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Frying Oysters

Posted on 4/3/19 at 7:16 am
Posted by dpd901
South Louisiana
Member since Apr 2011
7897 posts
Posted on 4/3/19 at 7:16 am
Give me your best recipies/tips/techniques for frying the perfect oyster.

Want them nice and crispy, but not over cooked, with just a bit of seasoning as I’ll be serving them with a cream sauce for a dish I’m making.
Posted by gumbo2176
Member since May 2018
19957 posts
Posted on 4/3/19 at 7:20 am to
I use a mix or yellow and white corn meal, about half and half. Add some seasoning of your choice, as for me, it's Slap Ya Mama, black pepper, garlic powder and a bit of cayenne.

Get your oil up to about 350, drop the oysters in and fry till the outside is crisp-----just a couple minutes to not dry them out. They'll start to float in the oil when I pull them out. Place on paper towels to sop up some of the oil or put them on a wire cooling rack to drain excess grease.

ETA: Don't crowd the oysters when frying as it brings the oil temperature down and they don't crisp up as nicely.
This post was edited on 4/3/19 at 7:23 am
Posted by OTIS2
NoLA
Member since Jul 2008
52475 posts
Posted on 4/3/19 at 7:37 am to
I grew up a seasoned cornmeal guy, but a 50/50 mix with seasoned corn flour is excellent.

3+ inches of oil

Heat to 350-360

Dredge oysters in meal, taking them directly from their brine

Fry a handful at a time until golden and floating...less than a 2 minute process

Do not over crowd the pot

Drain on a wire rack
Posted by Trout Bandit
Baton Rouge, LA
Member since Dec 2012
15022 posts
Posted on 4/3/19 at 7:41 am to
What Otis said. I used to be cornmeal only but I’ve switched to half meal, half flour.
Posted by SmokedBrisket2018
Member since Jun 2018
1544 posts
Posted on 4/3/19 at 8:34 am to
quote:

What Otis said. I used to be cornmeal only but I’ve switched to half meal, half flour.


I am close to this. I use half blue box louisiana and half flour.
Posted by horsesandbulls
Destin, FL
Member since Jun 2008
5196 posts
Posted on 4/3/19 at 8:47 am to
When I was 17 training on fryer at my first job, chef told me oysters are to be cooked less than 3 min or more than 30min. Anything in between is gonna be off. We had some big oysters we were frying so 3 minutes was good. Normal oysters should be around 2 min. Like the guy said above, don’t over crowd and pull me when they float.

Posted by dpd901
South Louisiana
Member since Apr 2011
7897 posts
Posted on 4/3/19 at 8:53 am to
Thanks guys! Good stuff.

quote:

Dredge oysters in meal, taking them directly from their brine


So no wash? I was reading a recipe in Garden and Gun where it called for Buttermilk instead of an egg wash. Said the tanginess of the buttermilk was a good offset to the briny flavor of the oyster.
Posted by SmokedBrisket2018
Member since Jun 2018
1544 posts
Posted on 4/3/19 at 9:03 am to
quote:

So no wash?


I always go straight from the liquor.
Posted by gumbo2176
Member since May 2018
19957 posts
Posted on 4/3/19 at 9:12 am to
quote:

I always go straight from the liquor.


Yep, here too. Can't beat the briny taste of the oyster liquor and that is why I always open my own instead of buying them already shucked and washed like the law requires them to do now.
Posted by OTIS2
NoLA
Member since Jul 2008
52475 posts
Posted on 4/3/19 at 11:44 am to
quote:

I was reading a recipe in Garden and Gun where it called for Buttermilk instead of an egg wash. Said the tanginess of the buttermilk was a good offset to the briny flavor of the oyster.


Anyone, and I mean ANYONE, who thinks they should run a fresh oyster through egg or buttermilk before frying needs to be run out into the damn street, stripped down and flogged. Publically flogged.
Posted by t00f
Not where you think I am
Member since Jul 2016
101945 posts
Posted on 4/3/19 at 11:57 am to
quote:

needs to be run out into the damn street, stripped down and flogged. Publically flogged.


Need to start a list
Posted by Shockthamonkey
BR
Member since Jul 2016
818 posts
Posted on 4/3/19 at 3:42 pm to
No wash, straight from the container only.
Posted by Sherman Klump
Wellman College
Member since Jul 2011
4571 posts
Posted on 4/3/19 at 3:53 pm to
I don't even coat them - literally straight from the shell into the oil. Anyone who uses a coating should be killed on the spot.
Posted by RetiredTiger
Lafayette,LA
Member since Mar 2014
731 posts
Posted on 4/3/19 at 5:50 pm to
Most important points to me are don't crowd them as the oil temp will drop to much,pull them as soon as they float and never ever drain anything on paper towels unless you want them to rest in their own grease. A wire rack/cookie cooling rack is the only thing to use for anything you fry.
Posted by CnAzInCA
Dallas, Texas
Member since Jan 2014
620 posts
Posted on 4/3/19 at 5:58 pm to
I don’t even shuck them from the shell, from the oyster bed straight into the fryer.
Posted by Martini
Near Athens
Member since Mar 2005
49660 posts
Posted on 4/3/19 at 6:08 pm to
quote:

Yep, here too. Can't beat the briny taste of the oyster liquor and that is why I always open my own instead of buying them already shucked and washed like the law requires them to do now.



When did this come into effect? I buy from Wilson’s in Houma and watch them toss directly into the container then hand it to me. You might be thinking of pasteurized oysters.

And I’m a Garden and Gun fan but they got that dredge in buttermilk wrong.
Posted by rodnreel
South La.
Member since Apr 2011
1537 posts
Posted on 4/3/19 at 10:14 pm to
when you drop in grease time 45 seconds and pull out.
Posted by AUCE05
Member since Dec 2009
45356 posts
Posted on 4/3/19 at 10:56 pm to
They are at their best when raw.
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