By RUSS PARSONS Los Angeles Times
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LOS ANGELES - You order sweet shrimp at Haneda Sushi & Seafood
restaurant in Koreatown and the chef nods his acknowledgment. On the
television above the bar, ESPN is blasting baseball highlights.
After a moment, the chef hands you your dish: two shrimp tails
wrapped around two heads. You take the plate and the antennae start
to wiggle. It's as if they're waving hello, or, more appropriately,
goodbye.
Live seafood, available in better sushi bars for some time, is
increasing in popularity. It's not uncommon to find places selling
shrimp, abalone and lobster and sometimes even whole fish such as
halibut and sculpin that have been killed just before the chef
slices them raw onto the plate. Like those antennae, sometimes parts
are still moving when it reaches the table.
And it's not something that's restricted to small restaurants in
insular ethnic communities. It's at Westside sushi places such as
Matsuhisa and Nishimura as well. At the entrance to the popular
Santa Monica sushi bar called the Hump, there's a sign that reads,
"Warning! This sushi bar does prepare live sea food in full view, at
the counter."
This live seafood is somewhat different than what you may be used
to. It's chewier and perhaps not quite as flavorful, and cut a
little thicker. But it represents the cutting edge of the sushi
fanatics' quest for the very best: fish so fresh it might even slap
back. Connoisseurs appreciate the very best live abalone because of
the way the slices curl against your palate as you eat them.
And while eating live food is nothing new - consider the oyster -
there is a difference when that aliveness is obvious rather than
theoretical.
Granted, what's available in Southern California might seem mild
compared with some bars in Asia, which are built around massive
pools that hold swimming fish for customers to choose for their
dinner, or to the Korean delicacy of serving a bowl of tiny fish
swimming in a clear broth.
Still, the trend does not sit well with everyone. In an editorial
for the People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals newsletter,
Paula Moore condemned customers at these restaurants as "bored
restaurant-goers who want something truly new and exciting.
Apparently, it's not enough that we eat all manner of dead animals -
now we have to eat live ones, too."
Actually, aside from the most obvious cases, the presentation of
this live fish isn't really that different from that of more
run-of-the-mill sushi and sashimi. In fact, thrill-seekers may go
away from most places disappointed.
Usually everything is handled discreetly, obscured from view by the
frosted glass cases that circle the bar. The whole live food will be
presented to you for inspection, then reappear moments later looking
like a regular plate of sliced sushi. The point of the exercise, it
seems, is freshness, not frisson.
This is not the case at the Hump, where diners have a full view of
the sushi chefs' artistry. They're not kidding about that sign. At
lunch one day, a chef reaches into a refrigerator behind the bar to
retrieve four Santa Barbara spot prawns. He quickly slices off the
heads, and begins to work peeling and de-veining the bodies. But
wait. Is that an antenna moving? It is. Then a couple of them are.
Then it's the front legs.
By the time the bodies are presented on their tray, firm and sweet
and gleaming like carved alabaster, the severed heads are bouncing
about the cutting board like so many Mexican jumping beans. (Later,
these will be served as well, two of them stuffed and deep-fried,
two of them in a small bowl of beautifully sea-scented miso broth.)
The whole thing may be a bit disquieting, but you have to admit it
is hard to find fish any fresher than this.
"It's mainly the texture," says chef Shunji Nakao. "It's firm. It's
not exactly chewy and it's not crunchy, but it's something like
that."
Despite the sign at the door, Nakao says the Hump hasn't had a
problem with any customers so far. "But you know, some people don't
like to look at it," he says.
"Most people, though, when they come in, they ask us what is good
and when we tell them 'live shrimp,' or 'live lobster,' they always
order that."
Prices at the restaurants vary. At the Hump, regular shrimp are $8
per order, an order of two live shrimp (including having the heads
fried, turned into soup or served raw) is $10 to $12, depending on
the market price. At Kyoto, a bustling sushi bar in Koreatown at the
Chapman Market, the regular shrimp are $3 an order and the live are
$7 to $8. Halibut on ice is $3.50 and the live ranges from $10 to
$15 a per person.
While there is a difference between freshly killed fish and that
which has been on ice for even a day, it may not be what you'd
expect. Animals are not vegetables and freshest is not always best.
Like all animals, fish go through rigor mortis after they're killed
- a tightening and then relaxing of the muscles. This process can
take anywhere from one to three days to finish.
Until it does, the texture of the fish is tougher - definitely not
the satiny, buttery quality normally associated with perfect
seafood.
Live halibut sampled side by side with regular is chewier and the
flavor doesn't seem to be as nuanced. Because of the difference in
texture, sashimi from live fish is cut thicker and may be somewhat
irregular in shape rather than the thin, perfectly rectangular
slices you usually find.
But for fans of live seafood, this means little compared with the
sparkling freshness of the fish - taken straight from the water and
as close to nature as you can get short of wading into the surf and
catching it yourself.
This is RealityCarnival's cache of http://www.myinky.com/ecp/me/article/0,1626,ECP_2256_1561611,00.html.
Date of original article: November 22, 2002
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