Friday, February 19, 2016




AFTER three minutes of digging on a muddy and shell-strewn beach along the shores of the Hood Canal in Washington State, I had gathered enough shellfish for a pretty mean paella.
I don’t mean to brag — it sure wasn’t through any skill of my own. The Hood Canal is a glitteringly beautiful 60-mile-long fjord and the western waterway of Puget Sound, and it sits about an hour and a half outsideSeattle (although the trip may take an hour or more longer until repairs to the Hood Bridge are completed this June). With the snow-clad Olympic Mountains as a backdrop and beaches bristling with oysters, clams, mussels and crabs, it’s ripe for a shellfish safari. In summer, throwing crab pots off the dock for Dungeness or red rock crabs and shrimping for the sweet and sizable Hood Canal spot shrimp are main attractions. But oysters are available year round, and the sport clam season opens each spring on some public beaches.

I came up from San Francisco the first weekend in April, just after the harvesting season opened at Potlatch State Park, south of the town of Hoodsport on the canal’s western shore. I asked my mother-in-law, Robin VanSickle, who loves all manner of seafood, to come along. In Northern California, where we both live, there are lots of oysters, but they’re grown mostly on farms; they’re either suspended in racks or in plastic mesh bags placed on top of mud flats, so you can’t pick your own.
But you can on the Hood Canal, and therein lies the fun. It’s the kind of old-fashioned place where shellfish permits can be easily procured at a gas station or general store, along with all kinds of local wisdom: the best time of year for picking oysters (spring is nice, since winter is too cold to be comfortable, and summer heat makes some oysters milky from sitting out in the sun too long); optimal tides for clam digging (the lower the better); and the right size for clams (anything that fits through your thumb and forefinger in an O.K. gesture is too small and should be thrown back).
“They freeze nicely in the shell,” one woman said as we waited in line at Hoodsport’s tiny hardware store. “That’s how I make my clam chowder.” Robin consulted with a man at the counter about the easiest way to make clams spit out sand (soak them overnight in a bucket with water and a handful of cornmeal). Oh, and if you aren’t paying attention, sometimes clams will pull a disappearing act on you.
“Razor clams are the most fun to catch,” said Lee Geist, a young bellhop and summertime dock master at the Alderbrook Resort, where we stayed. “They’re the ones that run away.” With its long foot, a razor clam can burrow back under the sand in 10 speedy seconds. But razors are typically harvested on the open Pacific coast of Washington; most of what you’ll find on the Hood Canal are steamers, a k a Manila and Japanese littlenecks. They are bad burrowers, which makes it easy for a rookie shellfish harvester like me.
Spring is a moody time on the Hood Canal: it can be blazingly sunny and 70 degrees, as it was during our weekend there, or it can be snowing, as it was three days before we arrived. Moss-covered alders lean together over the roadway; the Olympic Mountains are mirrored in the glassy, cold water. The icy mountain runoff ushered by rivers into the brackish waters of the canal makes a prime breeding environment for oysters; in tide pools, mud flats and gravel banks, the oysters’ irregularly fluted gray-white shells take shape around the rocks and nurse shells they’ve decided to grow on.
It was on a tidal beach at Potlatch State Park where I plucked a specimen that seemed more barnacle-encrusted royalty than food item, its shell sprouting seaweed tendrils and crowned with mussels, the surface itself a nurse shell for several minuscule baby oysters.
“That’s a good one,” a man in knee-high boots next to me said as he expertly wielded his shucking knife. He was Jerry Briggs, a heavy-construction-equipment operator from Winlock, a small town some 75 miles south. Mr. Briggs explained that since young oysters seed and grow on the shells of other oysters, harvesters have to shuck their catch at the water line and throw the shells back. He and his wife, Pamela, used plastic bags to secure their limit of 18 shucked oysters per person per day.
Mr. Briggs grew up fishing and trapping on the Hood Canal, and his family spent summers at a rented cabin just up the road. “We’d lie down on inner tubes and fry ourselves in the sun collecting oysters,” Mr. Briggs said. “It was something we just grew up doing — we learned everything from the old folks.” As a young man, he was a member of the Murky Lurkers, a club that spent summers scuba-diving the deep, clear waters of the canal and picnicking on its shores. They caught and barbecued everything from crabs and oysters to sea bass and octopus.
Mr. Briggs was happy to teach the finer points of picking and shucking: how to spot the seams on a living oyster and how to insert the tip of the shucking knife at the joint of the shells and wiggle with just the right amount of force, to avoid a self-gouging catastrophe (Mr. Briggs also pointed out several of his battle scars). We scrutinized the beach and watched oysters open, filtering the water, and then snapping shut on our approach. From one of my finds, Mr. Briggs even extracted a tiny pearl.
After an afternoon that seemed to fly by, we had all collected our quotas. Robin and I said goodbye to the Briggses and stopped at a gas station on the way back to our hotel; there, we spent $17 on an aluminum baking tray, a bag of ice, a bottle of Washington Hills 2007 gewürztraminer (screw-top), a small bottle of cocktail sauce and a jar of horseradish.
Back at Alderbrook, we hurried to the dock just in time for sunset. As we prepared a little makeshift picnic, ospreys and bald eagles soared overhead, and silvery schools of baitfish burbled below. With a toast to the Olympic Mountains in the distance, we tipped oysters into our mouths and tasted the luxuriantly round, salty flavor of the sea.
For Entire article see link below
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/05/01/travel/escapes/01shellfish.html?_r=0