How to Crack Lobster Claws
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Jim Davis, a native of West Virginia, has had two successful professional careers, one traveling the world building hospitals in seven countries and another as a Mortgage Broker in the Gaithersburg Area.
Jim is a graduate of the part-time Professional Program of L’Academie de Cuisine in Gaithersburg and has been a teaching assistant at the Bethesda location of L’Academie for more than 8 years and has assisted both local and world-renowned chefs in more than 500 classes. He has been teaching more than forty cooking classes in all disciplines each year for the last 8 years for the Montgomery County Recreation Department and also is an instructor at Bryan’s Kitchen, a Cooking Studio in the Kentlands section of Gaithersburg, MD, owned by his son, Bryan Davis.
Jim also has a strong interest in wine and has studied wines with leading wine educators. He teaches a monthly wine and food pairing class for the Montgomery County Recreation Department and teaches private wine and food pairing parties and classes in the clients home or at Bryan’s Kitchen. Jim is a member of the Society of Wine Educators.
Jim was named “Chef of the Year,” 2005-2006, in July 2005 at the Annual Summit of the American Personal Chef Association in New Orleans, LA. Jim is also the Eastern Regional Director of the APCA.
Jim and Sandra have been married for 48 years, have four married children and six grandchildren.
How to Crack Lobster Claws
In this video learn how to properly crack lobster claws.
Transcripts
Jim Davis: Hi! Jim Davis here for Harris Teeter. I'm going to show you now how to remove the meat from lobster claws and legs.
First of all, we take the claw and separate the leg from the claw. And you'll notice I have also kept a couple of the legs from the main body.
What we're going to do now is either use the back of a knife, like this, and crack our claw, or we can use a Lobster Cracker like this.
Crack it all down through there. And lobster shells are hard. So don't be afraid. We have to work at it to get the meat out. And we pull this down section out. There we go. Look at that beautiful piece of lobster claw meat coming out of there. And there is a whole piece of lobster claw ready to eat.
Now one of the treats that a lot of people miss is these little legs. Nobody realize it. But if you take these little legs, cut it off like that and just take a wine bottle. Just put it down on. Look at that. Isn't that great? That is really a good lobster meat. Oh, yeah that's good.
Okay, now from this leg, I'll show you how to do this one. And then we take our scissors, and cut the shell this way. Separate it and pull out the lobster meat.
And you'll find usually those as much lobster meat in these legs as you'll find in the other parts of the body. And it's all very good meat. And that is how you remove the meat from lobster claws and legs.
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