobster. My absolute favorite is oysters dusted with flour fried in butter ! . Ive found it harder and harder to find quality seafood at a good price over the years as the stocks are getting smaller and smaller and it becomes a luxurie rather then a staple as it once was .
In northern Germany, according to Stevanus von Schonevelde (in a book from 1624 on fish species of the coast), the North Sea crabs native to the region were also used on a large scale as fodder for fattening ducks and pigs. Unthinkable today, but very interesting.
"The fancy food of today was the working man's food of yesteryear" And I'm sure if you lived close to a chocolate fountain, a glass of water would seem like a luxury. It's just a case of living close to the source that defines what's exotic on the plate.
Surprised you didn’t mention the legend that lobster was so plentiful and as a bottom feeder considered a trash food, that in Massachusetts indentured servants got a judgement saying they couldn’t be fed lobster more than 3 times a week, because it was cruel and unusual punishment
Im not sure how to articulate this appropriately, but i really value Ryans knowledge and ability to translate that into entertaining media, and as a person. I hope its not condescending or patronizing, but i really hope he takes his health and well-being seriously. I do have concern for his well-being, he deserves a long rich life doing what he loves sharing all these wonderful past times of our founders.
Lovely informative video, with a really great presenter. I'm going to have to try that lobster tail recipe. One small thing: here, in the UK, 'Prawns' (that you call 'Shrimp'), and 'Shrimp' are two related, but totally different creatures. Prawns are readily available, and cheap, but Shrimp, especially Brown Shrimp (👌👌👌) are smaller, sweeter and more expensive, and lovely served with some Marsh Samphire (Salicornia europaea).I also really enjoy Crayfish (Crawfish) tails, too. Your videos always make me hungry, despite already having eaten. Every time. 👍👍👍
Thanks for sharing with us Ryan. I enjoyed each of those recipes and sure glad that Lemon Juice is optional.I hope folks understand. Thanks for the great presentation. Fred.
Arbroath Smokies are a thing of beauty, getting them fresh and still warm wrapped in newspaper was the highlight of my Saturday afternoon as a kid. Still get them shipped down a couple of times a month now ive lived in southern England for the last 30 years
Back when my Grandpa was a kid in the 40s in Maine he would go down to the docks and get buckets of scallops for free because nobody really wanted them. Funny how things change.
If you're looking for a "working man" alternative to your lemon sauce, you might try using shamrock. It was imported to the Americas from Europe for it's tart, somewhat citrus taste. Naturally, it's less potent than lemon, but makes for a very nice sauce - especially mixed with a little dill. Sumac (specifically the velvety flesh from the outside of the seeds) is another option - though I don't know when it was imported, and may come in at a later time period.
@@Your-Least-Favorite-Stranger Oh, you're right! I was specifically thinking of staghorn sumac (Rhus typhina), but I was conflating it with the sumac used in Middle Eastern and Indian dishes, and thought it was an import. Thanks for the info!
Until the last decades of the 20th century New York City ate the fish in the Hudson River and Atlantic Ocean. There were seafood restaurants throughout Manhattan appealing to all levels of society including the poet Ogden Nash but he didn't like cod much. He loved the shad that swam up the Hudson to spawn and he wrote... The Shad I'm sure that Europe never had A fish as tasty as the shad. Some people greet the shad with groans, Complaining of its countless bones; I claim the bones teach table poise And separate the men from boys. The shad must be dissected subtle-y; Besides, the roe is boneless, utterly.
Grew up in Savannah. Grandma had a freezer full of fish, shrimp, and crab. My uncle Mike never used buoys on his crab traps because of crab thieves. He would tie a cane pole to the trap line and hide it in the edge of the marsh. Don't know how he remembers where they are. When Grandma was a girl they regularly scoured the beach in summer for sea turtle nests, which is of course a federal crime now, but was free food for poor folks back then.
Here in the central part of the states, seafood is only available when frozen and shipped inland and even then, the cost is almost prohibitive. I love seafood of all sorts but for the cost, I will be happy catching and eating what I can catch locally.
Unless they were brought over on ships, your go-to would often be vinegar. That being said, I dont think they were as hard to acquire as one might think; Mexico was still to the south and im sure merchants brought the stuff upwards by then.
