haddock

[ US /ˈhædək/ ]
[ UK /hˈædək/ ]
NOUN
  1. important food fish on both sides of the Atlantic; related to cod but usually smaller
  2. lean white flesh of fish similar to but smaller than cod; usually baked or poached or as fillets sauteed or fried
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How To Use haddock In A Sentence

  • That means pearly white skinless cod or haddock under a casing of crisp batter the colour of dark honey, served with golden chips. Times, Sunday Times
  • You can have sea bass, lobster, herring, turbot, sturgeon cusks, haddock, mullet, eels, crabs, oysters and mussels.
  • The saithe/pollock is an excellent food fish and, as with the cod and the haddock, processing methods are varied.
  • Haddock, the explosive, semi-sozzled scion of Marlinspike Hall; Cuthbert Calculus, the nearly deaf genius inventor; Thompson and Thomson, the bumbling identical-twin detectives; and opera diva Bianca Castafiore, aka the Milanese Nightingale, who is the sole female character to recur in Hergé's Tintin stories. Tintin & Co.
  • The best fishermen returned for a second year in a row without their usual haul of cod and haddock, so the Icelandic government took radical action: they privatized the fish.
  • For a main course I ordered a kedgeree of salmon and haddock with curry butter.
  • Eat In nearby Boshum, the Millstream's millstream.com £50 tasting menu features roquefort mousse with pickled pears, smoked haddock and leek ravioli, summer fruit and elderflower trifle. Five great beach weekends
  • He does not need to interrogate the old salts on the dock to find out why haddock is high-priced.
  • While the cod, pollack and haddock may have all but disappeared, you stand a good chance of spotting porpoises, minke whales and even the odd beluga.
  • For £5.50 there was a choice of cod or haddock, with scampi £1 extra.
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