
If you live in New Orleans, you can easily pick up a pint of freshly shucked oysters at most grocery stores, especially in late fall and throughout winter as folks prepare to make oyster dishes that are traditional there for the holiday table.
Gulf of Mexico oysters usually are fat and salty. If they are fresh, we eat them straight from the shell, but they also are great for frying and then tucking into a sandwich or eating on a platter with fresh lemon juice or a touch of tartar sauce.
Louisiana’s bigger oysters make better fryers because they are inexpensive and because their size and plumpness allows you to more easily avoid the kiss of death: Over-frying.
Crisp on the outside and custardy on the inside is the goal for fried oysters, and in her cookbook “Mosquito Supper Club,” restaurateur Melissa M. Martin describes how you should use your senses rather than a timer when deciding if the bivalves are done. She writes: “The oysters will make a lot of noise at first and then calm down — keep your face and appendages away from the pot as the oysters talk. Listen for the moment when they quiet down; that’s when they are done.”
Advertisement
Martin, who owns the Mosquito Supper Club restaurant in New Orleans, grew up in a family of South Louisiana fishermen, so she relishes eating oysters raw and describes the experience as “like jumping into the ocean, tasting the salt water on your lips, the seaweed, the algae, the brackish marsh or the frigid Nova Scotia coast.”
The issue for many home cooks, however, can be getting your hands on freshly shucked oysters. If you don’t live adjacent to oyster-rich waters, you can order the bivalves online or visit a seafood market and ask if they will shuck them for you.
Even if you do have access to fresh oysters, they vary dramatically in size, flavor and cost depending on where they are harvested. If your oysters are smallish, Martin’s preferred way of frying them works well. She lightly dusts them in cornstarch and cornmeal — no dairy, no egg — and then quickly fries them in very hot oil until they are just golden and, as she says, quiet.
Advertisement
Martin suggests tossing the hot-from-the-fryer oysters in a bit of melted butter and generous shakes of hot sauce and serving them over rice with a sprinkling of parsley and sliced scallion. I had never eaten them this way, but was eager to try it. Now, this is a new favorite of mine.
I tweaked her serving suggestion a bit by making a garlic-flavored rice as the base. I tossed a few cloves into the rice as it simmered and steamed in water. Then, I crushed the softened garlic and tossed it with the freshly cooked rice.
The garlic-scented rice with the spicy, buttery oysters were like a taste of home — even if it turned out the oysters I bought had been harvested from Long Island’s Great South Bay.
ncG1vNJzZmivp6x7uK3SoaCnn6Sku7G70q1lnKedZLOwu8NoaWlqYGR%2BcXuRcGafqpmasW672Kyrnqpdp7Kktc%2BeZg%3D%3D