Cynthia wrote:Le Bouchon does classic escargot.
And everything else they do is good, too.
Pie Lady wrote:I saw snails and conch at Fresh Farms too. I would love to, but I'm afraid of doing a bad job and having to eat a lousy meal and worse, wasting all that money.
Sweet Willie wrote:Pie Lady wrote:I saw snails and conch at Fresh Farms too. I would love to, but I'm afraid of doing a bad job and having to eat a lousy meal and worse, wasting all that money.
Upon your post, I thought to myself, how hard can it be to cook escargot and if it is so easy, why haven't I done so myself??
I did a quick search for some recipes and each one I can across suggests using canned escargot.
Is there some extensive cleaning process with fresh escargot that I'm unaware of (I would think a quick scrub & cooking) or is it just easier to source canned?
Cynthia wrote:That said, if you have a garden, check for snails after rain. You'll still have to do the fasting/cleansing period, but you can't beat the price.
Cynthia wrote: If they're still alive when you buy them, you have to feed them milk for a couple of days, to clean out their guts -- or at very least, make them fast for five or six days. (So you really can't buy them the day you want to eat them.)
If they're not alive, they're probably already beginning to spoil, since they don't hold up well once dead. Frozen snails are going to have better texture than canned snails, and will be much closer to fresh.
That said, if you have a garden, check for snails after rain. You'll still have to do the fasting/cleansing period, but you can't beat the price.
Cathy2 wrote:Cynthia wrote:That said, if you have a garden, check for snails after rain. You'll still have to do the fasting/cleansing period, but you can't beat the price.
Are garden slugs the same critters people find in Europe and eat? Just by their appearance in the can, they don't seem to be the same critter. Have you done this yourself?
Regards,
bella54330 wrote:For what it's worth, I bought escargot at my local Jewel a couple weeks ago. They came in a little steamer basket, and are already stuffed with butter and herbs. They're still in the freezer, but I'm excited to try them. I think they were on sale for about $9. Can't beat that!
exvaxman wrote:A story that should not be told. But it is awesome.
Many years ago my kid's kindergarten was looking for collections of local creatures for a sustainable environment. The kid and I walked to the local park and got four snails that we put into the terrarium.
A couple of hours later all heck broke loose. A fellow of a local museum "NEEDED" to know where the snails came from. As in RIGHT NOW THIS INSTANT. All said and done, including DNA analysis, I still laugh. Apparently the snail colony was one of a set of snails sent from France in the 1930's (it took a six week time frame for this to be discovered) that had died out in France. Apparently the French colony was gone and the person who had imported the snails in the 1930's for a celebration who tried them, tossed everything into his garden that was flooded (I am assuming several times) and they moved downstream. A professor from France showed up at our house to thank the kid for his restarting a dead colony. We still run into grad students as part of our walk in the area

