The Debate about Cooking Live LobstersThis is a featured page

What's the most humane way to turn a live lobster into a succulent dinner? The debate has gone on for years with lobster eaters claiming the lobsters feel no pain when they're tossed alive into boiling water, and lobster advocates demanding that better ways be found for killing and cooking live lobsters.

There has been a lot of scientific research done to try to determine the amount of pain a lobster actually feels. While not being totally conclusive the findings have been good news for people who love to eat fresh lobster.

A lobster has a brain about the same size as a grasshopper has which is pretty minute for a larger animal like a lobster. Lobsters brains are lacking in the complexity human brains have which means a lobster is unable to think.

There's no way a lobster can have a brain like that and have the ability to think or feel like we do. Researchers have concurred that the practice of cooking live lobsters by steaming and boiling and grilling are not inhumane.

Steaming a lobster starts with a four to five gallon pot containing two inches of seawater or salted water and containing a steaming rack being brought to a rolling boil over high heat. Once the pot is up to temperature, add the lobsters one at a time. Put the lid on the pot and start your timer. It takes about 10 minutes to cook one pound of lobster and around an hour for six to eight pounds. Halfway through the cooking time, rearrange the lobsters in the pot.

Using the four to five gallon pot, add three quarts of water for every 1 to 2 pounds of lobster you want to boil. Next add one-fourth cup of salt per gallon of water. After heating the salted water to a rolling boil, add the lobsters one at a time. One pound of lobster needs to be boiled about 8 minutes, while it will take 50 minutes to an hour for six to eight pounds. Time the process carefully and halfway through the cooking time give the lobsters a good stir.

Grilling lobsters starts the same way boiling them does by cooking them in boiling water for about five minutes. Remove them from the hot water immediately and plunge them into a cold water bath so that they won't continue to cook. Take each well-drained lobster and place it on its back on a cutting board. Using a sharp knife, split each lobster down the middle and cut out the black vein in the tail and the sand sac by the head. Baste the lobsters with melted butter or oil and place them flesh-side down on the grill. Cook them for five to six minutes on that side before turning them over. Baste them again and continue cooking for another four or five minutes.

There are still people who shy away from lobsters that are cooked live, but most have come to accept the fact that the lobsters do not suffer. Cooking a live lobster is the way to experience the freshest lobster meat available. Not only can you purchase live lobsters at restaurants and supermarkets, there are also many wonderful online seafood shops that promise the very freshest lobster delivered to your door overnight.


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masterLobster
Latest page update: made by masterLobster , Oct 10 2008, 12:00 PM EDT (about this update About This Update masterLobster Edited by masterLobster


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