In a modern bushcraft or survival situation, fishing is an excellent way to get food, if you have a large enough body of water near you. Even a small stream will have fish in it, usually. And all you need is a hook and some line. A pole can be fashioned fairly easily. And a packet of hooks and some monofilament line are small and lightweight. So it's almost a no brainer to carry these if you go out into the woods for any length of time.
Here we can catch our own lobster recreationally so I’ve eaten plenty. Can do the same with oysters in places. Shrimp/prawns are a much better flavour and texture, you’re paying for the “exclusivity” of the former not because they’re better.
I was in the Coast Guard for 14 years and served most of them in New England. Back then I couldn't wait to get back to central Texas. Now that I am several years into college, I dearly miss the ocean, seafood, and snow. Funny how that works.
25,000 fish is the equivalent of 1-3 cran or 37.5 imperial gallons. Cran is predominantly used for herring. A cran is measured for unclean/unprocessed herring generally.
A particular kind of fishing much esteemed in the 18th and 19th centuries that’s not held in high regard these days is whaling. I can’t see that you’ve covered this, but I’d love to see a video on this topic.
Many years ago, a friend of mine worked in a boatyard on the Maine coast. To save money for college, he lived on a boat and ate what he caught. He'd set his traps, go to work, come "home" and cook what was in the traps. He said he ate so much lobster and crab that he couldn't eat it for well over 10 years after. He did go to college and is now a marine biology professor.
I went to secret harbor school on Cypress Island north of Seattle. Wed fish for wild king salmon cod and halibut and use the guts for Dungeness crab traps and grab mussels right off the dock to aid an already pretty nice diet they fed us. Never eat that good again 😂
@@joshschneider9766how come it’s secret?
Cool!
That’s rad. I would love that.
Used to be prison food
😂
Really like the "Working Man" series on the weekend. Very informative and enjoyable to watch!
I grew up on the Gulf Coast with a father who was an attorney. When he did work for people on the bayou, they paid him in seafood: shrimp, crab, crawdads, and big croaker sacks of oysters. When those were delivered, it was a party!
I read that book too.
@brendamyc3173God bless salmonella and trichinosis too then 🙃
@@erikcrouch7881 I didn't know you could eat raw beef with zero consequences. Or didn't Muhammad say to cook food and eat it meaningfully?
@@Frame_Late people eat steak tartare all the time dude what are you on about?
@@joshschneider9766 Still causes food poisoning my guy.
Ryan, it is fine to see your work featured on the Townsends channel. You did the cod fillets perfectly: crispy breading and a flaky, yet moist interior! The entire episode was nicely produced and edited: kudos to that crew. I have cured salmon into gravlax with satisfactory success. My various ancestors were from families that came very early to New England. They included merchants and fishermen. At one point, a father and son were lost at sea while out fishing using a larger ship with a crew. Many families could tell the same tale (lost at sea.) As a child, my Mom periodically used Mary Anne brand salted cod that came in a wooden box. Even when rinsed a bit, the product was still salty. Mom made milk gravy and poured the cod and gravy over mashed or plain boiled and smashed potato to make a tastier use of the salt.
Even with refrigerators and freezers, I think learning how to preserve most foods the old fashioned way is important to learn. Never know when there's a power outage, the fridge/freezer breaking down, SHTF, or you have more food than you can easily store.
Thumbnail looks so good
Also can just be fun from the new food perspective. Dried fish tastes different from fresh, potted salmon is different from smoked, etc.
Simply grow a large garden. If successful, you'll normally have more than you can eat at once.
(people in Texas furiously taking notes)
For most First World people, if you're worried about few-day power outages, it's simplest to just have a stock of canned and dried food, rather than getting into home preservation. Even if you grow a lot of fruit or veggies in your garden, or buy bulk food on sale, preservation is competing with buying a big freezer.
My son is taught almost nothing about history at his school. Especially American history. My wife and I have a lot of fun studying history with him at home. Your uploads are an important part of his (and ours too) education. Thank you, Townsend.
It’s abysmal. They hardly teach any American history these days. Really a shame.
Did I hear you say "Joe Workaday" as a moniker for the Everyday Joe? If so I love it. If that's what I thought you said I love it anyway.
