Espada Fish - A Unique Madeira Meal

Espada fish meal with vegetables Espada fish, also known as the black scabbered, is the basis for one of the best Madeira meals. You are unlikely to find this on the menu anywhere else in the world.

However, the espada fish is not an over-priced menu item aimed solely at the tourist. It is also one of the favourite dishes with the local population.

Sometimes included in the English section of the menu as swordfish, we have yet to find a restaurant or café that doesn't offer at least one espada dish of one sort or another.

Our choice is to order lightly battered espada with fried banana and a selection of fresh vegetables and salad. Not only will find this a healthy option, with a taste rather akin to that of mild cod, the soft flesh simply melting in the mouth, but you will also find it the perfect complement to a glass of your favourite wine.


Espada Fish - Fresh Daily

Funchal fish market Whichever restaurant you visit, it is likely that the

    espada fish
on their menu has been purchased from the market earlier that very same day.

This is because there are no large, industrial, factory-style, fishing ships supplying the markets. On the contrary, a fleet of small fishing boats set sail every evening to land the catch by hand.

Indeed, the black scabbard fish resides in the deep water off the coast at depths of between 600 and 1,600 metres. The only economical way to catch them is by using single, drop lines.

The haul is then packed in ice and sold at various fish markets early each morning.

The fish market in Funchal is situated adjacent to the fresh fruit and vegetable market located on the Rue Brigadeiro Oudinot, just up from the Praça da Autonomia which is at the eastern end of the seafront promenade.

The market itself is house in a 1940s building called the Mercado dos Lavradores (Worker's Market) and it often has traditionally dressed flower sellers immediately outside.

Buying espada fish fresh at the market

If you do visit the market, time your trip early as the black scabbard fish have usually completely sold out by midday. Also, have a meal of black scabbard before you go to see it laid out on the metal, iced, slabs - it is definitely not the most appetising sight to see in the market.


Espada, Very Tasty but Very Ugly

When seen laid out for sale in the market, the black scabbard fish is certainly not what you might call an attractive produce.

Sharp teeth and bulging eyes espada fish Its eel-like black elongated body, slimy skin, sharp teeth and bulging eyes give it a somewhat hideous persona.

Anyone would surely be forgiven for contemplating long and hard before sampling a mouthful - let alone ordering a complete meal based upon it!

However, the espada's repulsive looks are not all that they may seem.

In its natural habitat, some 600 metres or more beneath the ocean surface, the espada has a rounded body and normal eyes that do not protrude at all.

At that depth, the pressure is considerable, more than 50 times that of normal air pressure at sea level.

Having been caught by the special hooks and long lines of the fisherman the espada is hauled to the surface.

Its body, perfectly formed to withstand the high pressures of its normal environment, undergoes a transformation as it is pulled to the surface. Its body expands and then, when it reaches the point of no return, collapses. Further, its entrails are sucked out through its own mouth under the forces of decompression. The stronger tissue of the eyes bulge under the strain, but do not collapse.

Suffice to say, no fish reaches the surface still alive.


Espada Fishing History

Traditionally, fishing for the espada preta - as it is more correctly known so as to distinguish it from the espada branca, or white scabbard - originated from the fishing village of Câmara de Lobos.

Madeira fisherman (circa 1909) Indeed, in December 2003, the United Nations Conference on the Governance and Management of Deep-Sea Fisheries, reported that the catching of the black scabbard fish in Madeira was the longest established deep-water fishery in the world.

Certainly, the espada fish was known to science in 1839 as in May of that year, the Zoological Society of London recorded in their proceedings:

"Aphanopus carbo - Espada preta. Rariss.
Of this most curious new genus a single individual only has yet occurred. The whole fish is of a dark coffee colour, approaching to black, and has in form so close a general resemblance to Lepidopus argyreus, that it might well be taken hastily for a mere variety of that fish."

It is very likely that regularly fishing had commenced a good many years before this first scientific classification.

The earliest boats used for fishing were of wood, open breadth and typically 7 to 8 metres in length and 3 metres wide with one sail and four oars.

By 1851 Robert White details that 2 to 8 lbs was selling in the local market for between 3d to 6d - which equates today to about 1 to 3.6 kg of the scabbard fish selling for between 1.15 euros and 2.30 euros.

Câmara de Lobos harbour Today, Câmara de Lobos still remains the principal port from which most of the fishing for espada is undertaken.

In 1979, the Regional Government of Madeira had asked the National Institute of Fisheries Research in Lisbon to evaluate the possibilities of developing technological innovations to modernise the fishing methods.

However, the myriad of small, brightly painted wooden boats in the harbour reflect the fact that the traditional methods still prevail here.

Once thought only to inhabit the deep water off the Madeiran Islands, the espada can also be found in the waters surrounding Japan. Reports also suggest that it has been found near to the Canary Islands and Ireland.


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Madeira Features

Passeio Publico do Lido

If your staying in the hotel district of Funchal, you will be spoilt for choice when it comes to selecting a restaurant for your evening meal.

After you have dined though, what better way to end the perfect day than to take a gentle stroll in the public park that lies adjacent to the nearby Lido.

Many people do not venture down the short hill to the seafront - and they are surely missing out.

Just set back from the coast is the lovely Passeio Publico do Lido.

Many locals can be found in this park as the hot sun of the day wanes. Surely, there can be no better way to end your day than to watch the fading glow of the setting sun over the Atlantic from this oasis set apart from the tangle of hotels.


Ponta Gorda Lido

On the south coast, beneath the Madeira Regency Cliff Hotel, is the Complexo Balnear da Ponta Gorda Lido.

This is a relatively new facility that is ideal for children and adults alike.

It has a number of different pool areas, including a shallow toddlers pool.

Refreshment facilities are available and the Lido has the advantage of a free WiFi access point.


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