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Jamaica (West African ackee brought to the Caribbean; saltfish from colonial trade) Techniques

1 technique from Jamaica (West African ackee brought to the Caribbean; saltfish from colonial trade) cuisine

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Jamaica (West African ackee brought to the Caribbean; saltfish from colonial trade)
Ackee and Saltfish
Jamaica (West African ackee brought to the Caribbean; saltfish from colonial trade)
Ackee and saltfish is Jamaica's national dish — sautéed desalted salt cod combined with ackee (the national fruit, Blighia sapida), onions, scotch bonnet, thyme, sweet peppers, and tomato. Ackee's yellow, buttery lobes look and taste like scrambled egg; their mild, fatty character absorbs the salt cod's intensity while the tomato and onion soften both. The ackee must be fully ripe (the pod must have opened naturally on the tree) — unripe ackee contains hypoglycin A, a toxin that causes Jamaican vomiting sickness. Canned ackee, packed in brine and pre-cooked, is safe and widely used. The saltfish must be desalted by soaking and boiling before cooking — the residual salt level after proper preparation provides the seasoning for the entire dish.
Caribbean — Proteins & Mains