The Book of Household Management by Mrs. Beeton

266. INGREDIENTS.--1 large thick haddock, 2 bay-leaves, 1 small bunch of

savoury herbs, not forgetting parsley, a little butter and pepper; boiling water. _Mode_.--Cut up the haddock into square pieces, make a basin hot by means of hot water, which pour out. Lay in the fish, with the bay-leaves and herbs; cover with boiling water; put a plate over to keep in the steam, and let it remain for 10 minutes. Take out the slices, put them in a hot dish, rub over with butter and pepper, and serve. _Time_.--10 minutes. _Seasonable_ at any time, but best in winter. THE FINNAN HADDOCK.--This is the common haddock cured and dried, and takes its name from the fishing-village of Findhorn, near Aberdeen, in Scotland, where the art has long attained to perfection. The haddocks are there hung up for a day or two in the smoke of peat, when they are ready for cooking, and are esteemed, by the Scotch, a great delicacy. In London, an imitation of them is made by washing the fish over with pyroligneous acid, and hanging it up in a dry place for a few days. RED HERRINGS, or YARMOUTH BLOATERS.