<h2 id="THE_LOBSTER">THE LOBSTER.</h2>
<p class="psub"><b>Remarks on the Lobster.</b>—It takes a
lobster about five years to arrive at maturity, or
over ten inches in length. The spawning season
depends upon the temperature of the water.
Along the Sound, the season begins in June,
and ends in September.</p>
<p class="psub"><b>The Season for Lobster.</b>—Lobsters
are at their best before the spawning season.
They are then filled with roe, or coral as the
red spawn is called by some. This is a great
delicacy, and is highly esteemed by epicures.
After the spawning season, which is late in the
summer, they are in very poor condition, and
should not be offered for sale until cool weather.</p>
<p>The green part in the body of the lobster is
called the tom-alley by New-England folks. It
is excellent eating.</p>
<p>The external spawn adhering to the tail of
the female lobster, when not highly developed,
is edible, and is used in garnishing and making
lobster butter, paste, and cardinal-fish sauces.</p>
<p>It is a curious fact, that the lobster changes
or re-makes a shell from eight to ten times the
first year, five to seven the second, three to four
the third, and from two to three the fourth<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">46</span>
year. So says Professor G. O. Sars of Norway,
about the European lobster, whose habits agree
more or less closely with those of the American
lobster.</p>
<p class="psub"><b>Soft-shell Lobster not edible.</b>—After
the fifth year the change of shell is only annual.
A soft-shell or shedder lobster, unlike
the soft-shell crab, is not edible, and if eaten is
likely to produce ill effects. In a soft condition
the lobster itself is sick, and is therefore unfit for
food.</p>
<p class="psub"><b>Selecting Lobsters.</b>—Always select a firm
shell, of a deep dark-green color. Light-colored,
thin-shelled lobsters are likely to be lean and
poor. When plunged into the boiling water,
the joints contract, and the tail draws under,
provided the lobster was alive at the time of
immersion. If dead when boiled, the tendons are
relaxed, the claws hang loosely, the tail will not
possess a spring-like tenacity when straightened
out. Select the former, and reject the latter.</p>
<p class="psub"><b>Value of the Lobster as Food.</b>—According
to Professor Atwater of Middletown,
Conn., the nutritive value of the flesh of the
lobster, compared with beef as a standard and
reckoned at 100, is 61 to 97. Forty per cent
of the lobster is edible, the remainder is shell
and waste.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">47</span></p>
<p>Buckland says, “That phosphorus exists in
large quantities, may be easily proved. A
lobster in hot weather, when it ceases to be
fresh, assumes a highly phosphorescent appearance
when seen in the dark, equal if not superior
to that of a glow-worm or luminous centipede.
This light increases by friction.... The presence
of phosphorus in the lobster is of great
importance to the consumers of these sea
luxuries. There is no substance which conveys
phosphorus so readily into the human system
in an agreeable form, and which the system so
readily and quickly assimilates, as the flesh of
crabs and lobsters.”</p>
<p class="psub"><b>Broiled Lobster.</b>—Select alive and active
lobster not less than ten and a half inches long.
(If below this measurement, the dealer should
be arrested for breaking the law which protects
the lobster.) Split it in two lengthwise, which
instantly kills it. Remove the entrail through
the fleshy part of the tail, and the crop or
stomach near the head. This done, there are
two ways of preparing it for table. One is as
follows:—</p>
<p>Remove the flesh from the tail, and brush
over it a little melted butter or olive-oil; broil it
gently, but not too well done. Heat the shell,
put the meat back in the shell again, add more<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">48</span>
butter, salt, pepper, and serve on hot plates.