I'm a WORDIE...gonna start saying that to refer to ME, someone who has spent their entire working life as a Temp Worker - clear up to 67 yes old.
Love the content of this Channel. Always a history lesson.
too busy with the indoctrination
Yeah, we're taught the history of politics and major societal events, but never life-skills of the time (which could still be life-skills today).
America is like barely 300 years old. There's way more other important history to learn about then just America
This is the most wholesome channel on UA-cam. If you are feeling low, just watch a couple of Townsends videos and your mood will lift. There is just such a cozy vibe to this that is unparalleled anywhere else on the platform.
I grew up in the White Mountains of New Hampshire, and every year for my birthday, we'd go out for lobster dinner. What we paid to get a full meal, the grocery stores charge for just a tail here in Texas
I grew up out in west Texas, absolute desert, and Red Lobster was probably THE most expensive seafood in town back then lol! It's so interesting to learn how different seafood is regarded even today within our country.
whats really crazy is one of my teachers in school told me when he was young, (40-50 years ago now maybe?) lobster was considered poor mans food and they had to hide the shells so the neighbours wouldnt think they were poor
i should also point out that i'm from
nova scotia canada and lobster is very plentiful here. still expensive nowadays but very plentiful to the point even subway and mcdonalds sells them occasionally
@@tylermabey3828 I remember my family ate alot of lobsters during the summers when I was younger. I asked my dad how did he afford it? He said lobster use to be cheaper than beef. New England area during the late 90's
@@ToxicSpinach64 Yea I'd say its a little more expensive than beef now but if you can get it from the right people you could get it cheaper than beef just hard to find. I think average price from a fish truck is $15ish per pound now and a pound of beef is $10-$20 depending on cut and quality.
I love seeing all the comments from people all over the world on these videos. Food cultures might vary, but they're also great ways to bring people together regardless of nationality as people talk and share. Food is one of the great unifers.
My mother grew up in a small fishing village in Nova Scotia and she always said that you could tell the social status of a family by the sandwiches the kids brought to school: mutton for the shop owners children, jam for the "middle class" kids and lobster for the poorer kids. Just boiled lobster on plain dry bread, no butter, no mayo.
Sea cockroaches 🪳
I'm from NS aswell fishing is huge here. Aswell as agriculture and hunting
@@adventureguy4119 YES. i cannot see them in any other way. I'll eat 'em if i have to but it is NOT my first choice. crab is soooooo much better. even crawfish is better.
I am a Mongolian, a country that's extremely far from any sea. Nowadays there's imported seafood, but even then, it is NOT a popular option.
Mongolians and the open sea don't have a good history
What protein is most commonly eaten in Mongolia? Since I heard there is a lot of meat and dairy eaten in general due to herding
What about freshwater fish, from lakes and rivers? Regardless, Mongolia looks like a beautiful country.
I live in Liverpool, UK so we can get some local fish on the coast, but most of our seafood is still imported.
Based meat diet
Yeah, that's about as landlocked, as you can be.
This is the best channel on UA-cam
Being from Maine, shellfish was a regular weeknight meal. Lobster was (and still is when compared to other meats) cheap, and shellfish was common. Having fish such as bluefish, flounder, or haddock was a treat. I suppose I never really noticed it wasn’t normal in other parts of the country and took it for granted when I was growing up.
Perhaps I ought to move out there, I'd kill to have shellfish more often
It's a beautiful state, and if you like seafood you can eat like like a king or queen without breaking the bank, I've lived all over the East Coast of the USA and I will go to my grave saying that Portland Maine is the most beautiful place in the country
This is my absolute favorite history channel on UA-cam. I keep the mushroom ketchup in my house always nowdays and my wife and I love it.
Can't forget the nutmeg too!
Man this channel is seriously one of the best on UA-cam hands down. Well made, fascinating content, that keeps you watching. Hard to believe I would want to watch how people salted fish in the 1800's but now I just want to know more! Amazing stuff. Thank you Townsends.
also this is the definition of a scottish kipper
A kipper is a whole herring, a small, oily fish, that has been split in a butterfly fashion from tail to head along the dorsal ridge, gutted, salted or pickled, and cold-smoked over smouldering wood chips (typically oak).
