Thursday, August 8, 2013

Oysters Again

For many years the joy of oysters passed me by. My father, on occasion, and usually for no special reason, would arrive home with oysters. He brought them home in tall thin bottles looking suspiciously like specimen jars.

I don't think it was until my mother and I started our illicit outings to Long Reef on Sydney's northern beaches that I came to appreciate an oyster. There was no pre-meditation from recollection. The outings usually involved taking our young kelpie pup (named Haggis by my Scottish father as he said she was a bit of everything) in the car down to Long Reef. Once on the reef, my mother would produce a screwdriver from her pocket, (last seen in the boot of the car in the toolbox - perhaps there was an element of pre-meditation after all) and away we would go. We never took any home. We just had a feed and left.

Years later I ate oysters bought at a pub in Sydney. It was 1978 and, along with a couple of thousand other Australians, I had a terrible bout of gastroenteritis after heavy rain had caused contamination by sewage. It was over two weeks before I realised I wasn't going to die! For information on this outbreak here is the link.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/514174.
The good news is, however, that oyster farming is seriously monitored these days in Australia and around the world.

 It does amaze me the amount of literature written about these precious bivalves. Way at the top of the Nobel Prize for Oyster Writing would have to be  Mary Frances Kennedy Fisher's, 'Consider the Oyster' (1941) although it certainly isn't the earliest. I have recently read Sex, Death and Oysters by Robb Walsh and it has inspired me to learn more about their place in culinary history and to also look at current day farming methods, sustainability and where to go from here. For those with an interest in the oyster industry, especially on the south coast of NSW, you could do worse than follow David Maidment Oysters blogsite.  For recipes, The House of Oysters is hard to beat and also includes interesting sections on the life of the oyster and the history of oysters in Tasmania.

My interest in oysters also gives me an excuse to delve into the wonderful world of accessories for oyster dining! These vintage oyster plates I found on Pinterest are glorious!
 http://media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com/originals/06/e9/87/06e98774700540f982de10dc09695c5c.jpg
I have already started my collection although I have yet to find a Limoges oyster plate at my local Narooma New and Used or the Narooma Vinnie's but I live in hope. And don't let me start on oyster print fabric!

Consider the oyster and enjoy.











1 comment:

  1. Love the oyster story - particularly the story about Edith, Haggis and your good self going down to Long Reef - can picture Edith with a mischievous grin getting the screwdriver from the boot. Yet to get to the Wagonga Inlet and thereabouts for a sortie but it is on the agenda. Lou

    ReplyDelete