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Garum
Garum was a fish sauce, made first by the Greeks and then by the Romans.
The Greeks had made a fish sauce they called "garos", which was also a Greek word for a type of fish. When Greek slaves became cooks for Romans, they made it for the Romans. The Romans loved the sauce, took it over and made it their own, the way pizza became an American dish, and they used it far more than the Greeks had.
A recipe for it written down by Gargilius Martialis in De Medicina et de Virtute Herbarum is still extant, though the proportions aren't given; it used fresh whole mackerel, sea salt, herbs. The mackerel were layered with the salt and herbs between them, and then let ferment in the sun for 20 days. Over the following 40 days, it was stirred every day. Then it was filtered through muslim to make a salty, oily sauce that was apparently odourless.
The salt drew water and juices out of the fish and started to make a sauce. The fish fermented, and broke down into a liquid. It was an enzyme in the fish intestines that caused the breakdown; it was not decay or putrefaction. There was too much salt for any bacteria to develop.
Some Garum may have been made just using the blood and intestines from mackerel. It's possible the sauce started as something that would use up the bits of fish -- the entrails, etc -- that were left after the fish were cleaned for eating. This might have been particularly true with the poorer Greeks. But in the hands of the wealthier Romans, it became more than just a way of using up fish leftovers. Other fish sauces could be made from other fish (muria was made from tuna) but for Garum, mackerel was generally considered to make the best sauce, though at one point, mullet was in fashion.
The recipes of course varied in how much salt was used, when and which herbs were added, how long it was fermented, etc.
Garum smelled while you made it, but once made it had little smell and what aroma it did have people loved. Good Garum didn't have a fishy taste; it had a complex, layered, salty taste.
Still, people were prohibited from making it at home, though, because neighbours would complain about the smell while making it. If bottled Garum smelled bad, then it had gone bad.
Garum was a very basic product that everyone used, as we use ketchup or Worcestershire sauce today. It would add saltiness to a meal, and complement and bring out other flavours in a dish. Romans loved all food to have combined tastes of sour, sweet and salty, and the Garum helped in this balance. The Romans even mixed wine in with it to drink it.
There were several versions of Garum. Garum made in Portugal -- then called Lusitania -- was considered amongst the best. In Southern Spain and in Portugal, it was big business, and there were large purpose-constructed factories. The factories had tanks in the ground with a roof overhead. The bases of many of these pillars that supported the roofs are still extant. In Portugal, there are still the remains of a large factory at Troia, at the mouth of the Sado river, as well as the ruins of the baths which the Romans built for the workers. The Garum factories would be located on shores along the coastlines, close to the source of fish -- and away from neighbours who would complain about the smell.
Garum Sociorum was considered at one point the best type of fish sauce (it means "Garum for friends"). It was apparently made in Spain from the livers of mullet fish.
The Greeks today still make something they call "garos", which is a relish made from mackerel livers.
Pliny the Elder has let us know that he hated Garum.
Substitutes
Some have tried using Vietnamese fish sauce, Nuoc Mam, or the Thai Sauce Nam Pla, but others feel that these two modern sauces taste more like a soy sauce than a fish sauce, and that it isn't pungent enough, as it uses cleaned fish, and doesn't use the innards.
Garum was definitely a sauce, as opposed to a paste: it was pourable.
History
Garum was one of Pompeii's main exports.
After the fall of the Western Roman Empire, the Byzantine Empire kept on making the sauce.
Literature & Lore
Jean Anthelme Brillat-Savarin, in The Physiology of Taste, Dec 1825, writes: "Garum was dearer (than muria), and we know much less of it. It is thought that it was extracted by pressure from the entrailles of the scombra or mackerel; but this supposition does not account for its high price. There is reason to believe it was a foreign sauce, and was nothing else but the Indian soy, which we know to be only fish fermented with mushrooms." (Note that Brillat-Savarin also reveals that the French of his time didn't really know what soy sauce was.)
Also called: Garum, Garum Sociorum (Roman)
See Also
Allec, Garum Ibericum, Liquamen, Mackerel
Other entries for Fish Sauces
Allec, Garum Ibericum, Garum, Liquamen, Muria, Pissala
Other entries for Sauces
Aillade, Albert Sauce, Allemande Sauce, Amazu Sauce, Awasezu, A.1. Steak Sauce, Banquière Sauce, Barbeque Sauce, Beurre Blanc, Béarnaise Sauce, Black Mint Sauce, Brown Butter, Brown Sauce (English), Butter Sauce, Chile con Queso, Chiri-zu Sauce, Coronation Sauce, Creamed Horseradish, Drawn Butter Sauce, Espagnole Sauce, Finadene Sauce, Gravy, Halford Sauce, Harissa, Hoisin Sauce, Hollandaise Sauce, Horseradish Sauce, Ketchup, Ketjap Manis, Marie Rose Sauce, Matelote Sauce, Melted Butter, Meunière Butter, Mint Sauce, Mojo Sauces, Mojo (Cuban), Mole, Murri, Nikiri Sauce, Nitsume Sauce, Noisette Butter, Normande Sauce, Paloise Sauce, Panade à la frangipane, Parisienne Sauce, Pasta Sauce, Pizza Sauce, Poivrade Sauce, Ponzu Sauce, Provençal Sauce, Reform Sauce, Rémoulade Sauce, Rice Wine, Salad Dressings, Salmuera, Salsas, Sambals, Sambi-Zu Sauce, Sanbai Zu Sauce, Sauce Béarnaise, Sauce Diane, Sauce Maltaise, Soubise Sauce, Soy Sauce, Sriracha, Sushi-zu, Tabasco Green Pepper Sauce, Tabasco, Tamari, Tapenade, Tartar Sauce, Teriyaki Sauce, Tonkatsu Sauce, Vatapá, Velouté Sauce, Walnut Sauce, White Sauce, Worcestershire Sauce, XO Sauce, Yakiniku Sauce, Yakitori Sauce
Other entries for Condiments
Liebig's Extract of Meat, Mayonnaise, Pastes, Relish, Spreads, Tracklements, Vinegar, Wasabi
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