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Food

Salmon Special: Slice of life learned from master carver

Alex Kasriel makes the cut with some expert tuition

June 18, 2009 11:01
Salmon stakes: Alex Kasriel working under Len Lawson’s guidance

By

Alex Kasriel,

Alex Kasriel

2 min read

Ever wondered why Jewish-style lox tastes better than Scottish smoked salmon? Len Lawson has the answer — and the 87-year-old should know, as he has been cutting salmon for almost 30 years.

Mr Lawson attributes the delicate flavour of heimishe lox to its wafer-thin slicing. Because of this, the fat rapidly melts in the mouth and the flavour is let loose before chewing.

Perfecting the slicing technique takes years of practice. It is certainly not something you can pick up in an hour or two. So my expectations were low when I met him at Platters Deli in Temple Fortune, where he still works at least two days a week, for instruction in salmon slicing.

As with many specialist skills, machines are taking over. And according to Mr Lawson, not enough caterers know the best slicing method.

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