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Tips for a great raw oyster program

Tara Fitzpatrick, Senior Editor

May 3, 2017

7 Min Read
oysters
Oysters on the half shell at Ocean PrimeOcean Prime

What leads up to that first luxurious gulp of oyster? From purchasing to storing to shucking and serving, here’s how to create an oyster experience that engages all the senses. 

Presentation: The visual

Every oyster has its own beauty. Putting half shells in the spotlight can be one mark of an oyster program done right. 

The seafood tower at Ocean Prime Boston, part of a 14-unit chain of upscale seafood restaurants by Cameron Mitchell, tends to turn heads when delivered to the table.

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The Smoking Shellfish Tower

The tower — which includes oysters on the half shell, as well as other seafood — is draped in bright green seaweed and billowing with puffs of smoke, thanks to pellets of dry ice and a last-second splash of water. 

“Once we send one out of the kitchen and the server walks it out, we know there will be a bunch more orders for the tower coming in,” said Mitch Brumels, the restaurant’s executive chef. “It’s kind of a show.”

The right kind of ice is key for serving oysters, whether on something elaborate like the tower or a simple platter with a drain to keep the presentation from getting waterlogged. At Ocean Prime, one ice machine is dedicated to oysters, producing ice that’s perfectly flaked.

The setting is part of the presentation at Merroir in Topping, Va., the site of the Chesapeake Bay oyster farm and the location that started it all for the Rappahannock Oyster Co.’s group of restaurants.

Brothers Travis and Ryan Croxton’s growing oyster restaurant empire began on the scenic plot of land and sea where they revived their grandfather’s oyster company — and, some would say, the Chesapeake Bay’s whole oyster farming industry by bringing the latest advances in aquaculture to the area. 

The Croxton brothers have two locations in Richmond, Va., including Rappahannock restaurant and Rapp Session oyster saloon; as well as oyster bar locations in Washington, D.C., Charleston, S.C., and another slated to open in Los Angeles in September.

For Ryan Croxton, that first location on Chesapeake Bay is the purest, most stripped-down experience, truly connecting the oyster eater with the water.

“Merroir is one in a million. It is not repeatable,” Croxton said. “That’s where the farm is, and chefs would always ask me to come try our oysters. So we opened a tasting room.

RappSession_593_1.jpg

oysters., rappsession

“It’s very low key and simplistic,” he added. “It’s not a chef-led restaurant like our other restaurants. It’s more about honoring what comes out of the bay. We don’t want the place to ever get complicated.”

Merroir_604_1.jpg

The name Merroir is a play on the word terroir, and in the same way that soil and climate affects the taste of wine, the state of the ocean influences the flavor of oysters.

“We ripped off the terminology of wine and the whole business approach, and people really responded to it,” Croxton said.

Merroir_165_1.jpg

Taste and how to talk about it

To feed the need for oyster satisfaction, servers must be able to speak with authority on the characteristics and backstory of each oyster on the menu.

Merroir_218-2_1.jpg“As a staff, both the back of the house and the front of the house, we all taste the oysters,” said Bobby Palmquist, executive chef at Seattle’s Walrus and the Carpenter seafood restaurant.

On a recent day, Hama Hama, Eldon and Harstine oysters from nearby Hood Canal and Peale Passage dominated the menu.

“We arrange them on the menu from mild to increasing brininess,” Palmquist said. “And before service starts, at our pre-shift meeting, we discuss any new oysters, both flavor and growth method." 

Oysters from Murder Point, Ala., for example, are farm-raised near Mobile, and an example of oysters from the Gulf of Mexico. The dangerous-sounding oysters have been praised by chefs around the country. 

There’s a story behind the name. The oysters were central to a land dispute and a homicide last century. Murder Point Oysters are described as having a “full, rich, creamy taste with a light metallic finish and a drop of butter,” according to the farm’s website, which uses the tagline “Oysters worth killing for.” 

Saltine, an oyster bar in Jackson, Miss., is not far from Murder Point, so the oysters are regulars on the menu there. Staying local is important, said Connor Mize, sous chef at Saltine.

But “at the same time we do enjoy varying our source points for our oysters and feature selections from around the world to keep things interesting,” he said. Staff members are encouraged to taste to know the difference.

“It’s the only surefire way for the staff to have the confidence to sell new oysters,” Mize said. “Obviously, oysters from similar regions have similar flavor profiles, but the devil’s in the details. The subtle differences are what make sourcing new oysters so enjoyable.” 

