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Lobsters: Enjoy the Feast

By: Joy Cagil



Several weeks ago, a seafood restaurant imported Australian
lobster; the taste was delicious. I assumed, they had the
lobsters frozen to be sent here, but then I found out they might
not have. Since the lobsters taste better fresh, they are
shipped in carefully refrigerated trucks, alive. 

That is why, inside a seafood store or restaurant, I try to
avert my eyes as the lobsters climb on each other, overflowing
the tank. I'm afraid to look a live lobster in the face out of
guilt. On the other hand, it may be far more merciful to grant
an escape to the animal rather than have it spend another night
inside the tank. 

Within a few miles to where we live, in Jensen Beach-Florida,
there's a quality seafood restaurant with a seafood store near
it, called New England Clam, Fish and Chowder. I enjoy the food
there and they bring in their lobsters mostly from Maine or off
the coasts of the Caribbean.

Lobster cooked in any form is appetizing: lobster bisque,
lobster rolls, lobster in a basket with drawn butter, spicy
shrimp and lobster linguine, lobster cocktail, lobster chowder,
baked stuffed lobster, crêpes filled with lobster Newburg,
lobster curry, lobster creole. Did I leave anything? Probably,
but it doesn't matter. A true lobster lover can boil the lobster
and eat it with crackers. I like any seafood with lots of lemon
juice and no butter. In most restaurants, however, they bring a
tiny slice of lemon, lots of drawn butter, plus other sauces. 

There must be a painter hiding inside a lobster because it turns
crimson when cooked. A live lobster is greenish-brown for it has
many different color pigments. When the lobster is cooked, all
the pigments are masked except for the background red pigment.

A friend, who goes diving for lobsters off the coast of the Palm
Beaches and sometimes the Florida Keys, taught me a few things.
She says all lobsters caught in the east coast of USA are called
Maine lobsters. They are also sold as two kinds, hard shell and
soft shell.

When a lobster outgrows its shell, it molts and discards or
"sheds" the old shell; now, it has a soft shell and it's called
a "shedder." As the lobster feeds, its shell hardens, and it
adds meat to its body. Soft-shell lobsters have less meat than
hard-shell lobsters, but their shells also weigh less. Since
lobsters are bought according to their weight, hard-shells and
soft-shells end up costing about the same.

Hard-shell lobsters usually survive longer in the refrigerator
than the ones that have soft shells. I couldn't believe it when
my friend said that "still living" lobsters could be stored in
the refrigerator. Some people prefer soft-shell lobsters because
they say the meat is a little sweeter and they don't need any
tools to crack them apart. Hard shell lobsters have firmer meat. 

The popular white meat of the lobster is inside the tail, claws,
knuckles and parts of the body and legs. The greenish soft
matter at the joint of the lobster's body and tail is
"tomalley", which is the lobster's liver with a very different
taste. Some people consider this a delicacy; many won't touch
this part. The red material in the tail is the roe or the eggs.
This too is a delicacy. 

To eat a lobster, some people put on the bib. Actually, eating a
lobster is no messier than eating any other food, but wearing
the bib has become the flair of lobster-eating. With or without
the bib, a good restaurant will supply its diners with a tiny
seafood fork, knife, pliers, nutcracker or hammer, and a pile of
paper napkins. If it hasn't, don't hesitate to ask for them. 

After clearing some space on your plate for the lobster-eating
ceremony, twist off and crack the claws. This is worth the
effort because claw-meat is very tasty. Then, separate the tail
from the body by arching the back until it cracks. Bend the tail
flippers backwards and break them off. Then enjoy the meat in
each flipper. Next, with the tiny fork, take the tail meat out,
getting rid of the black vein that runs through the length of
the tail meat. Afterwards, open the shell of the body from the
underside. Push away the greenish liver substance. 

When you crack the underside of the body in the middle, you'll
see the meat in four sections or joints. To these joints, small
legs are attached that contain meat, and they can be removed by
biting down on the leg and squeezing the meat out.

Fresh lobster can be stored in the refrigerator up to 24 hours.
You can also refrigerate the cooked meat for two to three days
or keep it in the freezer for several months. 


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