| On Eating Oysters "You always start with
oysters," seafood consultant Jon Rowley is fond of saying.
"They come at the beginning, before anything else."
And there is good reason for that.
To fully appreciate an oyster in its prime, you bring all your
senses to bear. You feel the rugged nature of the beach and tides in the shell as
you raise the oyster to your lips. You inhale the briny essence of the ocean
captured in the liquor in which the oyster bathes in its shell.
And then there's the flavor. Serve the same six oysters to
six different people some time and have everyone write down what their oysters taste like.
The answers will have only a little to do with each other, for no two people
experience an oyster the same way. True, all Ostrea edulis have a distinct metallic
aftertaste, but the taste itself? That's the trick. Because with oysters, you
are dealing with the initial taste, then the aftertaste following along right behind.
"The taste of the oyster is like the color of the sea,"
Rowley says. "You can't quite capture the color in words. And then
it changes from moment to moment."
Schuyler Inge
Los Angeles Times |
| Eating Fish
Protects Heart, Study Finds
Eating fish at least once a week cuts in half the risk of sudden cardiac...
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FISH,
FISH, FISH,
FISH, FISH, FISH, |
THE ONLY WAY
THAT HEALTH
BEGINS EAT THE
FOOD THAT COMES
MIT FINS.

Bob Roubian, Proprietor
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