Saturday 5 January 2013

The Only 7 Things You Need To Know About Oysters

You're in danger. Let me help.


There are two kinds of people who eat oysters. There's the Charming-I-Love-Oysters person, and there's the I-Am-Trying-Too-Hard-To-Be-Sexy person. Reading this post turns you into the charming kind of oyster person.



The r-month rule DOES matter.


The r-month rule DOES matter.


Most people will tell you that the "r-month rule" doesn't matter anymore. They'll say that it's cool to eat oysters in a month doesn't have an "r" in it — like August — because it's safe. And sure, it is safe. But you know what? It's gross. Oysters aren't meant to be eaten then, so stop it.


“I basically inadvertently follow the r-month rule because they never taste good in the summer,” says Rowan Jacobsen, author of The Geography of Oysters and the best oyster website on the Internet, oysterguide.com. “It’s perfectly fine to eat oysters any time of year, unless you’re on the Gulf Coast, temps are too high in the summer there."


There was another reason for the r-month rule: It allowed them time to reproduce since oysters spawn in the summertime. On the Gulf Coast, where they still harvest wild oysters, they still have a set season for oystering. But everywhere else, baby oysters are “made” in hatcheries, so natural reproduction is not a real issue.


But still, oysters grown in cold water are better so just follow the rule.




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