I had two beautiful, fresh kippers for my breakfast this morning. Nothing comes close to fresh, ever.
@@brianartillery sounds lovely. I prefer the red stag in Scotland but the fish is also definitely tasty and clearly a very happy traditional thing too
Cod was a very big thing in Newfoundland and Labrador, in Canada, long ago. It sustained so many people. It still is important. In other parts of Canada, such as Atlantic Canada, and British Columbia, salmon is very abundant, and was important for Native peoples. Saskatchewan, and Manitoba, in Canada, have many freshwater lakes, and fishing was very important for people in these parts of Canada. It is an abundant source of food, year round. Fish was also used for barter, in exchange for other foods, in North America, long ago. I have heard of different preserving methods for fish, and different methods of preparing fish. Cedar planked salmon is very good. Also, I recall hearing about pemmican made from fish, but I've never see it done. This is a very informative series. Cheers!
Cod was one of the earliest exports from North America.
In Sweden there's tons of traditional dishes based on various kinds of preserved fish.
Salted, dried, smoked, brine pickled and then last but not least: the notorious fermented herring (Surströmming).
I'll admit that I avoid the last one. It's a very acquired taste to say the least.
Great video, thank you! I know a family who grew up in the 50s in Tucson, AZ & their parents would take the kids to the small lake nearby, Momma would tie a string on her finger & would catch fish to feed their kids. Gotta love the love & ingenuity of the poor!
The way you prepared the cod is pretty much how my grandma used to cook (and still does) most fish! I remember that on Fridays after school she'd often make some sort of fish, floured and fried in butter. It's to this day my favourite way to eat fish :)
salted herring was a huge part of the swedish working man's and farmer's diet for quite a long time. the herring trade was hugely important and the fattest catch made for excellent pickled herring for the rich man's table, which lives on in modern sweden. home-made pickled herring is a fundamental part of christmas and midsummer festivities. i've made my own recipe where i season it with orange zest, toasted sichuan pepper, black peppercorns and thinly sliced yellow onion. it's perfect on buttered hard bread. seafood is so important yet so ravaged and neglected. soon we won't have any left. it's a tragedy on multiple levels. a decent man would be driven to despair and madness over less
During the time of the 13 colonies the Royal Navy had precedence over the supply of limes and lemons---to stock it's ships to ward of scurvy for it's sailors---grown in Britan's Caribbean colonies and anything left over was imported into it's North American colonies seasonally and they were expensive, especially in it's most Northen 13 Colonies; lemons and limes on a working class man's plate would have been seen very rarely.
Vinegar it is
@@Your-Least-Favorite-Stranger Sauerkraut
What a lovely way to start a Sunday morning n.n It's always so interesting to see not only how our foods have changed, but how our narrative around foods have changed! It makes one wonder how the "lobster used to only be sea-bugs for the poor" story got started and popularized!
My understanding is that when you hear stories about lobsters and crabs being seen as a poverty food (prisoners protesting being fed lobster, etc.) the significant context is that these would have been bigger, tougher lobsters that wouldn't be marketable today, in addition to likely being overcooked and underseasoned. Something more akin to the infamous stewed crab that everybody hated.
I hadn't thought about the preparation, good point!
Oh man a big lobster you chew and chew and chew
In Sweden in the 17th and 18th century it wasn't uncommon for workers to demand or even have it stipulated in their contracts that they wouldn't be served salmon more than three times per week since it was such a cheap staple food.
Same in parts of Germany.
It's always great to see Ryan again! The fishing scene was fun. Great video.
All the Townsend videos are fascinating and a joy to watch. Your deadpan humor at 9:31 had me literally laughing out loud. Y'all are great. What you folks do is important and appreciated.
Waking up on a Sunday morning with my mug of coffee in hand, relaxing on the couch, and seeing a new Townsends video is always a great pleasure!
I had some flounder last night prepared how you showed here. So simple and so good.
They wouldn't have boiled just the lobster tail. Theyd have plunged the whole thing, live, into a pot of boiling water, as we do in Maine today. The head has quite a bit of edible meat and the tamallay - the green paste inside the body is edible as well. They wouldn't have wastes it.
Tu vien’du Maine? Est-ce tu parle le français Acadian?
