The mid-nineteent
century Parisian ‘Chinese’ menu I gave you the other day included a dish called
oluthuries à la mandarine. This was a
dish of Holothuria sp. – better known
on the dinner plate as sea cucumber, sea-slug, bêche de mer, or trepang. This creature, so repulsive to many of us
in the West,
lives on the
sea-floor, and has a habit of disgorging its own intestines when annoyed – a habit
which did not endear it to potential diners outside of Asia. One of its common
names bears witness to this distaste: bêche
de mer comes from the Portuguese bicho
de mar, or ‘vermin of the
sea.’
In Asia, trepang is an enormously important food, and has
been so since ancient times. A large part of its success is due to the fact
that the flesh lends itself very well to preservation by drying. The following
instructions, from The Animal Food Resources of Different
Nations (1885), by Peter
Lund Smith, explain what the cook then does with the dried product:
The mode of cooking trepang is as follows:
- Soak it in cold water for an hour, then clean it and scrape it carefully.
Boil it for eight hours in water with a little salt added, wash, scrape and
clean it anew ; and soak it in cold water for two hours. Then cover it with
meat gravy, season and cook it for half-an-hour more, and serve it hot.
Quotation for the
Day.
The woman
just ahead of you at the supermarket checkout has all the delectable groceries
you didn't even know they carried.
Mignon McLaughlin
Many years ago I was invited (along with several other officers from my unit) to a formal Korean banquet to celebrate something or other.
ReplyDeleteOne of the dishes was sea slugs. They are disgusting (and I'm someone who enjoys snails).