What should I be aware of while eating raw oysters?












3














I've never eaten a raw oyster, mainly because I am afraid of the dangers involved. I'd like to try it however, and I'm trying to find what is the best way.



I was thinking about trying first at a restaurant and then at home. So, both when eating out and buying for home, what precautions should be taken to avoid the risks from raw oysters?










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  • Where do you live, and where would you procure your oysters?
    – moscafj
    2 hours ago
















3














I've never eaten a raw oyster, mainly because I am afraid of the dangers involved. I'd like to try it however, and I'm trying to find what is the best way.



I was thinking about trying first at a restaurant and then at home. So, both when eating out and buying for home, what precautions should be taken to avoid the risks from raw oysters?










share|improve this question







New contributor




Paul92 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.




















  • Where do you live, and where would you procure your oysters?
    – moscafj
    2 hours ago














3












3








3


1





I've never eaten a raw oyster, mainly because I am afraid of the dangers involved. I'd like to try it however, and I'm trying to find what is the best way.



I was thinking about trying first at a restaurant and then at home. So, both when eating out and buying for home, what precautions should be taken to avoid the risks from raw oysters?










share|improve this question







New contributor




Paul92 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











I've never eaten a raw oyster, mainly because I am afraid of the dangers involved. I'd like to try it however, and I'm trying to find what is the best way.



I was thinking about trying first at a restaurant and then at home. So, both when eating out and buying for home, what precautions should be taken to avoid the risks from raw oysters?







seafood






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Paul92 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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share|improve this question







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  • Where do you live, and where would you procure your oysters?
    – moscafj
    2 hours ago


















  • Where do you live, and where would you procure your oysters?
    – moscafj
    2 hours ago
















Where do you live, and where would you procure your oysters?
– moscafj
2 hours ago




Where do you live, and where would you procure your oysters?
– moscafj
2 hours ago










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















4














Usually for a business it's up to the oyster shucker to worry about the quality and you're to just enjoy.



You can tell if the oyster is bad if it has an off smell. Much like fish, fresh oysters won't give that off rotten fishy smell and tend to smell mild.



Many people suck them whole but you should chew oysters before swallowing to taste if there's anything wrong. If there something not tasting properly don't chance it, spit it out!



If you are buying oysters to shuck yourself try to get some without noticeable openings or cracks in the shell because this could mean that the animal is dead and possibly rotten.



The oyster just shucked should be attached to the shell still before the oyster knife cuts it off for eating. If it's detached from the shell without cutting it, the odds of it being bad go up.



The meat should look shiny and mildly semitransparent the oyster juice should smell of the water it grew in and should be clear. Bad meat will look dried and unhealthy and the juice will be cloudy.



PS. When you shuck the oyster don't wash the meat off after shucking it; you'll lose the oyster juice and that gives it tremendous flavour!






share|improve this answer





















  • Your answer has many good points, but I would add info about purging and washing them before shucking (for at home consumption).
    – Cindy
    32 mins ago











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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









4














Usually for a business it's up to the oyster shucker to worry about the quality and you're to just enjoy.



You can tell if the oyster is bad if it has an off smell. Much like fish, fresh oysters won't give that off rotten fishy smell and tend to smell mild.



Many people suck them whole but you should chew oysters before swallowing to taste if there's anything wrong. If there something not tasting properly don't chance it, spit it out!



If you are buying oysters to shuck yourself try to get some without noticeable openings or cracks in the shell because this could mean that the animal is dead and possibly rotten.



The oyster just shucked should be attached to the shell still before the oyster knife cuts it off for eating. If it's detached from the shell without cutting it, the odds of it being bad go up.



The meat should look shiny and mildly semitransparent the oyster juice should smell of the water it grew in and should be clear. Bad meat will look dried and unhealthy and the juice will be cloudy.



PS. When you shuck the oyster don't wash the meat off after shucking it; you'll lose the oyster juice and that gives it tremendous flavour!






share|improve this answer





















  • Your answer has many good points, but I would add info about purging and washing them before shucking (for at home consumption).
    – Cindy
    32 mins ago
















4














Usually for a business it's up to the oyster shucker to worry about the quality and you're to just enjoy.



You can tell if the oyster is bad if it has an off smell. Much like fish, fresh oysters won't give that off rotten fishy smell and tend to smell mild.



Many people suck them whole but you should chew oysters before swallowing to taste if there's anything wrong. If there something not tasting properly don't chance it, spit it out!



If you are buying oysters to shuck yourself try to get some without noticeable openings or cracks in the shell because this could mean that the animal is dead and possibly rotten.



The oyster just shucked should be attached to the shell still before the oyster knife cuts it off for eating. If it's detached from the shell without cutting it, the odds of it being bad go up.



The meat should look shiny and mildly semitransparent the oyster juice should smell of the water it grew in and should be clear. Bad meat will look dried and unhealthy and the juice will be cloudy.



PS. When you shuck the oyster don't wash the meat off after shucking it; you'll lose the oyster juice and that gives it tremendous flavour!






share|improve this answer





















  • Your answer has many good points, but I would add info about purging and washing them before shucking (for at home consumption).
    – Cindy
    32 mins ago














4












4








4






Usually for a business it's up to the oyster shucker to worry about the quality and you're to just enjoy.



You can tell if the oyster is bad if it has an off smell. Much like fish, fresh oysters won't give that off rotten fishy smell and tend to smell mild.



Many people suck them whole but you should chew oysters before swallowing to taste if there's anything wrong. If there something not tasting properly don't chance it, spit it out!



If you are buying oysters to shuck yourself try to get some without noticeable openings or cracks in the shell because this could mean that the animal is dead and possibly rotten.



The oyster just shucked should be attached to the shell still before the oyster knife cuts it off for eating. If it's detached from the shell without cutting it, the odds of it being bad go up.



The meat should look shiny and mildly semitransparent the oyster juice should smell of the water it grew in and should be clear. Bad meat will look dried and unhealthy and the juice will be cloudy.



PS. When you shuck the oyster don't wash the meat off after shucking it; you'll lose the oyster juice and that gives it tremendous flavour!






share|improve this answer












Usually for a business it's up to the oyster shucker to worry about the quality and you're to just enjoy.



You can tell if the oyster is bad if it has an off smell. Much like fish, fresh oysters won't give that off rotten fishy smell and tend to smell mild.



Many people suck them whole but you should chew oysters before swallowing to taste if there's anything wrong. If there something not tasting properly don't chance it, spit it out!



If you are buying oysters to shuck yourself try to get some without noticeable openings or cracks in the shell because this could mean that the animal is dead and possibly rotten.



The oyster just shucked should be attached to the shell still before the oyster knife cuts it off for eating. If it's detached from the shell without cutting it, the odds of it being bad go up.



The meat should look shiny and mildly semitransparent the oyster juice should smell of the water it grew in and should be clear. Bad meat will look dried and unhealthy and the juice will be cloudy.



PS. When you shuck the oyster don't wash the meat off after shucking it; you'll lose the oyster juice and that gives it tremendous flavour!







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered 2 hours ago









Jade So

753119




753119












  • Your answer has many good points, but I would add info about purging and washing them before shucking (for at home consumption).
    – Cindy
    32 mins ago


















  • Your answer has many good points, but I would add info about purging and washing them before shucking (for at home consumption).
    – Cindy
    32 mins ago
















Your answer has many good points, but I would add info about purging and washing them before shucking (for at home consumption).
– Cindy
32 mins ago




Your answer has many good points, but I would add info about purging and washing them before shucking (for at home consumption).
– Cindy
32 mins ago










Paul92 is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.










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