THE AMERICAN OUTDOORSMAN
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On The Water
On The Water
10 Jan 2024


NextImg:Seafood Oddities: Periwinkles

If you haven’t done so yet, you must give periwinkles a try. They are perhaps the sweetest of the meats found in the sea and are truly delicious when dipped in butter.

Many people don’t realize it, but these little creatures are actually an invasive species. They first arrived in the mid-1800s and are now found clinging to just about every intertidal rock along the entire East Coast. It’s believed they came from Britain, where to this day, the periwinkle remains a delicacy. Some scholars suggest they were brought over intentionally by settlers looking for a dependable year-round food source.

Periwinkle shells often pepper stone and pebble beaches along rocky, craggy areas of the coast.

Finding them is easy, but finding the big ones can take some looking. Head out to any rocky shoreline at low tide and collect the largest specimens you can find. Steam them up in seawater for about four to five minutes. I use a toothpick to pry the meat out of the shells, but don’t forget to remove the small, hard operculum, or foot, which periwinkles use to glue themselves to rocks. Dip them in melted butter, and you are in for a treat.

How To: Dry Aging Fish

Recipe: Monkfish Liver

WATCH: Living Off the Land and Sea | Series