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Producing Cod Liver Oil from Atlantic Cod — Norway's Liquid Gold
මධ්යම
Instructions
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Understand Atlantic Cod Biology
Understand Atlantic Cod Biology
Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) is a cold-water demersal fish found throughout the North Atlantic, from Newfoundland to the Barents Sea. Adults reach 1-1.5 meters and 40 kg. Cod have an exceptionally large, oil-rich liver that constitutes 5-10% of body weight — an adaptation for energy storage in cold, food-scarce waters. The liver stores vitamins A and D in concentrations hundreds of times higher than muscle tissue. Norwegian Arctic cod (skrei) migrate annually from the Barents Sea to spawn at Lofoten, where they have been fished for over 1,000 years.
Materials for this step:
Codfish2
2
Trace the History of Tran Production
Trace the History of Tran Production
Vikings produced cod liver oil ('tran', from Old Norse þrán) by packing fresh cod livers in birch bark containers and letting them decompose slowly over weeks — the oil separating from the liver tissue rose to the surface. By the 1700s, Lofoten fishermen filled large wooden vats with livers each winter season, collecting the pale oil that floated up as a valuable trade commodity. Bergen was the primary export port. The foul-smelling but nutritious oil was consumed medicinally across Northern Europe long before anyone understood vitamins.
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Examine Peter Møller's Revolution
Examine Peter Møller's Revolution
Norwegian pharmacist Peter Møller transformed cod liver oil production in 1854 by developing a gentle steam rendering process at Svolvær in Lofoten. Instead of letting livers putrefy, Møller heated fresh livers with steam at temperatures below 85°C, releasing pale, mild-tasting oil within hours rather than weeks. The resulting oil retained far more vitamins and had vastly less odor and rancidity. Møller's method became the global standard. His company (now Möller's, owned by Orkla) remains Norway's most recognized cod liver oil brand, producing tran continuously for over 170 years.
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Follow Modern Industrial Extraction
Follow Modern Industrial Extraction
Modern cod liver oil production begins within hours of catch. Livers are separated at sea or at the processing plant and heated with steam in large rendering tanks at 70-85°C. The mixture separates into three layers: oil on top, aqueous protein solution (stickwater) in the middle, and solid residue (press cake) at the bottom. The crude oil is separated by centrifugation, then refined through degumming, neutralization with sodium hydroxide, bleaching with activated earth, and deodorization under vacuum at 180-200°C to remove volatile compounds while preserving vitamins.
Tools needed:
Large Stainless Steel Pot (40-80L)
Cooking Thermometer (0-200°C)
Fine Cheesecloth5
5
Understand the Vitamin A and D Content
Understand the Vitamin A and D Content
Cod liver oil is one of nature's richest sources of vitamins A and D. One tablespoon (15 ml) contains approximately 4,500 IU of vitamin A (as retinol) and 1,360 IU of vitamin D3 (cholecalciferol) — exceeding daily requirements for both. Vitamin A is essential for vision (rhodopsin in rod cells), immune function, and skin integrity. Vitamin D3 regulates calcium absorption and bone mineralization. Before fortification of milk and margarine, cod liver oil was the primary defense against rickets in children and osteomalacia in adults throughout Northern Europe.
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Examine Omega-3 Fatty Acid Profile
Examine Omega-3 Fatty Acid Profile
Cod liver oil contains 20-25% omega-3 fatty acids, primarily eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA, 20:5n-3) at 8-10% and docosahexaenoic acid (DHA, 22:6n-3) at 10-12%. These long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acids originate from marine microalgae at the base of the food chain and accumulate through the trophic levels. EPA reduces inflammation by competing with arachidonic acid in prostaglandin synthesis. DHA is a structural component of brain gray matter and retinal photoreceptors. The cod concentrates these fats in its liver because its lean muscle stores almost no fat.
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Discover the Rickets Prevention Story
Discover the Rickets Prevention Story
British physician Samuel Kay first documented cod liver oil treating rickets in 1782 in Manchester. By the 1820s, German physician Daniel Schütte demonstrated its effectiveness in controlled hospital settings. During the Industrial Revolution, rickets reached epidemic proportions in sunless factory cities — children's bones softened and deformed from vitamin D deficiency. Norwegian and Scottish cod liver oil became the standard treatment. In 1922, Elmer McCollum identified 'anti-rachitic factor' (vitamin D) in cod liver oil. By the 1930s, a daily spoonful of tran was mandatory for Norwegian schoolchildren.
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Survey Quality and Oxidation Control
Survey Quality and Oxidation Control
Cod liver oil quality depends on freshness of livers and processing speed — oxidation of polyunsaturated fatty acids produces rancid off-flavors and harmful lipid peroxides. The industry measures quality by peroxide value (fresh oil: below 3 meq/kg), anisidine value (secondary oxidation products), and TOTOX value (2× peroxide + anisidine, target below 10). Nitrogen blanketing prevents oxygen contact during processing and bottling. Antioxidants including mixed tocopherols (vitamin E) and rosemary extract are added to extend shelf life. Modern tran has a mild, almost neutral taste compared to the rancid historical product.
Materials for this step:
Dark Glass Bottles with CapsTools needed:
Precision Scale (0.01g)9
9
Understand Norwegian Tran Culture
Understand Norwegian Tran Culture
Norway produces approximately 20,000 tonnes of cod liver oil annually, with Lofoten remaining the historical heartland. 'En skje tran om dagen' (a spoonful of tran a day) is embedded in Norwegian culture — surveys show over 40% of Norwegians take cod liver oil regularly, especially during the dark winter months when sunlight-driven vitamin D synthesis drops to zero above 60°N latitude. Flavored varieties (lemon is most popular) have replaced the dreaded unflavored oil that generations of Norwegian children associate with breakfast-time struggle. The product remains a cornerstone of Norwegian public health policy.
Tools needed:
Precision Scale (0.01g)10
10
Document Findings and Global Health Impact
Document Findings and Global Health Impact
Record cod liver oil's key data: pale yellow oil, density 0.92 g/ml, rich in vitamins A (4,500 IU/tbsp) and D3 (1,360 IU/tbsp), 20-25% omega-3 fatty acids. Cod liver oil is the product that proved nutrition could prevent disease — centuries before the word 'vitamin' existed, Norwegian fishermen knew that tran kept their families healthy through dark winters. From Viking birch-bark vats to Peter Møller's steam process to modern molecular distillation, the journey of cod liver oil mirrors humanity's understanding of nutrition itself.
Tools Required
4- ස්ථානගත
- ස්ථානගත
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