@@adventureguy4119 No, I don't speak French.
I still can’t get over how high the production quality of this channel is. I’ve yet to have seen a bad video from y’all, kudos.
In the early days of the city of Sydney:
The convicts ate salted beef (because beef was expensive) and fresh fish (which they caught themselves).
The gentry ate fresh beef (because beef was expensive) and salted fish (because convicts ate fresh fish).
30 likes and it’s been uploaded for 2 minutes. People haven’t even seen the entire video. You’re doing something right!
7min now
I always hit Like the instant the video starts, too. 😂
Townsend's food video, I click, I like
I can't believe how much his channel has exploded.
The video also might be available earlier for the Patreon contributors, too.
I just have to mention something. I was a young lad living in Key West back in the 60's. We would have shrimp, fish and what you know as lobster almost every day of the week because it was basically free for our family. We would beg our mom to have something special like chili dogs on Saturdays. LOL.
I’m in food heaven just looking at this! ☁🍴
Having grown up in Oregon I can agree with you about everyday foods becoming more elevated over time. Geoduck used to be the cheapest seafood one could buy, but in the early 1980's it was marketed to Japan and is now among the most expensive due to the demand for it there. It's only on the menu at high-end restaurants in the U.S. now, though it used to be considered bar food decades ago.
I grew up going to asian markets in the 90s and being utterly enthralled by these massive clams.
God I miss old Portland
I read about a poor fisherman (1800's?). He would filet his catch on the spot for each customer. The heads went into a bucket to take home. Some fish have a small bit of meat in their cheeks. Several nights a week his wife would cook 'fish cheek stew' with veggies from their garden. The family had a hearty meal for almost no cost.
If they had cream or flour, that stew became chowder.
Add some bread: you're living high on life
Salmon used to be plentiful everywhere. Back when we didn't have dams in rivers.
I've solved the problem of shellfish being expensive by not liking any kind of shellfish or most seafood besides fish really. Really working out well for me.
Love the shoutout to the Midwest. Would be cool to see you guys do a video focusing on the Great Lakes.
I live in Manitoba myself, and despite being practically in the centre of North America, fresh water fish is very common here with all our rivers and lakes. Head a few hours east into Northwestern Ontario, it's the same thing with all the lakes. I don't think I could live anywhere that was more than 5 minutes from a body of water to fish on.
I hear ya, I'm in Southern Ontario, so we have Lake Ontario, Lake Erie, and a ton of rivers to choose from.
12:10 Yes, Salmon are migratory and in Europe they used to swim up big Rivers like Rhein some of them making it as fare up as Lake Constance. After we started building dams for hydroelectric power plants, that stopped. The coming of the Salmon was a important thing in the past, and many towns along tho Rhein even have it in their (old) coats of arms.
LETS GO NEW TOWNSEND VIDEO you legit make me feel so at ease and comfortable
I made a fish trap using native materials for a local museum. Hardest thing about it was finding, processing and drying the mule fat saplings… As kids we would fish for bluegill and crappie and get enough to feed the whole family in a couple of hours. Fun times.
A fine assortment from the sea I'd gladly dig into, I commend your choices! Thank you for exploring the connection between the ocean, occupations, and food resources. Cheers to your research, and warm wishes from New England!
I love your videos! Keep up the awesome job y’all!
That underwater shot was awesome! Videography plus excellent content! 😍
I grew up in a very small town right on Barnegat Bay in NJ. It was originally founded in the 17th century, with the local industry centered around fishing, ship building, and, harvesting salt grass. It still had an active fishing industry while I was growing up there, in the 80s.
Fantastic!!! Townsends never disappoint.
3:09 - The correct terminology you were looking for is _'bartering.'_ He traded a fish for other goods or services that he needed.
Bartering was quite a thing in olden days.
Salmon is pretty big in Canada, as well as freshwater fish like you know. In Canada we learnt about candied salmon and salmon jerky, and even New York considers Canadian salmon the go to for lox.
Thank you for another great episode !
Always good seeing Ryan on here, really enjoy his presenting style 💪🏻
Awesome episode as usual Townsends cast and crew. What great insights into the working class of the 18th century.
Love the historical presentations in Ryan’s videos!
