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How to Shuck (Open) Oysters
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Recommended
and Not Recommended Oyster Shucking Tools
(click on photo to enlarge) |
All oysters taken by
sport harvesters on public tidelands must be shucked (opened) on the beach,
and the shells left on the same tideland and tide height where they were
taken. To find out why, click
here.
To shuck
oysters, we recommend you use a good-quality oyster knife (one with a
sturdy blade that won't bend easily) and a pair of garden-type gloves
to protect your hands from cuts and abrasions. We don't recommend using
screwdrivers or household knives. You'll also need a container with a
cover to hold the oyster meats and their "liquor." Each harvester must
have his or her own separate container.
We don't
recommend that young children shuck oysters, it's just too easy for them
to cut themselves. Adults with a valid Shellfish License may shuck a child's
daily limit of oysters, so long as the child participates in some way
in the gathering of his or her limit. |
| SIDE-ENTRY
SHUCKING METHOD: |
Figure
1 |
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Position
the oyster cupped side down, with the hinge facing you (if you're
right-handed, Figure 1). If you are left-handed, position the
oyster cupped side down, with the hinge facing away from you
. You can hold the oyster in your hand, but we prefer to hold
it down on a hard, stable surface (a board, a bucket, a rock,
another oyster). This makes it less likely that a slip of the
knife will cut your hand. |
Figure
2 |
Figure
3 |
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Look for a tiny gap between the two shells (Figure 2) in the
upper right-hand corner of the oyster (lower left-hand corner
if you are left-handed). Insert the knife tip between the two
shells at about the "2 o'clock" position, if you are right-handed.
This is the approximate position of the adductor muscle inside
the shell, shown here with a red circle (Figure 3). (For
left-handers, it will be about the "8 o'clock" position).
You may
have to "drill" slightly with the knife tip to get it to penetrate
between the two shells. If the edge of the shells is heavily
fluted, you may need to chip off the fluted edge near the
point of insertion with the blunt end of the oyster knife
before inserting the tip. |
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Figure
4 |
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Keep
the knife blade positioned as shown (that is, flat and parallel
to the edge of the shells). Keep the hand supporting the oyster
away from the blade's path if it were to slip forward (Figure
4). |
Figure
5 |
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Once
you have the tip of the knife inserted between the two shells,
your goal is to gently push the blade further into the oyster
and move it back and forth so as to sever the adductor muscle
(Figure 5). Be sure to keep the blade pressed up against the
inner top surface of the upper oyster shell, otherwise you'll
risk cutting the oyster meat itself. |
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Figure
6 |
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Move
the blade back and forth until the top shell "gives" a little;
this tells you that the adductor muscle has been severed at
the top shell. Now you can gently pry the top shell away from
the bottom shell with the knife blade. (Figure 6). Don't pull
the shells apart completely, however, or you may pull off some
of the oyster tissue still adhering to the top shell. With the
shells just slightly apart, use the knife blade to gently scrape
any remaining oyster tissue off the inner top surface of the
shell. |
Now you can
pull the top shell completely off (Figure 7). Notice the position
of the adductor muscle "scar" on the inside of the top shell
(Figure 8). |
Figure
7 |
Figure
8 |
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Figure
9 |
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Now move the knife blade underneath the oyster meat and cut
the adductor muscle where it is attached to the bottom shell
(Figure 9). |
Figure
10 |
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Now that the adductor muscle has been severed on both the top
and bottom shell, you can simply tip the bottom shell and let
the oyster slip into your container, along with the oyster "liquor"
which collected in the cupped lower shell (Figure 10).
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| HINGE-ENTRY
SHUCKING METHOD: |
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Don't worry if shell
fragments, sand, or other debris falls into your container. You can shake
most of the debris off in the oyster liquor when you get ready to prepare
the oysters for eating. Some people wash their oysters off in either salt
or fresh water. Personally, we prefer not to wash them off in anything
but their own "liquor" in order to preserve all the rich natural oyster
flavor.
Keep your oyster
container as cool as possible until you're back in your kitchen. Storing
your oyster container in a cooler immediately after shucking is ideal.
Shucking oysters that are attached to rocks and/or other oysters takes
a bit more skill, as does shucking very large oysters (it's somewhat more
difficult to find the adductor muscle on larger oysters, and prying at
the hinge can take more effort, too). Be sure to occasionally sharpen
the tip of your oyster knife with a stone or grinder, especially if you
use the side-entry technique.
Shucking will seem
difficult at first, but with a little practice, you'll find that you can
cleanly shuck a limit of oysters very quickly. If speed is your goal,
consider watching the West Coast's best shuckers who compete annually
at OysterFest, held every October in Shelton, Washington. The world's
fastest shuckers compete every fall at the International Oyster Festival
in Galway, Ireland, where winners typically open 30 Atlantic oysters in
less than three minutes! |