Showing posts with label maine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label maine. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 26, 2012

What to do with 16 Lobster Shells

Every year in Maine's Moody Beach, we have a big lobster dinner, outside. Everyone gets their own lobster, even the kids who are barely bigger than the sea bugs themselves. Then we are faced with a fairly awesome problem -- what are we going to do with all the shells?

In the past, we would throw them in a heap with leftover rubber bands and crumpled up napkins and toss it. But then someone pointed out the flavor waste and made lobster stock last year. She wasn't at the cottage for lobster dinner night this year, so Rob and I took it upon ourselves to see what we could do with the leftovers. I liked to think of it as an episode of Dinner: Impossible, only, you know -- not terrible.

We did a bit of research on Epicurious and Chowhound trying to find a good lobster stock recipe, but a lot of the instructions we found called for two or three lobster shells. Ha! Instead of multiplying everything by eight, we just looked for similar techniques and ingredients, took what we liked and ran with it.

First comes the task of taking all the leftover meat and gills and tomalley and gristle out of the cavities. It's tempting to want to use the edible meaty parts -- like when the kids forgot about the entire second claw -- but its really best to concentrate on the simplicity of the shells for full flavor.



Drizzle with olive oil and bake the shells in the oven at 350 for 5-10 minutes to bring out the flavor of the shells.

Meanwhile, chop up the aromatics. For this many lobster shells, you need a lot of carrots, celery, garlic and shallots. Remember that this is an awesome problem and stop complaining about how all that chopping makes your hand crampy. 



Sautee the aromatics with olive oil until it smells like you want to stick your face in the stewpot. Then start adding the lobster bodies and mash them up as you go. A wooden spoon does alright. Watch for flying lobster parts.



Now add some herbs. I think the best greenery for lobster stock is a bit of thyme and lots of tarragon.



Now the liquid. We used water and a little white wine. Simmer as long as you can. We left it on the stovetop while we flew kites on the beach for a few hours. Let it cook down to a nice rich color. The fragrance should reach over to the next room.




The next part is kind of gross, so I didn't take pictures. I started to second guess the whole thing but it's always darkest before the dawn, right?

Scoop out your concoction, blend in the blender, and press through a cheesecloth. It sounds easy, but there will be so many little tiny shells threatening to rip holes right through the cloth. Just continue scooping, blending, sifting, and pressing. What comes out the other wide of the cloth, thankfully, won't look so goopy and brown.

There will be a lot of stock. Freeze what you can. We took most of it and used it as a base for fish stew. While it re-simmered, we added potatoes and whatever other veggies we could find around the cottage. If the corn wasn't so amazing this year, there might have been leftovers for the soup, but there wasn't.


Earlier in the day we'd headed to the store and picked out whatever looked fresh in the seafood department. We settled on some sea scallops, hake, and maybe some haddock. Chopped into generous chunks and dropped into the stew about 5 minutes before serving time, the fish was perfectly cooked and completely enveloped in rich lobstery deliciousness. We scooped out just enough for 16 bowls. We settled back outside for dinner. The lobster life cycle was complete.

Thursday, July 7, 2011

Fun Summer Treats

Play doh ice cream from Hershey's in Nags Head, North Carolina


Lobster roll from the Lobster Joint in Greenpoint, Brooklyn


White chocolate nonpareils from Perkins Cove Candies, Ogunquit, Maine


Cashew caramel ice cream from Annabelle's, Portsmouth, New Hampshire


Beer sampler from Portsmouth Brewery, New Hampshire


Popovers (with maple butter!) from Popovers on the Square, Portsmouth, New Hampshire


Molasses taffy from the Goldenrod in York, Maine


Roquefort, cheddar and red pepper-studded sheep's milk Rustico Peperoncino from Corks n Curds, Portsmouth, New Hampshire


Coffee frozen custard at Kill Devil's, Outer Banks, North Carolina

Sunday, June 13, 2010

Lobster Roll Fever

A few weekends ago, Rob and I headed up to Maine to do some work on his family's summer cottage. It was a long day of scraping, painting and re-painting, but at the end of the day it was all made worth it with a lobster roll from Lobster in the Rough.

This place is more like one of those day camps that schools take kids at the end of the year than a restaurant. Except instead of horseback riding and mini golf, this place has an outdoor sports bar, horseshoes, karaoke, bonfires, a playground and the best lobster roll I've ever had in my life. Two tails, four claws with just the right amount of mayo on a split bun.


I should have shirts made that say "Will work for lobster." Who else would wear one?

This lobster roll got me craving the buttery, soft textures of the perfect Maine food, so I finally gave in the other day and headed up to the Urban Lobster Shack in midtown on my lunch break. Everyone on Yelp was complaining that its too small and too expensive, but I gotta say that these people must have never been to Maine. You can spend up to $18 for a small but decent lobster roll up north. Here, ten dollars gets you a tasty, normal sized roll, plus cole slaw AND a salad. What's everyone's problem?

While it obviously was not as fantastic as Lobster in the Rough, I gotta say this was a pretty solid lobster roll. A few good chunks of meat, although some of the meat on top is strangely shredded. The chunks of celery were a little large for my taste, but the extra butter on the split roll made up for that. For a lobster roll in midtown that satisfies the craving, I say its definitely worth the $10.

Lobster in the Rough (Behind the Lobster Barn)
Open mid-May through October
1000 Route 1, York, Maine
(207) 363-4721

Urban Lobster Shack
805 Third Ave, betw 49th & 5oth streets
(Lower level in the Crystal Mall)