Facts About Lobsters
Before you eat another one, check out the interesting facts about lobsters!
We love to eat them, but what do they eat? Lobsters crawl around the bottom of the sea hunting for food at night.
Although they will eat dead food, they subsist primarily on crabs, clams, fish, mussels and sea urchins -
they eat over 100 different types of seafood and plants. They live in rocky areas off the coast and hide in the rocks
and seaweed during the day and forage at night. Lobsters can live to be 140 years or more and can travel 100 miles in a year!
Some interesting facts about lobsters have to do with their coloring. Of course, when we picture them we think of
them as being red but that is only after they are cooked. When alive they are greenish brown, blue, yellow and even white.
There actually are some reddish colored ones too, but the bright red that we think of is only after they are cooked.
Lobsters molt (shed their shell) in order to grow.
Among the well known facts about lobsters is the fact that they can regenerate their claws, legs and antennae, but
did you know that they can drop a leg or claw at will and walk away to regenerate another one later? Contrary to popular
belief they do not have vocal cords so they won't scream when you plunge them into boiling water!
Facts About Lobsters - what's all that gucky stuff inside them?
Aside from the sweet white meat, lobsters have other strange substances in unusual colors! You may find that when you
first open your lobster, there is a white goopy stuff between the meat and the shells - this is their blood (it is clear while
they are alive and turns white when cooked). It has no taste and is harmless so you can either wash it off or eat it!
And what about the icky green stuff inside the body? That's the lobsters liver or digestive system. Commonly called
tomalley, it is safe to eat but since it is the liver it would most likely be the waste basket for all the toxins circulating
through the creature so you may want to just discard it and move on to the good stuff.
And the red stuff? A female lobster carries it's unfertilized eggs, or roe, under the tail. These are a bright red or coral
color and are safe to eat and even considered a delicacy by some.
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