Re: 'canned' Anchovy - shelf stable or must refrigerate?

From: P Howgate (phowgate@clara.co.uk)
Date: Fri Jul 20 2007 - 03:29:09 PDT

  • Next message: hmlupin\@libero\.it: "Re: 'canned' Anchovy - shelf stable or must refrigerate?"

    Christian does not tell us where 'here' is - see Pam's recent message about
    not being able to deduce the country of origin from the e-mail address - but
    I see from an Internet search that it seems to be Canada. I live in Britain
    and I have in front of me a can of 'Anchovy fillets in olive oil', net wt.
    50g, drained wt. 35g product of Morocco. They are made in other
    Mediterranean countries other than Morocco - I have seen the process
    underway in Spain - and in South America. The product is very salty, but I
    like them despite the current nutrition police campaign to reduce salt in
    the diet, and is the product presumably of 14% salt concentration already
    mentioned in this thread and defined in the Multilingual Dictionary of Fish
    and Fish Products as: 'headless gutted or whole ungutted anchovies packed in
    salt in barrels and allowed to ripen for about four months at temperatures
    up to 30degCuntil the flesh has reddened right through: as semipreserves,
    sold whole, filleted in oil or sauce, flat or rolled with or without capers;
    packed in cans, glass jars etc. ... '. If what you are selling in Canada is
    this product then it is shelf stable and need not be held under
    refrigeration. I see the 'best before end' date on the can I have is Nov
    2008, and the product is sold on the open shelves in shops here in Britain.
    In all the many years I have been buying this product I have never seen it
    offered other than on open shelves. Delicatessen shops and delicatessen
    counters in supermarkets sell a marinated anchovy fillet product which seems
    to come from Italy judging from the type of shop that sells it. Judging from
    the taste it is only lightly salted and I assume it is predominately the
    vinegar that exerts some preservative action. It is intended as an antipasto
    ingredient. Because this product is sold loose - at least at retail level -
    and not prepackaged I have not seen a shelflife date or advice on storage
    for it. I don't expect it to have a long shelf life and I hold it in the
    refrigerator at home, but we have usually scoffed within a day or two
    anyway. These marinated fillets are available in jars or plastics containers
    from mail order companies and would then be labelled with a shelflife date,
    but I have never bought any this way so can not tell you what it is. May
    Italian recipes ask for preserved anchovies, e.g. spaghetti alla putanesca,
    but it is never clear if they mean the hard salted, ripened product, or the
    marinaded one, though I tend towards the former. Can any Italian reader
    clarify for me?

    Best wishes

    Peter Howgate

    ----- Original Message -----
    From: "Christian Vogl" <cvogl@shafer-haggart.com>
    To: <seafood@ucdavis.edu>
    Sent: Tuesday, July 17, 2007 10:11 PM
    Subject: 'canned' Anchovy - shelf stable or must refrigerate?

    We have a customer in Australia who tells us that anchovy in cans
    (packed in oil) are sold 'shelf stable' there.
    Here, we refrigerate them.
    It was always my understand that this was required because of the lack
    of thermal processing. But if this is the case, how can Australian
    stores market them on the shelves instead of the cooler?
    Any thoughts appreciated!
    Best regards,
    Christian



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