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Softshell Crabs


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#1 ScotteeM

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Posted 05 August 2006 - 11:19 AM

From the Black's Bar and Kitchen thread:

My wife was disappointed by the size of the soft shell crab (one, from the appetizers), but I contend that it's pretty much out of season so I wonder why it is still on the regular menu. Better in June, I am sure. At $14, we do better at home, though it was delicious, she said.

A couple of weeks ago, my husband called Wegmans to ask if they had softshell crabs, and was told the season was over. I thought the season lasted until September, with supplies waxing and waning through the summer.

In checking my facts, I found this on Virginia Seafood:

The soft-shell is the blue crab in its molted state.The molting process means an abundant supply of soft crabs from late spring to early fall, with May through September ranking as the most productive months.

So what's the real story? The live softshells that Wegmans had in June were wonderful and reasonably priced, but they don't seem to have any now.

Surely the season is longer than 1-2 months!
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#2 Pappy

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Posted 07 August 2006 - 08:24 AM

The peak of the season is probably past, but softshells are generally available around these parts through the warm part of September. It is my understanding, however, that when it gets really, really hot, the crabs (softies esp) just kinda stop moving around, stop growing, stop molting, etc. They just want to dig into the mud and stay cool. Once the really hot streak passes, you should begin to see a few more in the market.

What I can't answer is what percentage of the softshells in our markets come from the Chesapeake, and what percentage come from NC, or even LA, etc.

#3 DaveBVI

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Posted 07 August 2006 - 10:59 AM

every month, the molting peaks at full moon, and the supply generally keeps up until the October's full moon. The size/heat part of the equation I'm not so sure about. :)
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#4 ScotteeM

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Posted 07 August 2006 - 04:29 PM

every month, the molting peaks at full moon, and the supply generally keeps up until the October's full moon. The size/heat part of the equation I'm not so sure about. :)
Dave Batista

Well, tomorrow is a full moon (yippee!) although it is kind of hot. We'll see what happens this week.

Thanks!
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#5 DaveBVI

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Posted 12 August 2006 - 05:11 AM

So was I right, did availabliity peak with the August moon? :)
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#6 crackers

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Posted 15 August 2006 - 01:05 PM

From WTOP ---> clickity.

TANGIER SOUND, Md. - Softshell crabs, the delicacy that pleases gourmet palates and lines watermen's pockets, are in scarce supply this summer. "It's up there among the worst seasons. I'll put it that way," said Dwight Marshall, a Smith Island waterman who has crabbed for more than 40 years.

Crabs normally begin shedding their shells in May, starting the softshell crab season which provides the money that helps many watermen make it through the winter. The downturn in the catch this year is particularly tough because of rising fuel prices.

More than 90 percent of the state's soft crabs come from Tangier Sound and nearly every islander's living is tied to the season. Watermen from the island's three towns of Tylerton, Rhodes Point and Ewell head out every morning to check their traps or dredge the bottom, returning in the afternoon and putting their catch of molting crabs in a tank. The tanks are checked every few hours to see whether the crabs have shed their shells. Smith Island crabbers usually ship about 25 boxes a day to markets in Crisfield, each box holding up to 18 dozen soft-shells. Last month, the ferry to Crisfield carried about four boxes a trip.

While some say a cold spring may have delayed shedding until later in the summer, others are not so sure. Bill Goldsborough, senior scientist at the Chesapeake Bay Foundation, said the loss of eelgrass in Tangier Sound this spring deprived juvenile crabs of their shedding habitat. "If that die-off affected the population in such a way that would be observable, the time you would see it is in the peeler season, which would be now," Goldsborough told The (Baltimore) Sun. "My sense is that it's of a magnitude that it could have a lot of effect."

Marshall, 61, picks through grass in a crab pot that is noticeably absent of the glass shrimp, water fleas and other small creatures crabs feed on and offers another explanation. He blames pollution from sewage treatment plants and other runoff from recent heavy rains which is prompting algae blooms that rob oxygen from the water, killing the crab's prey. However, recent catches are up, with the ferry once again carrying about 15 boxes a day, raising hopes for a good end to the season. "You don't really know what kind of year it is until it all winds up and you see what's in the checkbook," Marshall said. "You have to trust in the Lord to supply your needs. I ain't never seen him fail yet."


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#7 DonRocks

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Posted 12 April 2012 - 06:39 AM

I've been hearing about soft shell crab prices in restaurants this year that are making me cringe. I'm hearing (from several people) prices of about $18 per at some of the more upscale restaurants, and they supposedly aren't very big. Anyone know what's going on in the market? Usually I'm at the vanguard of early soft shells, but this year I just haven't been.

