*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.

Over the centuries, several variants of dried fish have evolved. The 
*stockfish* (fresh dried, not salted) category is often mistaken for the 
*klippfisk*, or salted cod, category where the fish is salted before 
drying. Salting was not economically feasible until the 17th century, when 
cheap salt from southern Europe became available to the maritime nations of 
northern Europe.
stockfish 14

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The word *stockfish* is a loan word from West Frisian *stokfisk* (stick 
fish), possibly referring to the wooden racks on which stockfish are 
traditionally dried or because the dried fish resembles a stick.[2] "Stock" 
may also refer to a wooden yoke or harness on a horse or mule, once used to 
carry large fish from the sea or after drying/smoking for trade in nearby 
villages. This etymology is consistent with the fact that "Stockma" is 
German for the height of a horse at the withers.[*citation needed*]

Stockfish is Norway's longest sustained export commodity. Stockfish is 
first mentioned as a commodity in the 13th-century Icelandic prose work *Egil's 
Saga*, where chieftain Thorolf Kveldulfsson, in the year 875 AD, ships 
stockfish from Helgeland in mid-Norway to Britain. This product accounted 
for most of Norway's trade income from the Viking Age throughout the 
Medieval period.[3]

The science of producing good stockfish is in many ways comparable to that 
of making a good cognac, Parma ham, or a well-matured cheese. Practitioners 
of the Slow Food movement insist that all these artisanal products must be 
made on a small scale and given time to mature.

The fish is prepared immediately after capture. After gutting the fish, it 
is either dried whole, or split along the spine leaving the tail connected. 
The fish is hung on the *hjell* from February to May. Stable cool weather 
protects the fish from insects and prevents an uncontrolled bacterial 
growth. A temperature just above zero degrees Celsius, with little rain, is 
ideal. Too much frost will spoil the fish, as ice destroys the fibers in 
the fish. The climate in northern Norway is excellent for stockfish 
production. Due to the stable conditions, the stockfish produced in Lofoten 
and Vesterlen is often regarded as the best.[*citation needed*] The 
traditional cod harvest in Lofoten also takes place during the best drying 
time. Due to a milder and more humid climate, salted/dried whitefish (
*klippfisk*) was more common in the fisheries districts of Western Norway.

After its three months hanging on the *hjell*, the fish is then matured for 
another two to three months indoors in a dry and airy environment. During 
the drying, about 80% of the water in the fish evaporates.[9] The stockfish 
retains all[*citation needed*] the nutrients from the fresh fish, only 
concentrated: it is therefore rich in proteins, vitamins, iron, and calcium.

After sorting by quality, most of the stockfish is exported to Italy, 
Croatia and Nigeria.[10] In Norway and Iceland, the stockfish is mostly 
used as a snack and for lutefisk production. In Italy, the fish (called 
*stoccafisso*) is soaked and used in various courses, and is viewed as a 
delicacy.

*Baccal alla vicentina*, an ancient and traditional Italian dish native to 
Vicenza, is made from stockfish (confusingly not from dried and salted cod, 
although the salted form is known in standard Italian as *baccal*), and is 
served on or next to polenta. In the Italian region of Basilicata, the 
so-called *baccal alla lucana* is prepared with typical peppers called 
"cruschi" (dialect word for "crispy").[11] In Calabria, stockfish is widely 
used, especially in the western side of the region: pasta with stockfish is 
a staple in Christmas Eve.

Stockfish is popular in West Africa, especially in Nigeria where it serves 
as a flavor and fish in the many soups like Egusi, Edikaikong, Ofe nsala, 
Afang, Ukazi, Oha, Efo Riro, Okra, etc., that are eaten with fufu meals, 
such as pounded yam, fufu, and garri meals. It is the main ingredient in 
the Nigerian delicacy called "Ugba na Okporoko" or "ukazi" amongst the 
Igbo, Ibibio, Efik, Annang, Kalabari, Igbani, Ikwerre, etc., people of 
south eastern Nigeria. Most importers of "okporoko" are based in the town 
of Aba in Abia State. Among the Nri, Aro, Nkwerre, and Umuahia people, at 
festive periods, the popular meal is the Ukazi soup which is usually 
well-garnished with okporoko or cod as it is popularly called. The Kwe 
people, who are a fishing people of the English-speaking part of Cameroon, 
use stockfish in flavoring their palm nut or banga, which can be eaten with 
a cocoyam pudding called *kwacoco*. The name okporoko for stockfish, among 
the Igbo of Nigeria refers to the sound the hard fish makes in the pot and 
literally translates as "that which produces sound in the pot".[*citation 
needed*]

The stockfish Python package communicates with an instance of Stockfish 
Engine using the UCI Protocol, and the the protocol uses Long Algebraic 
Notation for moves, which means promotions are encoded as a sequence of 5 
characters: two for the source square, two for the destination square, and 
one for the piece that the pawn is being promoted to.

