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Short Cellar: This Valentines Day, have a dozen good Os
Written by Matthew Sullivan   
Thursday, 04 February 2010

photo by Jeffrey BaryMore than once, I have discovered — at my peril — that Valentines Day can creep up with very little warning. So this week, I am devoting the Short Cellar to the most romantic meal of all: fresh oysters on the half shell with chilled white wine. It is exotic, aphrodisiacal and surprisingly cheap.
 
It’s also an easy meal that you can prepare (and consume) virtually anywhere — your kitchen, a dorm room, a hotel, a romantically lit holding cell. You can find some decent instructions for shucking the oyster online, or watch an instructional video. I prefer my oysters with just a drop of lemon juice so that their natural flavour is preserved, but you can also garnish them with freshly grated horseradish, chili-sauce or shallot vinegar.
 
Fresh oysters can be found at restaurants and shops all over Toronto, but some of the best can be nabbed at places like Mike’s at the St. Laurence Market or from an oyster bar (like Starfish or Oyster Boy). An oyster like the delicious Malpeque goes for around $10-12/dozen at the Market. Unlike a lot of shellfish, oysters can live for a couple weeks in your fridge’s vegetable crisper (layered between damp sheets of newspaper), so don’t be afraid to get them a few days in advance.
 
What kind of wine matches oysters? That depends on what kind of oysters you’ve selected.

Speaking very broadly, there are two types that you will typically find in Canada: East coast oysters (like Malpeques from PEI) and West coast oysters (like Kumamotos). East coast oysters tend to have a clean, salty and slightly metallic taste. The warmer waters of the West coast, however, usually create a stronger tasting oyster, with definite flavours of cucumber, herbs or tin.
 
For East coast oysters, I prefer clean, crisp wines with lots of minerality — wines that don’t overwhelm the subtle flavours in the mollusk. Good examples would be the Lenz Moser 2008 Prestige Grüner Veltliner ($12.95, Vintages #71233) — a delightful and refreshing wine from Austria, a country which often produces tremendous value wines. Another good choice would be a bright and steely Chablis like La Chablisienne 2006 Vieilles Vignes Chablis ($24.95, Vintages #942243).
 
West coast oysters, however, are more vegetal tasting and so they harmonize beautifully with wines that possess a herbaceous character, like Sauvignon Blanc. The Stoneleigh 2009 Marlborough Sauvignon Blanc ($16.95, LCBO #293043) has the perfect balance between flavours of grass, lime and luscious fruit — I’ve found it perfectly matches a fat West coaster like a Beach Angel.
 
They say Casanova ate 50 Oysters every day. Perhaps this Valentines Day, it’s time to find out why.


Matthew Sullivan is a civil litigator in Toronto. He blogs weekly here on lawandstyle.ca. The Short Cellar column also appears in the print edition of Precedent. Matthew can be reached at This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it . Follow along on Twitter: @shortcellar.

Photo by Jeffrey Bary

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...
Written by Greg Sullivan , February 09, 2010
Years ago I was the chief oyster opener for the New Year's Eve party. I was quite adept at it and usually slurped down a number in the process. If I remember correctly Long Island oysters were the favourite in these days. Of course in the 60's and 70's both oysters and Chablis were much more affordable. Now that I am in my semi dottage my oyster knife is used primarily to pry the lids off peanunt butter and jam jars - a lofty comedown from it previous usage. C'est la vie.
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