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Ingredient of the Year: B.C. spot
prawns
Over 900,000 tonnes
of Tiger prawns are harvested annually, roughly two-
thirds coming from warm-water farms that dot the
deltas
of Southeast Asia. It’s a relatively new and
very profitable industry in producer nations like Vietnam,
and it has badly wounded the communities that support
it. Along with environmental damage have come disease,
debt, and dispossession. Despite these sad facts (not
to mention that the prawns often feast on antibiotics
and growth hormones), the prawns remain an attractive
commodity on the global market. Predictable by virtue
of their blandness and cheap availability year-round,
farmed Tigers will always be an easy sell. Mushy in
texture and almost devoid of flavour, they remain manufactured
ghosts, shadows of the real thing. (Indeed, if this
were a piece on the worst ingredient of the year, farmed
prawns would most certainly crack the shortlist.)
The strongest argument
against them is that we have always had a superior alternative
sourced by fishermen right here at home. Sweet and delicately
flavoured, firm on the incisors and succulent on the
molars, the B.C. spot prawn—largest of all our
local prawns—is one of the finest and best-tasting
crustaceans that our oceans surrender. And the fishermen
use baited traps on buoy lines, keeping habitat damage
and by-catch to a minimum. Supply of the spot prawn
has long been ample, but local demand had been minimal.
The short season, six- to eight-weeks beginning in May,
made it a delicacy overseas and doomed the domestic
market. Ninety percent of the catch was whisked to Asia,
the remainder going to the few restaurants and markets
around B.C. willing to pay a premium price. Enter the
Chef’s Table Society. Last May, the local collective
of conscientious food lovers, chefs, and restaurateurs
helped to develop and promote Vancouver’s first
day-boat spot-prawn fishery. To raise public awareness
they hosted the 1st Annual Spot Prawn Festival at False
Creek’s Fisherman’s Wharf. The event introduced
Vancouver chefs and home cooks to the best local ingredient
they’d never heard of, and ensured the spot prawn
a place on our more forward-thinking menus for years
to come.—Andrew Morrison
2nd Annual Spot
Prawn Festival: Fisherman’s Wharf, May 2. For
more information visit Chefstablesociety.com
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