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#8 Ferhat Yalcin

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Posted 12 April 2012 - 07:37 AM

I had a dozen `whale soft shells` came in from SC last week. I am not able to get it again until next week because of the current weather conditions in SC, fishermen can not catch, I was told. So this can easily relate to the price. Size of the crabs looked fine to me, in my 4x4 ciabatta bread the crab fills up, legs and claws go way out the bread and people love it. Something I noticed is, some of the crabs shell was not soft enough (still very edible) but not what I expect from a soft shell. I guess this will change eventually. I serve it at $16 with red pepper sauce as a sandwich.
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#9 MC Horoscope

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Posted 12 April 2012 - 02:31 PM

I had two at Jerry's in Lanham for $30 at lunch the other day. They are "stuffed" with their crab imperial, battered, and deep fried. But the soft shell crabs themselves are quite meaty, and I did not detect that the shells were tough. (Jerry's is overpriced but it's a guilty pleasure of mine now and then.)
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#10 jandres374

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Posted 04 May 2012 - 05:02 AM

They were on the menu at Black's last weekend - $33 (ouch). I had a nice softshell sandwich at the Mussle Bar last week and I think it was $16 or $17.

#11 dcs

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Posted 04 May 2012 - 05:18 AM

From Bittman, for those who want to prepare them at home: Soft-Shell Crabs: Three Methods, Four Coatings, Five Sauces

#12 squidsdc

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Posted 04 May 2012 - 09:58 AM

The ones I had in B'more last week at Mo's were $23 for what they called small, but the body was at least 3/12" across--and they served three for that price. And they were soft, and incredibly meaty with a minimum depth of at least 1 1/2".

FWIW, I noticed there is a food truck in Farragut today serving a soft shell for $14.
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#13 DanielK

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Posted 04 May 2012 - 10:30 AM

They were on the menu at Black's last weekend - $33 (ouch). I had a nice softshell sandwich at the Mussle Bar last week and I think it was $16 or $17.


That sounds comparably priced to me - I'll bet the sandwich was one crab, and the dinner at Black's was 2.

#14 squidsdc

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Posted 04 May 2012 - 12:41 PM

Report on the food truck soft shell--verrrrry good. It was served atop a salad of watercress with roasted tomatoes, carrots, beets, cucumber, spring onion and lightly dressed. I removed the items I couldn't eat, and it was still quite tasty and refreshing. The crab itself was small, but well-prepared. I think I detected a note of cumin in the saute.
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#15 deangold

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Posted 04 May 2012 - 03:03 PM

$19 for one, 26 for two. Simply griled with house summer tomato essence P{mainly for dipping the legs and bread before sopping up the juices & salad.
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#16 jandres374

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Posted 17 May 2012 - 08:03 AM

Anyone picked these up at any local seafood places this season for home cooking. Looking to make some for dinner tonight.

#17 zoramargolis

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Posted 17 May 2012 - 09:10 AM

Anyone picked these up at any local seafood places this season for home cooking. Looking to make some for dinner tonight.

Saw them on Tuesday at A&H in Bethesda. Can't recall the price, but most everything at that store is reasonably priced compared to other fish markets in the area.

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#18 genericeric

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Posted 17 May 2012 - 09:25 AM

Anyone picked these up at any local seafood places this season for home cooking. Looking to make some for dinner tonight.

Wegmans in Fairfax also had them last week, depending on where 'local' is for you

#19 jandres374

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Posted 17 May 2012 - 09:37 PM

Ended up picking some up at A&H for $4.50 each, not whales but a decent size for the price.

#20 mdt

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Posted 18 May 2012 - 06:04 AM

Ended up picking some up at A&H for $4.50 each, not whales but a decent size for the price.

I think they were $5 at Wegman's.

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#21 pjoshea13

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Posted 18 May 2012 - 11:25 AM

Here in the mountains of western NC, just north of Asheville, we have had access to excellent "local", i.e. NC, soft-shells. Cape Fear Coast Seafood is a small family business that fishes off the NC coast & sells at two locations, at the weekend. They don't catch everything that they sell, but they have access to everything caught where they operate. There is often an immense & varied choice. Very fresh.

