Our annual survey of seafood in Southeast Louisiana this year counts down the 33 best seafood species for dining in restaurants. There are places around the world (New England and the Canadian Maritimes) where excellent scallops can be had from just about every grocery or seafood market. We are less lucky in New Orleans--either that, or our seafood supply is so strong with local items that the lack of scallops is just karma).
#8: Sea Scallops
Sea scallops have become omnipresent on local menus, even though they come from waters far away from New Orleans. Air shipping of seafood makes it possible for us to enjoy fresh scallops in our restaurants, and sometimes even from our grocery stores. That's what you find in the better restaurants. Unfortunately, we're also still getting the not-so-fresh scallops, too. Like as not, those are the ones you'll see in the supermarkets. More on that--and the little bay scallops, too--later. Back to the good news. The best sea scallops are the big ones. They come from the Atlantic in the same parts of the Northeast that give us good lobsters. They range in size from about an inch across to the size of a petite filet mignon. Scallops, like most mollusks, veer from the general seafood rule that smaller is better. I find the biggest ones most interesting. The scallops you've enjoyed in the best restaurants are gathered and shipped with better-than-average care. They're known generically as"dry-pack" scallops, meaning they have not been immersed in a preservative chemical. "Day-boat" scallops (gathered in one day's fishing and rushed to market) or "diver" scallops (actually gathered by divers instead of dredges) are the best of the dry-pack scallops. These have the superb sweet flavor of fresh shellfish, with just a light searing at the outside. (They should bulge at the sides when cooked.) They're also good raw as sashimi. The part of the scallop that we eat is analogous to the eye of an oyster. It's the adductor muscle, the one that keeps the shell closed. Only rarely do you see the entire surrounding tissue left intact. If you try that, you learn why we only eat the white part. [caption id="attachment_37008" align="alignnone" width="266"]