Pickled Herring Canape with Goat Cheese and Green Apple
Recipe
This combination of the salty and subtly sour umami smack of our pickled herring, with the sweet and lightly tart flavors of green apple,...
This should be enough herring to feed your party of smoked fish fans!
This wild-caught pickled herring product begins with the freshest herring available. Delicious, plump, velvety herring from the Gulf of St. Lawrence are hand-graded and selected for curing in just the right blend of spices and ingredients.
Blue Hill Bay Herring is a sustainably caught small fish that packs a big pickled herring punch! Not only is our Acme Herring in Wine Sauce great for you, but people have also enjoyed pickled herring for thousands of years. Our herring is simply brined and prepared with onions, and Acme Herring in Wine is the most traditional and simple of our herring varieties.
Among the world’s most widely consumed fish, and capable of adapting to the brackish waters of the Baltic Sea, herring became a primary food source of this coastal area. In these Baltic States, herring has been commonly eaten with brown bread and boiled potatoes for nearly as long as people have been pickling it in vinegar. Among the most popular ways to prepare pickled herring is a vinegar, sugar, and onion marinade, and after they are pickled for just long enough, they are preserved in a rich wine sauce.
With crackers, these herring tidbits in wine make excellent hors d’oeuvres. A classic preparation for this fish is chopped herring salad, frequently enjoyed as a spread or nosh. Many enjoy our pickled herring in wine on its own as a delightful preserve for snacking. Toothpicks sold separately!
Our Acme Smoked Fish Herring in Wine is alcohol free.
Herring, water, onions, sugar, vinegar, salt, spices, wine.
May contain bones
Omega-3 fatty acids, good source of protein and gluten free.
Contains fish
To keep with tradition, we add a trace amount of wine to every batch of our pickling brine. This wine is quickly absorbed by the vinegar present in the mixture, so there’s absolutely no alcohol detectable in this delicacy.
I consider myself something of a herring aficionado and this is my favorite brand.
I’ve been buying the herring in wine sauce for many years. Just bought a jar from market basket and my husband both agree that it’s not the same. The texture is much firmer and the taste is very fishy. Not as it was. Is this just a bad jar or has the recipe and fish itself changed? Because of this I don’t recommend this product. It’s not tasty at all….