We fancied some fritters for dinner, so after finding out
where the shellfish beds were we waited for low tide and then went digging for
tuatuas. Here in the Coromandel (&
Auckland) you’re only allowed 50 per person, elsewhere it’s 150, which meant
I’d have to get wet too if we were going to collect enough to make a few
fritters for tea. Although it wasn’t the getting wet that bothered me, it was the
crabs. I have childhood memories of digging for pipis & tuatuas &
coming up with a crab attached to a finger or a toe. I hate the foreboding feeling of
digging away knowing that if something moves it's probably a crab & it's likely to nip you or worse still latch on.
We brought the tuatuas home and kept them in a bucket of
salt water overnight, changing it twice to keep them fresh & to encourage
them to spit out their sand. There’s nothing worse in my opinion than a fritter
with sand in it; crunch, crunch. David then went about the task of opening them all & presented me with a small bowl of tuatua meat.
I found a couple of fritter recipes I had been saving (I
knew one day they would come in handy) & we had beer batter tuatua fritters
with coconut curry sauce, which was delicious. I’m not so sure about the
shellfish though; the batter & sauce seem to overwhelm the shellfish taste.
It’s the same with whitebait & paua fritters; personally I think they’re
all a little overrated.
More photos here of Port Jackson
More photos here of Port Jackson
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Thank you for taking the time to leave a message, I love reading them! All comments are personally moderated by me and I will post and answer them as soon as possible, Shellie