Anyone see Live & Kicking Lobsters $3.99 lb at the Market this weekend? See pics

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My brother now works for the water department down on the base. He comes across all kinds of interesting vestiges of the navy occupancy. Heck, we used to sneak down to the beaches on the Navy side of the island. We'd swim around rusted metal skeletons of various navy enterprises. I think that's a superfund sight now :eek:
 
I'm sure it has quite a history...no idea what all may have gone on there over the (many) decades. I've never been anyplace where there were little signs on nearly every building that identified the year they were built. Where I grew up, things from the 1800's were "old". Back there in RI, those things wouldn't even be ready to burn. ;lol There was a torpedo factory on Goat Island at one time. When I was there, NTC was a multi-faceted training facility (thus my multiple assignments there over a period of years). If I was there in the summer, I loved going down to the Navy Marina and checking out a sloop and sailing the Narragansett Bay for the afternoon, then retiring up to the Lighthouse restaurant for an ice-cold frosty mug of brew. If I was there in the winter, I loved bundling up and trudging through the snow to the Officer's Club for a nice dinner and a Bass Ale (or two). Good memories of Newport. Ah...to be young again. <>
 
Lived in Maine 18 years and I can count on one hand the times I ate lobster. They are the chit eaters of the sea, so no thanks!

Potatoes though, just about every meal! :eek:

The lobstermen up this way are really hurting . . . diesel and gas prices are still high, supply is up and prices are down . . . due to federal laws very few of them are especially talkative and no one is talking about a concerted effort to drive up the price by reducing supplies and staying tied up to the dock.

Me . . . the price is right . . . but I'm like Nate. Twenty minutes from the ocean, but I've always favored beef over lobsters when given a choice . . . give me a nice medium rare cut of prime rib, rib eye or filet mignon any day. Now if you start talking clams and scallops though . . . ;)
 

I kindof like the lobster industry here in Maine in terms of their philosophy . . . if it's over a certain size it goes back into the water . . . where it can continue to produce more young (ditto for egg bearing female lobsters) to be caught at a later date . . . besides at that age one has to wonder about the quality of the meat . . .
 
bought my wife lobstah dinnah while visiting Acadia...she loves the Cockroach of the Sea...I had the land meat. Meat should have at least 2, but no more than 4 legs (yeah, I'll eat a 3 legged pig). Remember, the rubber bands on their claws are to protect the lobsters from each other.....crazy sea monsters.
 
Lobsters get pretty tough over a few pounds anyway
ever see the taxidemied one they have at Brown's on the route to Hampton? Its the size of a medium dog.:eek:
 
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I don't care if they are the chit eaters of the sea...
Give me a nice tender lobster smothered in herbed butter...
friggin yum...;)
 
ever see the taxidemied one they have at Brown's on the route to Hampton? Its the size of a medium dog.:eek:
Ya- we love Brown's (and Marky's across the street). Remember to BYOB
 
I did the lobster feed for my father last weekend. Softshells are handy as you really dont need a cracker for the shell but there is a lot less meat. I usually figure 2 soft shells are equal to one hard shell. So the price for soft shells while great PR arent that great of of a deal. I generally buy from a local place in Portland that does high volume. They taste a lot better than the ones that the big supermarkets have.

There is some research that lobsters have taken over for cod in the gulf of maine. There are so many lobsters that the cod dont have a chance to repopulate.
 
M-m-m-m-m M-m-m-m M-mm. I love (almost) all seafood, and especially lobster and steamed clams. At the same time, the very sickest I've ever been was after eating a New England Boiled DInner in Newport RI in 1976. It was amazing...just a couple of hours after dinner I was in extremis (I'll spare you all the details). I ended up in the ER at the Naval Hospital, and then admitted for 2 days, on a couple of meds, a liquid diet, and lots of IV fluids to re-hydrate me. Walking down to the head in my open-back gown, pulling my wheeled IV stand along beside me will be something I'm not likely to ever forget. Doc told me I probably ate a clam or a mussel that had been dead for a while & got into the human food chain and into my New England Boiled Dinner. Took me a long time, but I've now long since regained my love for seafood.
 
