8893
Curiouser
- Joined
- Aug 26, 2011
- Messages
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$16.Lobster landing $15/16 forget the price but it's one of those numbers
$16.Lobster landing $15/16 forget the price but it's one of those numbers
Yes, I go to Turks when the line is too long at Jimmies. Good food.All this talk about Jimmies, yet no ones brought up Turk's across the street. The food is head and shoulders above the other Savin Rock seafood restaurants.
Hand raised.Some Yarders actually know their food better than basketball.
Are they flying the lobsters in from the East Coast, too? If so, that makes sense. If not, I can't imagine anyone who was ever a fan of New England lobster finding a Pacific lobster remotely comparable, much less better.Eh, my parents spend half the year on the cape. For me, a lobster roll from Connie and Ted's is as good or better than any you can find in New England. Matter of taste I guess.
I also have theory about salt/salinity. I think people develop a preference for the taste/smell of the salt in the air and water that is local/regional to them. Eating raw oysters drives this home for me. I have a very strong preference for oysters from the Northeast, especially the Maritimes, but also Maine, Rhode Island, MA and CT (I'm also a the-colder-the-water-the-better-the-oyster guy). As I've tried to figure out why I don't like raw West Coast oysters or Gulf Coast oysters nearly as much, I've deduced that a lot of it has to do with the salinity. Then I thought about things like the salt-sea air. When I smell the salt in the air around New England--even the strong low-tide, swampy smell--it's refreshing to me. When I smell it in, say, New Orleans, it smells off, swampy and kind of stale to me. Not refreshing at all. But in talking with locals down there, they have the opposite reaction.
They do but the better fried stuff is next door in the marina at Costello'sSurprised I haven't seen Abbott's Lobster in the Rough in Noank mentioned, went last summer while visiting CT., looked like they did a crazy business.
Open all year too!Skippers Seafood Restaurant • 167 Main Street Niantic, CT
Really Good!!!
It's been a LONG time, but when I was a kid, Jimmies of Savin Rock was the be-all, end-all. My guess is that the nostalgia is better than the taste.
Are they flying the lobsters in from the East Coast, too? If so, that makes sense. If not, I can't imagine anyone who was ever a fan of New England lobster finding a Pacific lobster remotely comparable, much less better.
Definitely a matter of taste.
I also have theory about salt/salinity. I think people develop a preference for the taste/smell of the salt in the air and water that is local/regional to them. Eating raw oysters drives this home for me. I have a very strong preference for oysters from the Northeast, especially the Maritimes, but also Maine, Rhode Island, MA and CT (I'm also a the-colder-the-water-the-better-the-oyster guy). As I've tried to figure out why I don't like raw West Coast oysters or Gulf Coast oysters nearly as much, I've deduced that a lot of it has to do with the salinity. Then I thought about things like the salt-sea air. When I smell the salt in the air around New England--even the strong low-tide, swampy smell--it's refreshing to me. When I smell it in, say, New Orleans, it smells off, swampy and kind of stale to me. Not refreshing at all. But in talking with locals down there, they have the opposite reaction.
Mickey's in East Hartford does good fried fish. The fish sandwich is a steal M-W at only $4.29.
Waq, do you know if that's the same Mickey's that used to be on the Silas Deane in Wethersfield? Great chili dogs and fried clams a long time ago there.
That's great to hear, I'm glad you made it. The owner's a Rhode Island guy.
Consistently, the best is Matunuck Oyster Bar in Rhody. The quality is still good in-spite of it becoming very high volume.
http://www.rhodyoysters.com/ Have their own beds right there. My favorite calamari.
For me, it's a matter of the oyster meat itself (size, composition, texture) and the brine in which it sits; the salt/salinity only comes into play with respect to the latter. As I understand it, and without refreshing my memory, there are different strains of oysters, and almost all of the East Coast oysters are based on the Virginica strain; while most of the West Coast oysters are based on a different strain (don't recall the name). In any event, there is one West Coast oyster that I consistently love equally if not better than any East Coast oyster, the Totten Inlet Virginica. That's an oyster from Puget Sound, but as the name suggests, it is an East Coast strain. I wonder if that's one of the ones you preferred.Interesting thought. Not sure I fit the bill, but I'm open to the point. I was saying this summer, I've been lucky enough to have oysters (I love 'em) from Wellfleet, MA, Chesapeake Bay, MD, New Orleans, LA and the Puget Sound in Seattle, WA. Almost the "4 corners" of the US oyster world. The Puget Sound oysters were the best I've ever had. Very clean tasting, not at all like low tide. I'd put Wellfleet 2nd, then Chesapeake Bay and last, New Orleans. I did think they were really swampy. Didn't stop me from eating almost 2 dozen....but you get my point.
Whatever you do, get the chowder too.I really shouldnt do this, and I blame it on all of you, but my mouth has been watering for 24 hours....
I am compelled to got to Johnny Ads right this second. About to head out the door.
Maybe Ill periscope my delicious whole bellies (or lobster roll, Im having trouble deciding) as payback for putting this in my head.
Fried is not good for you. Tasty, yes, but not good.End of May heading to CT and we were looking forward to revisiting Dinos. Seems they've gone downhill.
So what can people recommend? Thanks in advance.
Really?Fried is not good for you. Tasty, yes, but not good.
Really?
Well, that's a bummer.