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10 Comments
Janine O.
January 28, 2021
I don't know what they mean by "sweet" when they describe oysters. Oysters never taste "sweet" if by sweet you mean sweet like sugar or milk. I've been scarfing down oysters since I was 3-4 years old and I have never tasted any sweetness in any of them. There's briny, there's mineral, there's bland, etc, but there has never been sweet.
ChefJune
August 9, 2018
I love oysters in all their guises. However I'm deathly allergic to beer, but even if I weren't, I'd still prefer chilled Muscadet with my oysters. :)
Steve
August 10, 2017
The Texas coast is lined with shallow bays that grow awesome oysters. And Louisiana? King of Gulf seafood. The Gulf coast doesn’t stop in Mobile.
Greenstuff
August 9, 2017
Oh my, I see that the sponsor of this article is from New York. No celebration of New York oysters?
Speaking of the sponsor and with all respect to the wonderful beer breweries located close to some of my favorite oyster locales, I have to go with Ernest Hemingway:
“As I ate the oysters with their strong taste of the sea and their faint metallic taste that the cold white wine washed away, leaving only the sea taste and the succulent texture, and as I drank their cold liquid from each shell and washed it down with the crisp taste of the wine, I lost the empty feeling and began to be happy and to make plans.”
Needless to say, I'd be glad to discuss this issue further over some oysters and a beer.
Speaking of the sponsor and with all respect to the wonderful beer breweries located close to some of my favorite oyster locales, I have to go with Ernest Hemingway:
“As I ate the oysters with their strong taste of the sea and their faint metallic taste that the cold white wine washed away, leaving only the sea taste and the succulent texture, and as I drank their cold liquid from each shell and washed it down with the crisp taste of the wine, I lost the empty feeling and began to be happy and to make plans.”
Needless to say, I'd be glad to discuss this issue further over some oysters and a beer.
Cynthia N.
August 9, 2017
One of, if not *the*, ultimate quotes about the joy of oysters. I had the good fortune of being a judge for an oyster-wine competition for a number of years, that passage read with a near solemnity before we had our first slurp and sip each year. Such a vivid description.
Gordon
August 9, 2017
You need to get ready for the mid atlantic states to come a lookin for you. Chesapeake Bay oysters were eaten by the founders of America. You can still find paths covered with broken oyster shells in Colonial Williamsburg. Everyone around the Bay eats them, along with soft shelled crabs. Urbanna VA has an oyster Festival that brings thousands of people to this little river city. So get ready for Maryland and Virginia people to get their 2 cents in!!
Greenstuff
August 9, 2017
And how about Long Island Sound? Norwalk, Connecticut once had the world's largest fleet of oyster harvesters! I love all Food52's oyster articles, but I wish this one had been twice as meaty.
Cynthia N.
August 9, 2017
There are SO very many outstanding oysters along our coasts, that's for sure. I spent some quality time on the Virginia coast and in DC a couple months ago slurping as many Easterns as I could, including Riptide, Duxbury, Wiley Point, Pemaquid, Quonset Point, Sewansecott, Chincoteague, among others...a lot of delicious territory, and still just scratching the surface. Covering a good number of them all gets to be a book-length proposition, for which Rowan Jacobsen's The Essential Oyster does a great job.
Isabel M.
August 12, 2017
I was going to chime in about the recovery of the oyster fisheries in the Chesapeake Bay! These days they often raise them in baskets up off the bottom as it gets too silty from run-off. Our marina in St. Mary's County Maryland
Isabel M.
August 12, 2017
(got cut off) grows them in the creek and serves them fresh out of the water. Can't wait for the season to open!
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