For the past 5 weeks, I have bought 4 largish softshell crabs on the Friday. Two for dinner & two for breakfast the next day. My wife will not eat them. I have tried the traditional po boy recipe, but I recently, for health reasons, decided to adopt a modified paleolithic diet - no grains, no dairy & no starchy vegetables. Not as boring as it might sound. So, for the past few weekends, I have simply been sauteing them in butter - belly side down for 4 minutes & turned for a further 3 minutes. This has been a revelation to me. A light batter dulls the taste too much. The butter-crab flavor is bright in the mouth.

Perhaps if the crabs were not already dressed - a simple process - I might shave a minute or two off the cooking time.

My breakfasts have followed the same pattern: two crabs, sliced shitake mushrooms very lightly sauteed in butter, a good dollop of guacamole & a roasted red pepper. Simple & immensely satisfying.

Alas, there are no NC crabs this weekend.

I have also eaten crabs this year at Table, in Asheville. They get them delivered while alive, which is clearly preferable. I was told that, although the season extends into summer, the source moves south (does that make sense?) & the quality declines, and so the crabs disappear from the menu. It seems that I must now wait another year.

But this is how food used to be. As a kid growing up in England, local strawberries (the only kind) were a 7-day phenomena. Expensive on the first day; inedible on the seventh. We gorged on the third & made jam on the fifth. More or less.

On our last trip to England, we stopped by a roadside stand & bought some strawberries. They were horrible. Came from Spain (should surely have been better?). We were told that, owing to the uncertainty of the weather, strawberries were no longer grown in England on any scale.

There is a Thai restaurant in Asheville where softshells are always on the menu. I generally pass. I haven't asked where they come from, but suspect the worse. Pleasant enough, but a 3 - not a 9-10.

I owe Cape Fear Coast Seafood a huge debt in another regard. I had never tasted NC redfish until I bought from them. It is a lovely versatile fish. If I get a craving for home-made fish & chips, I wait until redfish is available. It is the perfect fish for the dish. No other fish will do.

Recipe:

Use bigger fillets of redfish. Take the thick end (4-6 oz based on appetite; two 4 oz fillets each is also good). Scaled; skin on; pin bones removed.

Mix salt & pepper to taste into 1 cup flour. I like to taste the pepper in the crunchy batter. Some people use salt alone, & sprinkle on the cooked batter. I prefer the batter to be seasoned.
Combine with one cup of good beer. Asheville is "Beer City", so naturally, a local brew.
Fold in two egg whites that have been beaten to soft peaks.

Halve the mix if cooking for two.

Heat cooking fat to 350 degrees. Dip the fillets into into the batter & drop into the hot fat. Fry until the batter is golden brown. No precise timing here. Trial & error, depending on pan size, the amount of fat, the fillet size, & the heat source. But not many minutes at all.

This is where I'll lose people. I do no not use omega-6-rich vegetable oils & I will not use canola oil. Hard to find these days, but I fall back on lard. Lard is 45% monounsaturated fatty acid - oleic acid - as in olive oil (73%). Almost a health food [LOL] - & certainly not deserving of demonization. And the batter simply does not absorb much fat. At 350 degrees, it is a light dish. Not cloying in any way. You will eat it all.

Thanks to Jaimie Oliver for the egg white tip.

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#22 wisehands

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Posted 19 May 2012 - 04:32 PM

Had great softshells at Crisfield in Silver Spring today. Total bill (incl. tax, not tip) for 2 softshell sandwiches with fries and slaw (comes with 1 side, extra for 1 added side), 2 beers and 1 wine was just over $40, so the softshell sandwiches might have been $12 each. Each sandwich had 2 plump softshells in them. They started serving them about 2 weeks ago.

BTW, Salt River Lobster was selling softshells for $5 at the Kensington Farmers Market today.

#23 DonRocks

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Posted 29 July 2012 - 03:57 PM

I've been hearing about soft shell crab prices in restaurants this year that are making me cringe. I'm hearing (from several people) prices of about $18 per at some of the more upscale restaurants, and they supposedly aren't very big. Anyone know what's going on in the market? Usually I'm at the vanguard of early soft shells, but this year I just haven't been.

Cheers,
Rocks


They were on the menu at Black's last weekend - $33 (ouch). I had a nice softshell sandwich at the Mussle Bar last week and I think it was $16 or $17.


Went to the Village location yesterday afternoon to get some chili crabs. They only have dungies and I didn't want to eat a 2 lb crab myself as a mid-afternoon snack. So I ordered two fried softshell crabs, served with hot sauce and fish sauce. Nothing special - other than the price was $32 (marked as market price on the menu)


So yes, $16 seems to be the average restaurant price this year - the days of the ubiquitous $12 soft-shell (or two for $18 at a strip-mall Vietnamese restaurant) are over, for now.

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