Book offers information about Northwest oysters
By Sandra Hines
News & Information
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Washingtons oyster industry owes its origins to the fertile shellfish beds of Willapa Bay. From there the first crates of oysters were shipped 150 years ago this month to California for hungry gold miners willing to purchase a plate of oysters with a measure of their gold.
What better way to announce a gold strike than with a complimentary round of drinks and a few fresh oysters for everyone in the house? Its impossible to know how many of these delicacies were consumed in this way, but its a good guess that the number approached several million. . . Their exorbitant price - a dollar apiece for raw oysters on the half-shell - did little to dampen the prospectors enthusiasm for such rich fare.
Thus writes David G. Gordon in Heaven on the Half Shell: The Story of the Northwests Love Affair with the Oyster, just published by the Washington Sea Grant Program, based at the UW, and WestWinds Press.
The book chronicles the Pacific Northwest oyster industry using the words of the first pioneers, early aquaculturists and contemporary scientists, field technicians and oyster connoisseurs. Gordon, science writer with Washington Sea Grant, co-authored the book with Nancy Blanton, former communications manager with Sea Grant, and Terry Nosho, a Sea Grant aquaculture specialist.
Today more than 9 million pounds of oyster meats are harvested each year from Washington waters. Valued at more than
$70 million annually, Washingtons oysters are the foundation of the West Coasts shellfish enterprise.
How it rose to this prominence is explained as the book ranges across topics historical, contemporary and biological:
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The impetus for the book came after Earl Brenner of the J.J. Brenner Oyster Company, the oldest continuously operating oyster enterprise on Puget Sound, donated scrapbooks of materials pertaining to the oyster industry between 1930 and the early 60s.
Those scrapbooks made it clear how many of the industrys most distinguished historians, the sons and daughters of the pioneering oyster farmers, had died in recent years. Along with them were going the remembrances, the tales of their lives on the oyster beds, the stories about the first shipments of seed oysters from Japan, the anecdotes about the war years, when Willapa Bays residents worked around the clock preparing protein-rich shellfish to feed our troops at home and overseas, says the books preface.
Co-author Blanton proposed to director Louis Echols that Sea Grant launch a project to remedy the situation. Sea Grants long ties to the aquaculture industry and UW departments such as the School of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences and School of Oceanography made it possible to pull together elements that include mounting a Web site at http://www.wsg.washington.edu/oysterstew/oystermain.html, creating a traveling exhibit and producing the book.
It was Ken Chew, professor of aquatic and fishery sciences, whose advice and willingness to help raise money from the industry turned the book from a planned 24-page booklet into 160 pages of Heaven on the Half Shell, Gordon says.
Promoting the book has taken Gordon to Pacific Northwest and British Columbia historical societies, bookstores and kitchenware shops for cooking demos.
Thats right, cooking demos. The books 18 recipes - from the contemporary Oysters Baked with Ginger Cranberry Port Sauce to the prospectors repast of eggs and oysters from gold-rush times known as Hangtown Fry - means the book has something for cooks as well as history buffs.
When the tide is out, the table is set, according to the old beachcombers adage.
As the book concludes, Nowhere is the table more attractively displayed than on the tide-swept beaches of the Pacific Northwest, whose beds are a heaven on the half shell, occupied by the bivalve the world loves best.