Carl Linnaeus, The Lapland Journey, translated by Peter Graves (Edinburgh: Lockharton Press, 1995), p. 157.

Jokkmokk [2], 24/07/1732, ¶851:

The Lapp, who had got hold of a number of large bleak, cooked them on a spit, putting 20 on the spit at once with the back of one pressed up against the belly of the next so that they formed a flat surface towards the fire. Thus he roast and ate them – unsalted, though they had been dried earlier.