This channel deserves an Emmy
Love these food videos. Very calming and nice to watch - just give the perfect vibe
Excellent episode Ryan. Well done!
Thanks for sharing! I love your videos!! I’m going to order some campfire / cooking items from your catalogue.
Fish was, and is such an important food source around the world. Likely the first harvested meat source for primitive cultures. Fish is so easy to get, often times like with salmon it comes to you, all that is needed is some sort of fish trap, or dip net and you got all the fish you need.
Limpets, whelks, snails, and other mollusks/bivalves are likely the first (easy to forage just walking along coastlines) but the minute we learned how to fish, it became a staple for sure.
Most early cultures also enjoyed seaweed, even in Europe
Idk what it is but im always drawn in as soon as i start watching an episode of yours . Growing up on Vancouver Island the plate looks vary familiar other then the lobster you could put oysters on to substitute lobster. My absolute favorite is oysters dusted with flour fried in butter ! . Ive found it harder and harder to find quality seafood at a good price over the years as the stocks are getting smaller and smaller and it becomes a luxurie rather then a staple as it once was .
In northern Germany, according to Stevanus von Schonevelde (in a book from 1624 on fish species of the coast), the North Sea crabs native to the region were also used on a large scale as fodder for fattening ducks and pigs. Unthinkable today, but very interesting.
"The fancy food of today was the working man's food of yesteryear" And I'm sure if you lived close to a chocolate fountain, a glass of water would seem like a luxury. It's just a case of living close to the source that defines what's exotic on the plate.
You forgot about smoking fish to preserve it.
Surprised you didn’t mention the legend that lobster was so plentiful and as a bottom feeder considered a trash food, that in Massachusetts indentured servants got a judgement saying they couldn’t be fed lobster more than 3 times a week, because it was cruel and unusual punishment
Crazy, if I could get lobster 3 days a week I'd be over the moon
I´ve heard the same story about salmon in Hamburg.
Great job hosting the show!
Im not sure how to articulate this appropriately, but i really value Ryans knowledge and ability to translate that into entertaining media, and as a person. I hope its not condescending or patronizing, but i really hope he takes his health and well-being seriously. I do have concern for his well-being, he deserves a long rich life doing what he loves sharing all these wonderful past times of our founders.
what a great episode, thank you Townsends!
Lovely informative video, with a really great presenter. I'm going to have to try that lobster tail recipe.
One small thing: here, in the UK, 'Prawns' (that you call 'Shrimp'), and 'Shrimp' are two related, but totally different creatures. Prawns are readily available, and cheap, but Shrimp, especially Brown Shrimp (👌👌👌) are smaller, sweeter and more expensive, and lovely served with some Marsh Samphire (Salicornia europaea).I also really enjoy Crayfish (Crawfish) tails, too.
Your videos always make me hungry, despite already having eaten. Every time. 👍👍👍
Thanks for sharing with us Ryan. I enjoyed each of those recipes and sure glad that Lemon Juice is optional.I hope folks understand. Thanks for the great presentation. Fred.
Really well presented by Ryan, and informative. It would be nice if he got to try some Scottish kippers, Arbroath Smokies, or even Scottish salmon.
Arbroath Smokies are a thing of beauty, getting them fresh and still warm wrapped in newspaper was the highlight of my Saturday afternoon as a kid. Still get them shipped down a couple of times a month now ive lived in southern England for the last 30 years
0:02 - ah ok, Gabe Newell is into cooking now, RIP half life 3 =(
Much love bro, your expertise is much appreciate!
All my favorite foods come from the sea but I live in the prairies. This video is getting me through withdrawals
Got lucky this weekend and ran into this guy at the Spirit of Vincennes Rendezvous. Once again, nice to meet you, Ryan.
Good old Bedford, NH. Nice town. Grew up right near there in Londonderry.
Back when my Grandpa was a kid in the 40s in Maine he would go down to the docks and get buckets of scallops for free because nobody really wanted them. Funny how things change.
I have a seafood diet. I see food, I eat it
Lol
Classic 😂
Very quintessencially American
glorious
Ha HAAA!
If you're looking for a "working man" alternative to your lemon sauce, you might try using shamrock. It was imported to the Americas from Europe for it's tart, somewhat citrus taste. Naturally, it's less potent than lemon, but makes for a very nice sauce - especially mixed with a little dill.