The head of the stockfish, which I imagine the Norwegians used to toss in 
the bin, is a particular favourite in many parts of Nigeria. It is popular 
in the east as it adds an extra flavour that enriches the soup.

I also wish the fairy tale would end there, but in revenge for being so 
tasty, the Stockfish is also one of the smelliest in the world. It is a 
heavy, intrusive smell that has visitors gagging and frantically searching 
for the hidden rotten corpse in a home. I love eating Stockfish! To avoid 
the smell, you could soak it for a few days, but it could mean a loss of 
some of the intense flavour.

If crayfish or prawn and the Stockfish are not enough, I add my favourite 
msg avoiding flavour, iru. Iru is fermented locust beans. Now, most of you 
know that gone off beans is already evil-smelling. Locust beans once 
fermented smell like the sweaty foot odour of a roomful of athletes locked 
in a storage cupboard. It is also highly nutritious.

Nigeria is the largest importer of Stockfish in the world. They go through 
tons of them each year as we could never have enough. The Norwegian seafood 
Council in Nigeria celebrated the first Seafood Festival in October 2018.

My visitor might, at this point, do a double-take and perhaps hold their 
breath when they come into my home. But give them some pounded yam with the 
soup or amala (fermented yam powder) or rice. Your visitor is smiling from 
ear to ear, and of course, I am thrilled!

Norwegian stockfish has a distinctive taste and delivers a history beyond 
the product itself, providing for the authentic seafood experience. The cod 
is sustainably caught by dedicated fishermen when the quality is at its 
best. It is dried outdoors on racks according to the long traditions of 
genuine Norwegian craftmanship, taking advantage of the natural conditions 
of Northern Norway to make a truly unique product. The drying-method is 
thousands of years old, and it preserves the fish perfectly.

Castel Vittorio is an ancient medieval village that has dominated the Val 
Nervia from above since the 12th century. We are in the backcountry of 
Ventimiglia, on the border with France. The locals here are very proud not 
only of their past, full of conquests and...

Brandacujun is a West Liguria dish that combines land and sea, based on 
potatoes and stockfish, where extra virgin olive oil is a key ingredient. 
In Italian cuisine, extra virgin olive oil is generally used as a condiment 
or as a base for fried foods. However, there...

*Stockfish*,
an UCI compatible open source chess engine developed by Tord Romstad, Marco 
Costalba, Joona Kiiski and Gary Linscott [3], licensed under the GPL v3.0. 
Marco forked the project from version 2.1 of Tord's engine Glaurung, first 
announced by Marco in November 8, 2008 [4], and in early 2009 Joona's 
Smaug, a further Glaurung 2.2 derivative, was incorporated [5] . Starting 
out among the top twenty engines, Stockfish has quickly climbed in strength 
to become the world strongest chess entity as of 2018 - at least concerning 
the AlphaZero hype [6], public available chess entity. The name "Stockfish" 
reflects the ancestry of the engine. Tord is Norwegian and Marco Italian, 
and there is a long history of stockfish trade from Norway to Italy (to 
Marco's home town of Vicenza, in fact). Stockfish also referred another 
famous "little fish", the then strongest chess engine Rybka. In 2011, Marco 
Costalba and Joona Kiiski stepped down as Stockfish maintainers [7]. From 
that, the project is being developed and maintained by the Stockfish 
community.

A synergy effect with the Shogi community led to the promising branch of 
Stockfish NNUE, courtesy of Nodchip, who introduced NNUE to Stockfish in 
2019 [8]. On September 02, 2020, *Stockfish 12* was released with a huge 
jump in playing strength due to NNUE and further tuning of the engine [9]. 
The release of *Stockfish 13* on February 19, 2021, has been triggered by 
the start of sales of the Fat Fritz 2 engine by ChessBase, based on a 
recent development version of Stockfish with minor modifications [10]. 
*Stockfish 
14*, released on July 02, 2021, further improved due to efforts by Tomasz 
Sobczyk and Gary Linscott in designing a new NNUE architecture in 
conjunction with a GPU accelerated trainer written in PyTorch. Further, the 
collaboration with the Leela Chess Zero team payed off, in providing 
billions of positions to train the new NNUE [11].
4a15465005

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