Letter: Cooking lobsters without torture

Roger Maylor
Tuesday 19 November 1996 19:02 EST
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Sir: Annie Bell's article (Magazine, 16 November) on ways of dispatching live lobsters rightly condemns the barbaric practice of plunging them into boiling water. Among the few alternative methods she considered there was no mention of the one advocated by Philip Harben (The Grammar of Cookery, 1965).

"By immersing a live shellfish in water at cooking temperature you kill it and cook it in one operation. But ... to plunge a lobster or a crab, living, into boiling water is to torture it. Crabs shed claws (a sure sign of terror in the crab) and lobsters scrabble desperately up the side of the pot.

"This is the way to do it. Pour mildly tepid water - not cold or hot - over the live fish. This stuns it. Bring the water rapidly towards the boil, and the lobster will die before recovering consciousness - not a flicker of a whisker."

ROGER MAYLOR

Sunderland

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