A French seafood farmer is proposing lemon-flavored oysters this holiday season, a delicacy he perfected after four years of trial-and-error experiments in his garage.
Joffrey Dubault, 29, also offers oysters flavored with shallots, another perennial accompaniment usually served finely chopped and floating in vinegar.
“It was pretty discouraging at first when I had to throw out 90 percent,” the lanky oyster farmer says, a baseball cap shielding his blue eyes. “Now I have a 95-percent success rate.”
The process, which Dubault has patented, involves plunging the oysters into a tank of sea water laced with lemon extract for between two and 12 hours.
The oysters naturally pump the water through sieve-like gills, becoming impregnated with the flavor.
The technique may seem simple but “there are 16 steps to the process, and if any one of them isn’t done correctly the result is failure,” says Dubault, who farms some 40 tons of the bivalves each year off Marennes, France’s oyster capital on the west coast.
Dubault, who says he got the idea from customers at his market stall constantly asking him to throw in a lemon along with their purchase, began marketing the pre-flavored oysters in October and has found buyers from Belgium to Hong Kong.
He won recognition for his invention at a seafood trade fair in Brussels last April when he said Chinese visitors congratulated him, saying they had been attempting a similar feat for seven years.
The nod in Brussels encouraged Dubault to set up his company, called So’ooh, to market the novelty.
Targeting Asian clients, he has created a ginger version, while oysters flavored with muscatel, the sweet fortified wine, are aimed at the Italian palate.
Next year he plans to add grapefruit and mirabelle plum to his flavor menu, Dubault says, while truffle and pepper versions will follow for the next end-of-year holidays.
“People have asked me to add chocolate, but I say no way!” he exclaims.
Of all his customers, the French are the hardest to win over, he says, calling them “purists.”
But he is hopeful, having recently signed on with a major supermarket chain.
“People eat flavored yoghurts and drink flavored water, so why not oysters?” he asks.
Then there are his raspberry-flavored oysters, aimed at young people. It is a future-looking strategy, since the average age of oyster lovers “is fairly advanced,” he says
Source: AFP
GMT 08:18 2018 Monday ,10 December
Trains cancelled across Germany after transport union strikesGMT 11:40 2018 Monday ,03 December
Special passport gate set up at Cairo airport for passengers from African countriesGMT 15:39 2018 Tuesday ,20 November
First flight with Russian hybrid aircraft engine scheduled for 2019GMT 17:34 2018 Wednesday ,31 October
Oman Air has launches direct daily service between Muscat and MoscowGMT 12:37 2018 Monday ,29 October
Lion Air plane with 189 people aboard crashes into sea off W. IndonesiaGMT 18:34 2018 Wednesday ,24 October
Turkey’s Antalya becomes most popular destination among Russian air passengersGMT 13:39 2018 Tuesday ,16 October
German police conduct raid after Cologne's main train station hostage-takingGMT 16:00 2018 Friday ,12 October
Saudi Arabia opens high-speed railway to public between Makkah and MedinaMaintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©
Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©
Send your comments
Your comment as a visitor