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WAIE (whatamieating.com)


This is the searchable online international food dictionary with 67,413 terms in 307 languages plus 42,027 plurals.

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The database behind this site was the loving creation of Suzy Oakes, who has since passed away. She is greatly missed. You can see her obituary in the Guardian


belon

Plural: belons

Language: French

Description: Native oysters. There are two types of sea water oyster readily available in the United Kingdom and most of Europe: rock (Crassostrea gigas) and native oysters (Ostrea edulis). Native oysters (known in France as belons) are small, flattish and circular in shape and with a brownish-green, relatively smooth shell. They are difficult to farm, take four to five years to mature and are not disease resistant. Not only are they more scarce than rock oysters, they are also more highly regarded, with firm flesh and a subtle, delicate flavour. Rock oysters are relatively abundant; the meat is held in a deep elongated cup with a flat 'lid' and the shells are rugged and warty, covered in coarse textured bumps and crevices. The flesh is less substantial than that of the natives and the flavour sharper, even metallic. When the word 'oysters' is used alone this will almost always indicate rock oysters as, if they are natives, they will invariably be described as such. Rick Stein's favourite size for a native oyster is No 3 - "Not too big and not too small"

Native oysters are now being raised in the US where belon is also a term which has come to mean any of several European flat oysters raised on the coast of New England.



Pronounced: beh-LOH'
Latin: Ostrea edulis
Ethnicity: French
Most frequent country: France
Most frequent region: Brittany

See places: French food and cuisine, Brittany

See foods and dishes: armoricaine, Belon, Galway oyster, oyster

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