“Fish Jerky”. ? You mean Salted Cod (or other fish)??
Well ready to use salted cod runs around $15 - $20 a pound, including shipping, and that's if you buy four pounds or more of the stuff. It was once, and in many places in the world still is, food for the lower classes. It's popular in many ethnic cuizines, Italian, Portuguese, Carribean, and along the Northern coast of South America. It was popular in Colonial American dishes, as well as some parts of England, and Europe, but as the use of salt and drying has fallen off, and freezing is more common, the price of salt cod has increased, and it's use has decreased. So you don't find it very cheap. This is unfortunate, as there are many ethnic dishes that simply can't be properly made without the proper salted fish. My wife is from Guyana, and I have an old cook book with recipes for salt cod.
I don't think it was ever used like jerky, and eaten straight. :barf:
So my friend the chef made some, as he wanted to try making some authentic sailor dishes from the Royal and American Navy, from the 1700's. He couldn't afford the price of the ready made product just to experiment..., So he bought some real cod, fresh, salted it with sea salt, and stuck it in his dehydrator, just like he would do with jerky. BIG MISTAKE. The house stank like fish, and his cats went batcrap crazy trying to get at the stuff. I am assuming he didn't mess up the production of the stuff..., but who knows? Maybe you will have a different odor, or none at all, when you make it like jerky, but I wouldn't try it.
Online, though, I have found examples where folks have made dried, salted fish, cod or otherwise, by drying the stuff in the refridgerator. They salted both sides of a filet, left it sit on a plate for 48 hours, then rinsed off the salt, (or left it on - methods vary), and then wrapped the fish in cheese cloth, and put it back into the fridge for 7 - 10 days. When dry and hard, it was done.
Any of you folks out there that do pirate or Royal Navy want to chime in?
LD