The body parts may be boiled, and furnish
dainty pickings for a late meal.</p>
<p>The other way is that which is generally
adopted by restaurants. Brush a little butter
over the entire half of the green lobster; broil
the shell side thoroughly first, then turn, and
broil the other. Serve with maitre-d’hôtel sauce.</p>
<p>A lobster that has once been boiled and then
broiled is so thoroughly over-cooked as to be
very indigestible.</p>
<p class="psub"><b>Lobster Croquettes, with Pease.</b>—Boil
one-half pint of milk, thicken it with a tablespoonful
of flour, and let it become cold. Mince
the meat of a one-pound can of lobster, or one
pound of fresh lobster; when very fine, add a
saltspoonful of salt and half a saltspoonful of
white pepper. Moisten the lobster mince with
the thickened milk, and work the whole to a
paste; add very little bread-crumb if too thin;
let it become amalgamated over the range, and
place in the ice-box until wanted; then shape it
into neat rolls or cones; dip them in egg and
crumbs, and fry in plenty of hot fat. Arrange
the forms neatly on a dish, put round them a
border of pease, and serve.</p>
<p class="psub"><b>Lobsters en Brochette.</b>—Instead of boiling
the lobster-tails, cut them in pieces, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">49</span>
arrange these on small skewers, alternated with
small pieces of bacon; brush melted butter over
them, and either broil or bake them; serve with
sauce tartare (which see on p. <SPAN href="#Page_84">84</SPAN>).</p>
<p class="psub"><b>Deviled Lobster.</b>—Take two live lobsters,
remove the tails, split them in two, and make
several incisions in them crosswise. Mix together
half a teaspoonful of salt, a saltspoonful
each of dry mustard and curry, and half a saltspoonful
of white pepper, add a tablespoonful of
oil; mix, spread it over the lobsters, and broil
them. When done, return to the shells, which
should have been kept hot for the purpose;
pour a little melted butter over them, and serve.</p>
<p class="psub"><b>Stewed Lobster, à la Créole.</b>—Remove
the tail part of the meat from three green lobsters;
split them in two lengthwise; remove the
thread-like intestine. Melt an ounce of butter in
a deep frying-pan; add the lobster; toss it for a
few minutes in the butter; add salt and pepper
and half a pint of hot water; cover, and simmer
three-quarters of an hour; drain, and reduce
the water one-half by rapid boiling. Put in
a saucepan half an ounce of butter and a
tablespoonful of minced onion; fry brown, and
add three peeled and sliced tomatoes, one sweet
pepper, four okra pods cut small, and half a teaspoonful
of salt. Allow these to cook fifteen<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">50</span>
minutes, add the broth, and simmer until
reduced to a pulp; rub through a sieve; put
this <i>puree</i> on a hot dish, place the lobster on
top, add a little lemon-juice, and serve.</p>
<p class="psub"><b>Curry of Lobster.</b>—Remove the meat
from two boiled lobsters, cut it into neat pieces;
take all green fat and coral, and set them aside;
mix the green fat with a heaping spoonful
of curry-powder. Squeeze out the juice of three
limes, and add to it half a teaspoonful of powdered
sugar. Put into a frying-pan an ounce
of butter; when creamed add a teaspoonful of
minced onion browned a little; now add the
mixed curry-powder; dissolve a teaspoonful of
rice-flour in cold water, add this to a pint of hot
water or soup-stock, simmer until thick; now
add the lobster, and simmer twenty minutes
longer. Wash and dry the coral, separate it.
Prepare a border of rice on a dish, and over it
sprinkle the coral and eggs (if any); pour the
curry in the centre, and serve.</p>
<p class="psub"><b>Lobster Salad.</b>—Take two live hen (female)
lobsters; boil them thirty minutes; drain. When
cold, break them apart; crack the claws, and
if the tail-fins are covered with eggs remove
them carefully. Take out the sand-pouch found
near the head; split the fleshy part of the tail
in two lengthwise, remove the small long entrail<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">51</span>
found therein. Adhering to the body-shell
may be found a layer of creamy fat; save this,
and also the green fat in the body of the
lobster (called tom-alley by New-Englanders),
and the coral. If celery is used, tear the lobster
into shreds with forks; if lettuce, cut the
lobster into half-inch pieces. Place the salad
herb in a bowl, add the lobster and the fat, and
pour over it a rich mayonnaise; garnish with
the claws and heads, tufts of green, hard-boiled
eggs, etc. The lobster eggs may be separated,
and sprinkled over the mayonnaise. The coral
is used for coloring mayonnaise, and also butter,
which is then used in decorating salmon and
other dark fish used in salads.</p>
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