M-m-m-m-m M-m-m-m M-mm. I love (almost) all seafood, and especially lobster and steamed clams. At the same time, the very sickest I've ever been was after eating a New England Boiled DInner in Newport RI in 1976. It was amazing...just a couple of hours after dinner I was in extremis (I'll spare you all the details). I ended up in the ER at the Naval Hospital, and then admitted for 2 days, on a couple of meds, a liquid diet, and lots of IV fluids to re-hydrate me. Walking down to the head in my open-back gown, pulling my wheeled IV stand along beside me will be something I'm not likely to ever forget. Doc told me I probably ate a clam or a mussel that had been dead for a while & got into the human food chain and into my New England Boiled Dinner. Took me a long time, but I've now long since regained my love for seafood.

Huh . . . New England Boiled Dinners in Rhode Island must be different than those here in Maine. Up here a New England Boiled Dinner consists of corned beef, cabbage, carrots, potatoes, turnips, onions and sometimes beets to give it a red color (although some folks skip the beets.) Never had one with clams or mussels . . . maybe in a Seafood or Clam chowder . . . but not in a boiled dinner.
 
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Huh . . . New England Boiled Dinners in Rhode Island must be different than those here in Maine. Up here a New England Boiled Dinner consists of corned beef, cabbage, carrots, potatoes, turnips, onions and sometimes beets to give it a red color (although some folks skip the beets.) Never had one with clams or mussels . . . maybe in a Seafood or Clam chowder . . . but not in a boiled dinner.

Oh, I could quite easily be misremembering the name of the entree. It was a big ol' bowl of mixed shellfish & some potatoes & stuff...maybe tomatoes. They, of course, had a name for it which now (36 years later) seems to have escaped me. I'm sure you're correct.
 
M-m-m-m-m M-m-m-m M-mm. I love (almost) all seafood, and especially lobster and steamed clams. At the same time, the very sickest I've ever been was after eating a New England Boiled DInner in Newport RI in 1976. It was amazing...just a couple of hours after dinner I was in extremis (I'll spare you all the details). I ended up in the ER at the Naval Hospital, and then admitted for 2 days, on a couple of meds, a liquid diet, and lots of IV fluids to re-hydrate me. Walking down to the head in my open-back gown, pulling my wheeled IV stand along beside me will be something I'm not likely to ever forget. Doc told me I probably ate a clam or a mussel that had been dead for a while & got into the human food chain and into my New England Boiled Dinner. Took me a long time, but I've now long since regained my love for seafood.

Maybe the clams came from the flats near the Naval base. _g
 
My Mom makes it a little different than that too. Ham, carrots, cabbage and potatoes.

Huh . . . New England Boiled Dinners in Rhode Island must be different than those here in Maine. Up here a New England Boiled Dinner consists of corned beef, cabbage, carrots, potatoes, turnips, onions and sometimes beets to give it a red color (although some folks skip the beets.) Never had one with clams or mussels . . . maybe in a Seafood or Clam chowder . . . but not in a boiled dinner.

I just don't do lobster or crab. They eat turd and rotten meat all their lives, how is that supposed to be good?
 
]Here is Holly 25lb. pooch rounding up one now.
Not fair! Give her a chance and take off the bands.

I've been around them all my life, something that is always special. They may be the cockroach of the ocean, but anything you can dip in butter is gonna be good.
 
I don't hate it, but I don't like it enough to pay the price it's usually selling for either. The $4/lb isn't bad though, can barely buy hamburg for that price.
 
Ya, boiled dinner is corned beef.

Anyway, NPR had a whole report on the glut of early lobsters, the pices, and the hardships for lobstamen yesterday. Very timely
Maybe we could "adopt a lobsterer". Eventually the prices paid by the corporate super-structure are going to put these people in the poor house. Products like lobsters that are available (for the most part) year round seem like the perfect products for direct marketing. Hard for me to get summer squash in February from a local garden.
 
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