
thumb|300px|right|Drying flake ('hjell') in Norway thumb|300px|right|Drying cod in Lofoten Islands thumb|300px|right|Codfish drying flake in Lofoten Islands
thumb|300px|right|Drying flake ('hjell') in Norway thumb|300px|right|Drying cod in Lofoten Islands thumb|300px|right|Codfish drying flake in Lofoten Islands
Stockfish is unsalted fish, especially cod, dried by cold air and wind on wooden racks (which are called "hjell" in Norway) on the foreshore. The drying of food is the world's oldest known preservation method, and dried fish has a storage life of several years. The method is cheap and effective in suitable climates; the work can be done by the fisherman and family, and the resulting product is easily transported to market.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).