Contemporary
Food - Smoked Eel
Eels
(tuna) have been a regular source of food for us. They still inhabit the fresh
water streams in Aotea and have always been a delicacy and highly sought after.
These days they are not as plentiful or as large as they have been in the past.
Historically the eels used to be in abundance because local Maori would place a
rahui on this food source. This meant that the eel could only be caught at
certain times of the year to ensure they were replenished and grew to a healthy
size. The eel shown in these photos was
caught recently in Aotea. In today’s terms it would be considered a good-sized
eel.
The
following steps describe how to smoke an eel:

-1-
Remove the head and cut
carefully along the backbone of the eel.

-2-
Repeat cutting along the
length backbone leaving as much soft flesh as possible.
-3-
Continue
Step 2 until one side of the flesh has folded out completely and the entrails
(guts) are visible. Repeat on the opposite side of the backbone.

-4-
Remove the entrails from the
eel and discard (makes great compost).
-5-
Peel away the backbone.
Don’t throw this away – keep it to smoke as this is edible and often a favourite.
Wash the eel thoroughly with water.

-6-
Sprinkle the eel with salt
and rub it into the flesh with your fingers to ensure even coverage.

-7-
Cut across the width of the
eel into desired sizes.
-8-
Prepare smokehouse by cutting manuka (the best wood to use) into kindling and by stripping the bark off to help start the fire. Using newspaper will also help start the fire. Pile these up until there are four layers criss-crossing one another (for better fire circulation). After lighting let it burn for 4-5 minutes before putting the eel onto the racks.
-9-
Place the eel slices and
backbone onto the racks and close the door of the smokehouse to allow the eel
to cook. Check every ½ hour by touching the outside of the smoke house with the
palm of your hand. The heat should be just bearable. This is a good gauge to
use for this smoke house. If it is too cool add more wood to keep it at a
constant temperature. The eel should be cooked in approximately two hours.
(Optional – towards the end
of smoking add two handfuls of manuka sawdust to the fire to help brown off the
eel. It will give the eel a good sheen and texture.)
-10-
Sawdust was used to help
brown off this eel. The eel should look similar to this and the flesh should peel
off very easily. Take care when eating because there may be bones remaining in
the eel.
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