Christmas has come and gone and it seems every year it happens faster and faster. I am sad to see most signs of the holidays leave but there is one I am not at all sad to say goodbye to.
My wife Cory calls me a Grinch because I do not particularly enjoy listening to Christmas music. I feel Christmas music can be overdone very quickly, this year was particularly bad because here in Chapel Hill there is a station that plays it 24/7, and has since before Thanksgiving!
It is not that I totally dislike it; I just wish it was not the same songs with different people singing them. Amazingly, almost every song I hear somehow reminds me of two of my favorite holiday movies, Home Alone and National Lampoons Christmas Vacation. This could stem from one of my family traditions I grew up with of watching Christmas movies on Christmas day.
I love my family dearly and appreciate the value of tradition but there is one I never could get on board with and am having a difficult time continuing. If you have never had the pleasure of eating, smelling, or even seeing Lutefisk, I will do my best to illuminate the mystery behind this "fish".
My mom makes Lutefisk every Christmas Eve, as it is a traditional holiday meal for Scandinavian-Americans.
Lutefisk is typically made from cod or ling that is skinned, deboned, salted and hung out to dry. It is then soaked in cold water which is changed out every day for five days. The next step is what gives Lutefisk its name.
Lutefisk translated means lye fish. It is placed in a solution of lye and water and soaked for two days. Yes lye; the corrosive alkaline that is used for soap making, biodiesel, and to clear clogged drain pipes.
When removed, it hardly resembles a fish as it has swelled, lost half of its protein and has a pH of 11 – 12! To make the fish edible, (edible because at that pH it is caustic; capable of burning, corroding, or destroying living tissue!) it is again soaked in cold water, which gets changed out every day for up to six days.
Once it is safe to eat you are left with the challenge of cooking it. This is particularly difficult because the process of preparing the fish gives it a jellylike flakey appearance and consistency. My mom opts for the boiling method, which should be another indicator of just how appetizing this “fish” is.
Not that I was ever a big fan of Lutefisk, but in learning all this, I really doubt I will eat it again. Some people however, really love Lutefisk, my family included, which now makes me wonder if I should commend or commit them.
Finally, I cannot help but wonder why the lye? People theorize it has to do with the preservation of the fish and to keep other animals, like dogs, from eating it.
I am sorry mom, please do not be upset with me, I will continue some of our other traditions and I will speak of this one, but I will probably not prepare it.
Whatever your traditions are, I hope you had a fantastic holiday and a very great new year!
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