Made some little freaks

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Made some little freaks
Fimsh
Unironically some of the nicer fish designs I’ve seen in media come from the Kesko retailer advertisements, like look at this
They all have super fluid, expressive and very well identifiable designs! They even sing songs and do little dances!!! Funny that these adverts are made to get you to eat fish and they still put in that effort to make the fishes into characters
~And in my mind, I dipped you in gold so you would never tarnish, and I buried you deep in my heart~
Burbot (Lota lota), 2025
Fishtober Day 4 - Burbot
Check out the creator! ^ [@/fishiscrazy]
🐟 ❄ 🐟 / ❄ 🐟 ❄ / 🐟 ❄ 🐟
Besides being a funny word to say, burbots or bubbots or... they have a ton of names! An interesting one is "The Lawyer" because they're so slimy. Bit mean.
They are freshwater fish - though they are related to the saltwater cod - and they prefer cold waters - but they prefer brackish water for spawning. This occurs from December to March, when it's coldest.
This happens frequently for a few weeks, then they won't spawn again for 2+ years.
Burbot, bubbot, mariah, loche, cusk, freshwater cod, freshwater ling, freshwater cusk, the lawyer, coney-fish, lingcod, or eelpout. That's a lot of names.
Burbot! A cod-like freshwater fish that spawn in very cold water, under the ice. I think it looks like a strange little dinosaur fish! :-)
[ID: an illustration of a serpent-like fish in profile, facing right. It is green-ish in color with darker dorsal stripes and a lighter belly. It has a fan-like tail and one barbel on its chin. It is on a red and orange background with light effects. End.]
Grzimek's Animal Life Encyclopedia. Volume 4: Fishes I. Illustration by Wilhelm Eigener.
Choucroute de la Mer (Seaside Sauerkraut)
Usually, a choucroute garnie, a staple of Eastern France cuisine, is made with juniper-flavoured sauerkraut topped with a variety of meat and sausages, an Alsatian treat appreciated throughout the country in the Winter for its heartiness and warming quality. I will gladly order just that in a comfortable tavern, but at home, I like to cook a lighter but just as tasty Choucroute de la Mer, where meat and sausages are replaced by fish and seafood. It is generous and tasty, a beautiful dish if you’re hosting, which also leaves enough room for dessert!
Ingredients (serves 3):
1 tablespoon unsalted butter
1 tablespoon olive oil
3 fresh burbot tails
about 300 grams/ ounces fresh salmon
half a dozen fresh scallops
1/4 teaspoon fleur de sel or sea salt flakes
1/2 teaspoon freshly cracked black pepper
1/2 cup dry white wine like Muscadet Sèvre et Maine sur Lie or Marlborough Pinot Gris
4 cups (a large tin) juniper-flavoured sauerkraut
a good pinch saffron threads
1/3 cup double cream
a small bunch fresh Parsley
In a large deep skillet or frying pan, melt butter with olive oil over medium-high heat. Once the butter is just foaming, add burbot tails. Cook, about 2 minutes on each side, until golden.
Cut the salmon into three chunky pieces, and add to the skillet as well. Cook, a couple of minutes on each side.
Add scallops and cook, about 1 minute on each side in the hot butter and oil.
Season fish and seafood with fleur de sel and black pepper. Then, deglaze with dry white wine. Reduce heat to low, and cover with the lid. Cook, 5 minutes.
Meanwhile, warm sauekraut in a large, deep skillet over medium heat.
Remove the lid, and gently lift out salmon, burbot and scallops onto the warm sauerkraut. Cover with a lid, keep warm.
Sprinkle saffron threads into the wine in the skillet, and increase heat back to medium. Once slightly reduced, stir in double cream, and brink to a slow boil. Simmer, a few minutes until a lovely yellow sauce coats the wooden spoon.
Finely chop Garden Parsley.
Arrange sauerkraut onto serving plate, and top with burbot tails, salmon pieces and scallops. Generously drizzle with saffron sauce and sprinkle with chopped Parsley.
Serve Choucroute de la Mer immediately, with a glass of chilled Muscadet Sèvre et Maine sur Lie or Marlborough Pinot Gris.