Sumac (specifically the velvety flesh from the outside of the seeds) is another option - though I don't know when it was imported, and may come in at a later time period.
I believe the Sumac you are thinking of came from India during the British Raj.
Edible Sumac is native to North America - the lemony one.
@@Your-Least-Favorite-Stranger Oh, you're right! I was specifically thinking of staghorn sumac (Rhus typhina), but I was conflating it with the sumac used in Middle Eastern and Indian dishes, and thought it was an import. Thanks for the info!
I've always hated oysters and thought lobster was over rated, always thought shrimp was better.
Until the last decades of the 20th century New York City ate the fish in the Hudson River and Atlantic Ocean. There were seafood restaurants throughout Manhattan appealing to all levels of society including the poet Ogden Nash but he didn't like cod much. He loved the shad that swam up the Hudson to spawn and he wrote...
The Shad
I'm sure that Europe never had
A fish as tasty as the shad.
Some people greet the shad with groans,
Complaining of its countless bones;
I claim the bones teach table poise
And separate the men from boys.
The shad must be dissected subtle-y;
Besides, the roe is boneless, utterly.
There's a book called The Founding Fish; its all about the Shad and how influential it was in the diets of early US colonies.
I LOVE shad. Not so much the roe, but the fish. That and bluefish were the first fish I liked to eat.
As someone from RI seafood has always been a part of my diet
Hey Ryan!! Awesome to see you bro!! I love your videos
Grew up in Savannah. Grandma had a freezer full of fish, shrimp, and crab. My uncle Mike never used buoys on his crab traps because of crab thieves. He would tie a cane pole to the trap line and hide it in the edge of the marsh. Don't know how he remembers where they are. When Grandma was a girl they regularly scoured the beach in summer for sea turtle nests, which is of course a federal crime now, but was free food for poor folks back then.
Great program! This working man's series is wonderful. Thank you.
I live near the coast in Massachusetts and we are so lucky to have fresh fish. It’s expensive, but delicious.
A recreational fishing permit here is only $10. Well worth it!
also salmon and trout species occur basically everywhere fresh water occurs on earth. even arctic ocean in the form of arctic char
Incredible insight love this channel
Thanks for another amazing video. Ryan Take Care and Be Safe!
Great video, great channel. Love this stuff. Keep it going, please.
Here in the central part of the states, seafood is only available when frozen and shipped inland and even then, the cost is almost prohibitive. I love seafood of all sorts but for the cost, I will be happy catching and eating what I can catch locally.
Were citrus fruits widely available at that time?? I would think they would be a rich persons food. Love this channel!!
Unless they were brought over on ships, your go-to would often be vinegar. That being said, I dont think they were as hard to acquire as one might think; Mexico was still to the south and im sure merchants brought the stuff upwards by then.
In a modern bushcraft or survival situation, fishing is an excellent way to get food, if you have a large enough body of water near you. Even a small stream will have fish in it, usually. And all you need is a hook and some line. A pole can be fashioned fairly easily. And a packet of hooks and some monofilament line are small and lightweight. So it's almost a no brainer to carry these if you go out into the woods for any length of time.
Here we can catch our own lobster recreationally so I’ve eaten plenty. Can do the same with oysters in places.
Shrimp/prawns are a much better flavour and texture, you’re paying for the “exclusivity” of the former not because they’re better.
I was in the Coast Guard for 14 years and served most of them in New England. Back then I couldn't wait to get back to central Texas. Now that I am several years into college, I dearly miss the ocean, seafood, and snow. Funny how that works.
25,000 fish is the equivalent of 1-3 cran or 37.5 imperial gallons. Cran is predominantly used for herring. A cran is measured for unclean/unprocessed herring generally.
I grew up in middle TN in the 70's and 80's. FIsh sticks and frozen, processed, supermarket "stuffed crabs" was the only seafood I got for years.
Fantastic video, great job!!
I'm deadly allergic to most shellfish and I've never regretted that fact until watching this video.
A particular kind of fishing much esteemed in the 18th and 19th centuries that’s not held in high regard these days is whaling. I can’t see that you’ve covered this, but I’d love to see a video on this topic.