Oysters
are another popular street food or appetizer in Trinidad and Tobago, especially
among local men. In Trinidad, they are harvested mainly from the Claxton Bay
Mangrove System. The species of oysters that are harvested there are
“Crassostrea rhizophorae“. However, these bivalve mollusks are also harvested
through out coastal areas in Trinidad (generally on the west coast). In recent
years, the popularity of raw oysters has made the occupation of harvesting
oysters a very lucrative business.
"Don’t
mind we have the streetlight, the flambeau is the traditional light of the oyster-man:
once you see the flambeau lighting, that mean the oyster-man is here in
progress; any time you see the flambeau out, that mean it’s finished."
Blackie - oyster vendor
Claxton Bay Mangrove |
In
Trinidad and Tobago, oysters generally are sold raw as a cocktail, served up
with local seasonings, lime and of course pepper. Served by the glass holding
one or two dozen oysters or, traditionally, on the opened half-shell, oysters
in Trinidad are invariably accompanied by a seasoned, ceviche-like sauce in at
least two, and often three, gradations: the possible “cool”; and the mandatory
“mild” and “hot”. All three are likely to contain Trinidad’s omnipresent chadon
beni (consider it cilantro-plus), lime juice, brown sugar, garlic, tomato
ketchup and more; the amount of local hot peppers added is the difference
between cool, mild and hot. Trinidadians, as a group, tend to be far closer to
the fiery than the mild spectrum in matters of the palate. Be careful...!
Oyster shooter complete with Trinidad's very own Angostura bitters! |
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ReplyDeleteI've never had oysters but my mom did in her hey-day did! Scandalous!
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