How to eat lobster?
What better place to discuss lobster
anatomy than at the dinner table?
Step 1
The first thing to do when your
cooked lobster arrives is turn it over and announce whether it
is a male or a female.Most people start by breaking off the
legs. Holding the lobster by the back, gently pull off the legs
with a twisting motion. Don't throw these away: there are plenty
of delicious morsels inside!
Step 2
Next, take off the claws, which are
also called chelipeds. Tear them off at the first joint, again
with a gentle twisting motion, and note that the crusher claw
usually is bigger than the tearing claw.
Step 3
Gently remove the loose part of the
claw. Again, check for especially tasty morsels in small parts!
Step 4
Using a nutcracker, break off the
tip of the large section of claw, revealing the meat.
Step 5
With your forefinger, push the meat
from the tip of the claw out the larger open end. Notice the
mouth parts, antennae, antennules, and rostrum or beak, all of
which are inedible.
Step 6
Grasp the tail portion with one
hand, and the back with the other hand. Twist to separate the
two sections.
Step 7
After that, turn to end of the tail
which has small flippers, or telsons, at the base. These provide
tasty if miniscule chunks of meat to those who don't mind a
little extra work.
Step 8
Arguably, the best part of the
lobster (the debate rages between tail lovers and claw lovers)
is the tail meat. Then insert your fingers into the telson end
to push the tail meat out intact through the larger opening.
Step 9
Peel off the top of the tail to
reveal the digestive tract, which should be removed before
eating the rest of the tail meat.
Step 10
Intrepid diners who explore further
find small chunks of meat inside the carapace, the hard shell or
body of the lobster.
Step 11
They may also encounter the gills,
the circulation system, and green "tomalley"(the
digestive gland) and in a female lobster, red "coral"
or "roe" (the unfertilized eggs). Hard-core lobster
lovers eat the latter two.
What's the green stuff?
It's the lobster's liver or more
accurately, its digestive system. Although many people like to eat
the "tomalley" it probably isn't a good idea because
this is where pollution in the lobster's own meal choices would
become concentrated in the lobster's body.
What's the red stuff?
It's the roe, the unfertilized eggs
of the female. Lobster eggs were once considered a delicacy, like
caviar. The roe is also called "coral" because of its
bright red color.
What is the nutritional value of
lobster?
Nutrition studies show that 3 1/2
ounces of lobster meat (without the butter) contains only 90
calories, compared to 163 calories for the same amount of chicken
and 280 calories for sirloin steak. Lobster also contains omega-3
fatty acids, the "good " cholesterol that seems to
reduce hardening of the arteries and decrease the risk of heart
attacks.
Can you eat lobster when there is a
shellfish ban?
Yes. Lobsters, unlike mussels,
oysters, and clams, are not "filter feeders." Filter
feeders pump sea water, and any plankton or pollution it carries,
through their bodies. Any toxins in the water will be concentrated
in their flesh.
Meat eaters like lobsters, crabs, and
fish do not filter plankton from sea water, so they are safe to
eat during an outbreak of red tide. |