Bake and Shark

Bake and Shark is a traditional fast food dish of Trinidadian cuisine prepared using fried flatbread, shark meat and additional ingredients. It is a classic street food dish that is sold at a multitude of food stalls and cookshops all over Trinidad and Tobago.

Bake & shark
Bake & shark hut at Maracas Beach, Trinidad

Preparation

It consists of a fried flatbread ("bake") filled with fried pieces of shark meat and various other ingredients and sauces. Before frying, the shark meat is either seasoned with a herb blend and breaded,[1] or marinated in a mix of lemon juice, onion, garlic, thyme and capsicum chinense.[2] Popular additional ingredients are lettuce, coleslaw, tomatoes and/or pineapple; liquid condiments commonly used are mustard, ketchup, garlic sauce, chili sauce and/or a sauce made from culantro.[1] In Trinidad, bake and shark is widely associated with Maracas beach on the Northern coast as it features a multitude of bake and shark stands, and the needed shark is caught in the offshore surf.[3]

Environmental problems

As apex predators, sharks are of high importance for the ocean as an ecosystem. Through overfishing, many shark species are endangered. Apart from ethical problems this also causes economic problems as the demand for shark meat in Trinidad cannot be covered any more.[4] Often catfish and ray are used as substitutes and are declared incorrectly.[5] In return, bake and shark stalls sometimes advertise for using shark meat instead of cheaper alternatives.[6]

gollark: I mean, the server end has to support it.
gollark: Fascinating.
gollark: Although I suppose the disadvantage of this is that you may also want to authenticate the endpoint in some applicationy ways.
gollark: Some meshnetworky things do it at the internet layer.
gollark: Really, if the network stack were cooler, the encryption would be done at a lower layer and not just handed off to applications.

References

  1. Bake & Shark fact sheet on About.com
  2. Dave DeWitt & Mary Jane Wilson: Callaloo, Calypso & Carnival, S.70. The Crossing Press 1993
  3. Dave DeWitt & Mary Jane Wilson: Callaloo, Calypso & Carnival, S.24. The Crossing Press 1993
  4. Statement by FFOS (Fishermen and Friends of the Sea
  5. Blog entry on Rishiray.com
  6. "Bake and shark advertisement poster". Archived from the original on 2014-07-14. Retrieved 2014-07-11.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.