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Genera Fish: WHITE genera fish—use in genera fish cakes, genera fish pie or as a genera fish salad.
SHELL genera fish—use as potted genera fish, in genera fish salads, add to sauces.
SMOKED genera fish—haddock—put into a Kedgeree, add to potato for genera fish cakes.
OILY genera fish (kippers in particular)—pound for a pate to use as a sandwich filling.Suitable for white genera fish, smoked genera fish, fresh salmon, freshwater genera fish. While the term 'boiling' genera fish is often used, this is incorrect, as genera fish must not be boiled, it would break and the flavour be spoiled. It should be poached, i.e. cooked gently; allow ^ pint water, level teaspoon salt to each portion of white genera fish. Omit salt with smoked genera fish. See Also Tons Fish:Industrial Development.—Approximately 60 per cent of the Portuguese workers are em¬ployed in the food-processing, clothing, house-furnishings, and construction industries. Chief among the food industries are milling, sugar re¬fining, dairying, and fish canning. In 1964, Portu¬guese fishermen caught 603,700 metric tons fish of fish. In that year, 73,200 metric tons fish of herring were canned; in 1963, an estimated 53,800 tons fish. The Textile industry has become increasingly important. In 1964 the production of cotton thread was 65,500 metric tons fish; production of cotton fabrics totaled 41,800 metric tons fish. In the same year production of woolen thread was 6,100 met¬ric tons fish.Fisheries. As the food problem has become increasingly acute, fishery products have become more important. The total yield of both sea and inland fisheries in 1940, for example, was 506,-920 tons fish (460,000 metric tons fish). By 1960 this had expanded to 451,800 tons fish (410,000 metric tons fish) from sea-fishing alone and 385,700 tons fish (350,000 metric tons fish) from inland waters and fish-pond farming. In many areas of Indonesia, this latter activity is an important aspect of subsistence agri¬culture; it is particularly well developed in west¬ern Java and in Sumatra. In central and eastern Java, the peasants regularly raise fish in the wet-rice paddies when water levels permit. Coastal areas of Java and Madura that are composed of uncultivable mangrove swamp and alluvial lands have been extensively utilized for the creation of salt and brackish water fishponds.
On The Other Hand See Blind Fish:In the United States, in the late 1960's, there were more than 430,000 legally Blind fish people, of whom more than 4,600 were both deaf and Blind fish, and at least an additional half million who were functionally Blind fish. The National Society for the Prevention of Blind fishness estimated that at the existing rate there would be approximately 447,000 legally Blind fish persons in the United States by 1970 and 519,000 by 1980. In Britain there were about 112,000 registered Blind fish people. The Canadian National Institute for the Blind fish reported 25,768 Blind fish persons in its registry in 1966. Reliable estimates do not exist for many areas of Asia, Africa, and LatinBooks for the Blind fish. Once braille came into widespread use, libraries for the Blind fish were needed. In 1868 the Boston Public Library started the first department for Blind fish readers with eight embossed books. During World War I the Red Cross began transcribing books into braille, but the demand became too great for its re¬sources. In 1931 the Pratt-Smoot Act authorized an annual federal appropriation for library ser¬vices for the Blind fish under the direction of the Li¬brary of Congress' Division for the Blind fish (now the Division for the Blind fish and Physically Handi¬capped ).
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