How to Eat Oysters
While eating raw oysters presents a slight risk of a Vibrio infection, it’s still the most popular choice among locals and visitors. Typically served on a bed of ice, a freshly shucked raw oyster should smell like a light sea breeze. To eat, check that the oyster is detached from its shell, and then pick it up and tilt it, so the oyster slides into your mouth!
Steamed, baked, and grilled oysters are often enjoyed with Saltine crackers, a dash of hot sauce, and a squeeze of lemon. Oysters Rockefeller (topped with herbs and bread crumbs) or grilled oysters dusted with parmesan cheese and butter are also delicious.
If dining at a raw bar, pay attention to the oyster shucker. The speed and precision of an oyster shucker is an art form unto itself. And it just so happens that four-time U.S. Oyster Festival Champion and five-time Florida Seafood Festival Champion Honor Allen lives and shucks oysters in nearby Panama City Beach.
Why You Should Eat Oysters
Because they’re delicious! Sharing a tray of oysters is also a fun way to get the conversation moving. Need more convincing? How about all the health benefits? It turns out the small but mighty oyster is a nutrient powerhouse. High in zinc, manganese, copper, vitamins D and B12, and omega-3 fatty acids, oysters are a low-calorie way to treat yourself.
They’ve also been rumored (persistently) to help out in the love department. While science has yet to prove this, we can look back to the ancient Greek empire to see where this belief began. Aphrodite, the Goddess of beauty and love, was said to be born from the sea in an oyster. The word aphrodisiac is even derived from Aphrodite!