Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Day Out with a Carolina Oyster Farmer



Ronald Sheffield
Owner Topsail Sound Shellfish
Just to prove that ostreophiles live among us, it turns out that my health insurance broker is also a budding oysterman.  Ronald Sheffield is the owner of Topsail Sound Shellfish, a boutique oyster farm on the Southeast coast of North Carolina.  I asked really nice - borderline stalked him by phone - and he agreed to take me out to see how he nutures his oysters.



5-acre aqua farm in the Intracoastal Waterway

Several times a week, Sheffield heads out on his Carolina Skiff to see how his oysters (and clams) are doing.  Last Wednesday, I was lucky enough to go with him to his 5-acre aqua farm in an estuary off the Intracoastal Waterway that he leases from the state of North Carolina.  Because I don't have an oysterman's license, I wasn't allowed to touch a thing (bummer!) but I did get to watch and take pictures.  Can you see the lines of floating bags?  Each bag contains hundreds of oysters growing safe and sound in water with very high salinity.  Unlike in the northeast where the bags are sometimes frozen under the ice, the mild North Carolina climate means no freezing and year-round access to the oysters.


Oyster seeds: crossbreed bxblyn.9




Sheffield starts with oyster seeds - not spat - no bigger than 1mm.





Sheffield loading the nursery bags 
into the floating bags.



He places thousands of the seeds into small mesh nursery bags and then places the nursery bags into the floating bags.






Oysters about to be moved from the nursery.
Compare to market-size oysters.


A couple months later he checks the bags to see which ones can be moved out of the nursery and directly into the floating bags.









Sifting young oysters.



In the early stages, he empties each bag into a colander and then hand sifts through the growing oysters.   The toddler oysters are then placed into the floating bags to continue growing. I can't express enough how tedious this part of the process is.   It was while watching him sift through these tiny oysters that I truly appreciated the love and effort that goes into my beloved bivalves.





Checking the floating bags


Every couple of months he checks on the growing oysters, separates them again and moves them to new bags by size.






Full-grown oysters ready for market
Tick tock.  Tick Tock.

 Finally, 15-17 months later - after checking and rechecking the oysters, cleaning out debris, flipping the bags over and over to prevent barnacles - the oysters are finally ready for market.  The triploid Topsail Sound Salties - as Ronald has named them - have a brine around 35 ppm - yum!  







Topsail Sound Salties
Shucked and ready to eat

When he took me back to the dock, he popped open a Topsail Sound Salties.  Fresh out of the water and loaded with brine and seawater, the oyster exploded my senses.  These are not starter oysters.  They are large, briny, hit-you-over-the head oysters that taste like the ocean and could stand up to to a Zinfendel or oaky Chardonney. 



Interested in Topsail Sound Salties?  Contact Ronald at topsailsoundshellfish@gmail.com.  He sells out every time he harvests so you may have to get on his waiting list.  

Thanks Ronald for a wonderful day! 

Friday, September 21, 2012

Welcome to Oyster Stew


Welcome to the first entry of Oyster Stew.  

I'm Kim ... I'm the founder of Harbor Island Oyster Co. ... and I really, really love oysters.  I once bet my husband and brother that I could eat 10 dozen raw oysters in one sitting.  I haven't yet tried, but I still think I could.  They don't.  I'll keep you posted. 


Harbor Island Oyster Co.
Topsail Sound Salties

Of course, to true ostreophiles, eating oysters is not a belly-up-to-the-buffet affair.  It's about savoring the mollusk.  It's about the salinity, the liquor, the sweetness, the pedigree ... I appreciate all of it, really, I do.  But sometimes, an oyster is just an oyster.  

I like to dig into a huge pile of steamed Topsail Sound Salties as much as I like to pour a glass of Pinot Grigio and savor the brassiness of raw European Flats.  Sometimes I geek out and read about new species and sometimes I get giddy when I see the perfect oyster shell chandelier.  Always, I enjoy learning about them. This blog is an opportunity to share with other oyster lovers.  It's also the place where I'll first introduce all of our new products - including blog-only promotions and opportunities to be the first to buy.  


Harbor Island Oyster Co. Signature Knife
Quick introduction: Harbor Island Oyster Co. (www.harborislandoyster.com) sells oyster knives, accessories and related oyster products.  Our Signature product is the engraved stainless steel oyster knife.  It's stunning.  Really.  It's impressive.  And, it's only $35 with free shipping and free engraving.  But we're just getting started.  Soon we'll have oyster jewelry, foldable oyster tables, holiday decorations, home decor  and much, much more.  Always, we will be representin' the oyster - and maybe a few of his or her sea friends.  (Did you know that oysters can change sexes several times during their life?  More on that later.)  

I hope you enjoy Oyster Stew.  Along the way, I'd like your feedback.  And if you have any products that you think would sell well on the website, please let me know.  I'm always available at kim@harborislandoyster.com.