Shucking and storing: safety first

Shucking can be dangerous.

At the Walrus and the Carpenter, “we shuck wearing latex gloves and while holding the oyster, but I am totally open to whatever method works for someone as long as they can keep up and do the job,” said Palmquist.

Likewise, at Ocean Prime, the method is the shucker’s choice of what works best to crank up the shells on the seam and disconnect the meat from the shell.

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“They make a variety of different oyster shucking knives — some are more pointed and sharper and some are more blunt,” Brumels said. “We have six different kinds of knives and each person likes a different knife.” 

Since oysters are living creatures until as close to service as possible, storing them correctly is key. 

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On the line at the Walrus and the Carpenter, oysters are placed in baskets and covered with ice. Downstairs in the walk-in, oysters are stored in plastic totes and covered with a wet towel and ice on top.

Proper food-safety protocols cannot be understated.

“Oysters have an inherent risk, as they’re raw, but we strive to serve really fresh oysters,” Palmquist said. “We get deliveries four to five days per week to ensure freshness.”

In addition, Palmquist and sous chef Colin Penttenin said they regularly speak with their oyster purveyors, another step to keeping things safe.  

Sourcing: Trust your fishmonger

When Brumels of Ocean Prime first came to Boston to open that location, he made sure to carve out plenty of time to figure out from whom he’d be buying his oysters. 

“The biggest thing is having a reputable fishmonger, someone you can trust,” Brumels said. “Before we opened in Boston, I spent two weeks looking at fish purveyors.”

He looked at storage, correct temperature and cleanliness at about 14 different purveyors before settling on one that had an impressive facility.

“They hold their oysters in sea water,” he said. “A lot of purveyors will just keep them on pallets and wait for someone to order and then ship them out.”

One red flag to look for is the cleanliness of the oysters, he said.

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“Look how clean the oyster is. Some come in so dirty, and that means when they were harvested, they were never scrubbed,” Brumels said. Even though oysters get a second scrub at the restaurant before being shucked, super filthy oysters coming from your purveyor aren’t a good sign.

Harvest tags and laws about traceability are powerful tools in keeping oysters safe.

“There’s lots of record keeping,” Croxton said. “But I live with that anxiety every day: the dock, the trucking company, the shucker, the chef. … But the nice thing is, with the way traceability is in this country, there’s always a way back.” 

Brumels also stresses the job of restaurants to look at the tags on oysters. They’re legally required and will tell you where and when that oyster came out of the water. That’s another reason it’s so important to find a reputable fishmonger: Your customers will notice, he said.

“When oysters have been out of the water for too long, you can tell,” Brumels said. “The point is to get the freshest oyster you can get. So when people find a place where oysters are so fresh, so creamy, with tons of brine, they’ll come back again.”

Mignonette Mania: oyster accompaniments

Bloody Mary mix granata, frozen and scraped, for a peppery tomato flavor on ice.

—Rappahannock Oyster Co.

Lemon, freshly grated horseradish and champagne vinegar mignonette.

—The Walrus and the Carpenter 

Smoked bell pepper cocktail sauce.

—Saltine

About the Author

Tara Fitzpatrick

Senior Editor, Informa Restaurant & Food Group

Tara Fitzpatrick is Food Management’s senior editor and a contributor to Restaurant Hospitality and Nation’s Restaurant News, creating editorial content for digital, print and events. Tara holds a bachelor of science degree from the School of Journalism and Mass Communications at Kent State University. Before joining Food Management in 2008, Tara was associate editor at National Association of College Stores in Oberlin, Ohio. Prior to that, Tara worked as a newspaper reporter in her hometown of Lorain, Ohio, where she lives now. Tara is a fan of food history, legends, lore, ghost stories, urban farming and old cookbooks. 

Tara Fitzpatrick’s areas of expertise include the onsite foodservice industry (K-12 schools, colleges and universities, healthcare and B&I), menu trends, sustainability in foodservice, senior dining, farm-to-table and innovation.

Tara Fitzpatrick is a frequent webinar and podcast host and has served on the board of directors for IFEC (International Food Editors Consortium).

Tara Fitzpatrick’s experience:

Senior Editor, Food Management (Feb 2008-present)

Associate Editor, National Association of College Stores (2005-2008)

Reporter, The Morning Journal (2002-2005)

LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/tara-fitzpatrick-4a08451/

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