bandcool.com bandcool.com
   Main Page -> About Us -> Privacy -> Terms of Use -> Add Your Link -> Add Article
Search:   
Add Url
 

People & Society

Travel & Accommodation

Fashion & Relationships

Investment & Finance

Self Enhancement

Children

Property & Estate

Health & Hygiene

Education & Reference

Jobs & Employment

Policies & Law

Issues & News

Family & Home

Food & Recipe

Culture & Art

Internet & Computers

Indoor Games

Recreation & Entertainment

Shopping & Auction

Business & Commerce

Adventure & Sports

Science & Research

Automobile & Automotive

Medicine & Treatment

 

Main Page –› Food & Recipe –› Cooking & Preperation
 

Lobster Q & A

 
Author: Anne Clarke

Are you interested in cooking lobster for yourself? Why only order lobster from a restaurant when you cook one for yourself at home? Here are some questions and answers that will help guide you in your plans of cooking a lobster.

Q: Why must the lobster be alive when you cook it?

A: Technically, you do not have to throw a live lobster into the pot to boil to death. But it is important that the lobster is recently deceased because lobsters decay very quickly after death and can therefore present health risks.

Q: Which is the most humane way to kill a lobster?

A: Many people say that plunging a heavy chefs knife into the back of a lobsters head is the most humane way to kill it. Of course, whether you kill it this way or by sticking it head first into boiling water, the lobster may very well continue to flop around for a bit after death, and this can be disturbing. Just realize that with all meats that we humans eat, the animal has to have died beforehand. And although you may find it more difficult to do the killing yourself, you must know that the lobster was going to come to its end somehow.

Q: How do I cook a lobster?

A: You can either boil or steam your lobster. To boil a lobster, fill a large lobster pot full of salted water (1 tablespoon of salt per quart of water). Bring this to a rolling boil and then place the lobster or lobsters into the pot, making sure that you completely submerge them. Cook 1 to 2 pound lobsters for around 18 minutes and 2+ pound lobsters for 22-25 minutes. If you choose to steam your lobsters, place only 2 inches of salted water into a large pot. Place your lobsters into the pot and cover it tightly. They should be cooked for the same time as listed above. The pigment of the lobster will trun from brown and greenish-blue to a bright red and red-brown after cooking.

Q: How do I eat a lobster?

A: Be sure to let the lobster first cool after cooking. Then twist the large claws off at the joints and crack the claws with a nutcracker or a small hammer. Then bend the body back away from the tail until it cracks and you can remove the tail. Break off the flippers of the tail and push the tail meat out of the tail in one piece. Then be sure to take out the black vein of the tail and to get rid of it. Discard the green lobster liver (or save it to use in sauces). Realize that there will be meat in the four cavities where the small legs join the body and also in the small walking legs of larger lobsters. Most people enjoy eating their lobster meat dipped in melted butter.

Q: Wait a minute what exactly is a lobster?

A: Lobster are members of the decapod (ten feet) family. There are two types of lobster found in the United States. The northern American lobster is the basic kind of lobster that is found on the East Coast and the spiny lobster found off the coast of Florida. The spiny lobster does not have any claws and it is only a distant relative to the northern lobster. The shovel nose lobster has a flattened face and is found in tropical waters. Freshwater lobster (also called crayfish) are very colorful. There are actually more than 30 varieties of lobster that can be found throughout the whole world.

Author Bio:
Anne Clarke is an expert on this subject. Anne has written several articles in the past on this topic.
You can search for this article using: cooking recipes, chinese cooking, solar cooking, cooking light recipes, microwave cooking
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Sea Foam
 
A Pease Journey
 
Pure Kona Coffee
 
Fun & Healthy Snacks for Kids
 
Sweets For Your Sweet
 
Cooking Filet Mignon
 
Welcome to the Middle Aged Diet
 
Eat smart
 
Hurricane Power Outages and Cooking Your Coffee
 
A Trip to France
 
 
 
 

10 Table Manners Every Family Should Practice

Today there is tons of information both in book form and on the Internet addressing business etiquet ... - Dee Davis
 

DMAE - Good For Your Brawn and Brain

DMAE is a memory booster substance common to a number of drugs that are known to stabilize cell memb ... - chester
 

How Is Kona Coffee Different?

In order to be called ?Kona Coffee,? coffee must be grown in a small area on the West Coast of the B ... - JD Sheveland
 
 

Coffee and How to Buy Related Products and Goods

Coffee is a fantastic drink and has some amazing gedgets to help us take advantage of it, learn the ... - Carol Hansonly
 

The True Hystory of Tiramisu'

Open an old Italian cookbook, browse through the index and... surprise! No Tiramisu'. My first encou ... - Anna Maria Volpi
 

Gano Coffee - Can Coffee Be Good For You?

Coffee, in all sorts, could be a ?pick me up drink ? or a ? real downer-down the shaft-drink? depend ... - Terry Dunn
 

Fun & Healthy Snacks for Kids

Looking for a quick and healthy snack for the kids? Here are a few tasty ideas that you can surprise ... - Deborah Shelton
 

Ginseng Can Play a Key Role in Your Health

For more than 5,000 years, the Chinese have promoted ginseng as an herbal energy booster and overall ... - Rodney Wright
 
 
   Main Page -> Privacy -> Terms of Use
Copyright © 2008 www.bandcool.com