Twas a brave man indeed that 'et the first oyster
Jonathan Swift wasn't whistling Dixie when he wrote that.
Franklin County, Fl. has historically harvested 90 percent of the state's oysters and 10 percent of the nation's. More than 1,000 people in the county make their living in the oyster business. To give you a sense of quantity, in recent years the U.S. oyster haul has been roughly 30 million pounds of meat--about 75 percent of that eastern oysters, or Crassostrea virginica, the species that is shown off to finest effect in Apalachicola. Currently, a number of things threaten the Florida oysters. Some is bad press: A few years ago the local oyster economy took a serious hit (35 percent off in sales) when two oyster-related deaths were reported in Florida. The culprit: vibrio vulnificus, a bacterium naturally present in marine environments that is dangerous to those with compromised immune systems. (New technology called post-harvest processing has just been developed to safeguard against vibrio vulnificus bacteria, kind of like pasteurization.)
The second, even more serious, is drought in Georgia to the north. Reduced water flows down the Apalachicola River mean saltwater encroachment upriver into the estuaries, where the gulf seafood spawns. Some estimates put the Apalachicola oysters at half dead right now due to lack of fresh water, with the east and west ends of Apalachicola Bay the hardest hit. Let’s hope this $134 million-a-year regional industry can bounce back.
There's not absolute consensus about where the best easter oysters are from, which is why on April 7 at the Westin Hotel in Providence, R.I. (my place of birth), the East Coast Shellfish Growers Association is holding a great oyster competition. They're bringing in celebrity chefs (including David Carrier of Apalachicola's Avenue Sea), restaurateurs and writers to judge 20 varieties of Eastern oysters from all three coasts. I'll let you know who wins.


This would be a very good reason to go to Providence and spend one day on Federal Hill, stopping to eat at the Italian bakeries and restaurants.
Posted by: hank | March 28, 2008 at 10:18 AM
Anyone that has sampled oysters from all over the country has to know that the best ones are easily from Apalachicola. Smaller, saltier, not overly chewy....by far superior to anything else offered.
Posted by: Jimbo | March 29, 2008 at 11:44 AM
There are lots of great oysters on the market today.Growing up on the beaches locally (many moons ago)we would harvest great oysters at the passes and mangrove islands,Just a few weeks ago I enjoyed some from around Steinhatchee, That were great and another batch from Ozello.Artisinal harvests of course but still a great and forgoten resourse.Also Tried WellPoints over the summer at Mortons Indianapolis half shell ice cold with simple mignonette beautiful.But day in day out Apalachicola.
Posted by: Old Chef Dude | March 30, 2008 at 12:22 AM
I had the pleasure of eating Chef Carrier's divine cuisine last Christmas at Avenue sea. If you have not been to the "forgotten coast" I highly recommend a visit before it becomes completely commercialized and Apalachicola Bay is ruined. We stayed in Cape San Blas and drove daily to Indian Pass Raw Bar to eat oysters. I am a Floridian from the Panhandle and I can honestly say the oysters I had last December were the BEST I have ever had.
Posted by: Rebekah | March 31, 2008 at 09:48 AM
By the way Cape San Blas is a great area for scallopping.
Posted by: Jimbo | March 31, 2008 at 08:10 PM
we used to go scalloping in Mexico Beach when I was a kid
Posted by: Rebekah | April 01, 2008 at 09:04 AM