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You can also buy cooked Lobster meat separately, but it is more expensive. When a Lobster is being purchased, it should put up a fight when it is taken from the water. Choose ones whose tail is still tightly curled under. Ones that have relaxed tails, or that just move a little bit, are on their last legs, as it were (which is fine, but it means you need to get them straight home and shorten the poor little blighters' life spans even further.) Buy them the day you are going to use them, or at the very most, a day and a half ahead. ![]() Claws on live lobster Putting a Lobster in any kind of non-seawater will kill them right away. Don't store them directly on ice (as any ice you're likely to have will be made of fresh water), but storing them near a bag of ice is fine. The best thing, though, is to put them in the fridge wrapped in wet newspaper or paper towel. Wrap each separately, or they may fight. Check on them frequently. If any stop responding to being poked or prodded, or respond only very little, then they have almost had it. Cook them on the spot. Handle carefully. Never stick your hand right into a bag of live Lobsters or you have no one to blame but yourself for creating a Kodak moment in your kitchen. Eating a Lobster![]() Cooked lobster If meat from a cooked Lobster isn't firm, don't eat it: it means the Lobster was dead too long before being cooked. Turn the cooked Lobster on its back. Pull off the tail. Split the body down the centre with a knife. Discard the black vein & small sac at the base of the head. Take out the green tomalley and roe, if any. Remove white meat. Crack claws and knuckles and eat meat. Remove legs and suck meat out. There are many opinions on the order in which the above steps should be performed. Spiny LobsterSee Other Entries below for separate entry on Spiny Lobster.North American Lobster![]() A 'Lobster Boil' Consequently, though Canadian Lobster is now being sold in the UK (2003), most cooks there advise against buying it. "Cape Breton Lobster" is a marketing term for these same Lobsters caught around Cape Breton, Nova Scotia. "Lobster Boils" are informal but lavish feasts held in late summer up and down the eastern seaboard of North America. Though lobster is the centrepiece of the meal, other seafood such as clams and mussels is usually served as well. Many are annual gatherings of friends and family. Breton LobsterThese Lobsters are also called "Brittany Blue Lobster" because their shells are tinged with blue. They are far more flavourful than most other Lobster. Connoisseurs who've had them will often only settle for the Breton afterwards. This Lobster shouldn't be confused with "Cape Breton Lobster" (see North American Lobster above.)Cooking Tips Also called: Homarus americanus, Homarus vulgaris (Scientific Name); Homard (French); Hummer (German); Astice (Italian); Bogavante, Langosta (Spanish); Lagosta (Portuguese)
See Also:Charles Ranhofer, Lobster NewbergOther entries for: LobsterLangoustines, Lobster, Spiny Lobster Other entries for: CrustaceansCigales de Mer, Crabs, Sea Urchin, Shrimp, Yabbies Other entries for:ShellfishMollusks Other entries for:SeafoodOctopus, Squid |
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