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All About Eel, Elver, Lamprey and Unagi: Which to Choose and How to Cook and Eat Them

All about eel

In this post:

“I could not bring myself to be an ally of yours for neither our customs nor our customs agree…. you hold the eel to be a mighty divinity: we hold it to by far to be the mightiest of dainties”

Anaxandrides, writing a comedy in the fourth century, Island Towns

Introduction – how I discovered smoked eel

On our way to the ferry to Sardinia we stopped for lunch on the edge of a beautiful tranquil lake. Many householders on the waterside had gone unrestrainedly to town, their balconies and doorways a riot of scarlet geraniums mixed together with a host of other, local, colourful flowers.

We found a restaurant with a view and settled into our chairs. Then I noticed that the name of this lovely, sleepy town was Anguillara, and that there was anguilla (eel in Italian) on the menu, and what’s more it was smoked eel – just how I like it. So naturally I assumed that eel was the thing to have there. However, later research revealed that the town was named Anguillara because a villa there belonging to a rich family supplying ancient Rome with fresh lake fish had an angular shape. If I’d known that I might never have tried the delicious eels!

Riots of scarlet geraniums… and other things…

Buying smoked eel – the sustainability issue:

Many of the narrow water courses and water meadows where eels used to proliferate are being reclaimed these days and wild eel are becoming rarer. To read about how to buy sustainable eel and what’s causing the problem see the full story here.

However, in quite a few of the dishes below you could substitute smoked mackerel or kippers.

You want to buy it boned and smoked, then you can use it straight away without cooking it.

What to do with smoked eel – loads of ideas:

“A plateful of smoked eel, accompanied by a mountain of pungent horseradish, is as much a taste sensation as a green papaya salad or Goan vindaloo”

Tom Parker Bowles, E is for Eating: An Alphabet of Greed
Serve it plain with horseradish sauce.

“Over the months, people would come in during the dinner rush, sit at the bar and order just a smoked eel sandwich, sometimes with beer, sometimes on its own, then pay silently and slip out into the navy Soho night. You could smell it before it arrived — the buttery saltiness of bread, the wood smoke in the eel, the sharp tang of the pickle. A treat. A thing of beauty.

The smoked eel sandwich was the one thing all the staff prayed would get sent up by mistake, an erroneous order, misread by the kitchen or wrongly put through by a supervisor, so we could take it reverently into the back, slice it into bits and devour it before going back out to top up the guests’ emptying glasses.”


“Brillat-Savarin recounts a tale of a three-foot eel fed to friars by a certain Madame Brguet. The presentation of the eel was so suggestive that the conversation ‘settled on the most popular of mortal sins and remained there'”.

Lana Citron, Edible Pleasures

Elvers:

Elvers are young eels that travel from the ocean where they are born to inland rivers and streams to mature. They are much more appreciated in countries like France, Portugal and Spain, also Japan than in the UK although many come from the West Country (the Severn river). Fry then in bacon fat and beaten eggs, or with garlic and chilli. They are in season in April and May, and in a scarce year can be almost as expensive as caviar.

Chef Nacho Manzano, at Casa Marcial, pairs the elvers with slivers of mushroom and then douses them in a shimmering broth with an egg yolk, for added silky richness.

Elvers on sale at the Mercado San Miguel in Madrid.

“….Or the elvers we had in Madrid, fried in oil with garlic and half a red pepper. It had been a cold spring morning and we’d spent two hours in the Prado, gazing at the Velázquezes, hugging one another it was so good to be alive: we had cancelled our bookings on a plane that had crashed.”

Bruce Chatwin, A Coup, in Granta 10: spring 1984

Unagi:

Unagi is freshwater eel, often used in Japanese cooking.

Heather Watson, British No 1 female tennis player, says that for her last meal she would choose Unagi – Japanese eel “the sound of it might put you off but it’s so good”.

In her wonderful book on Japanese cooking, Reiko Hashimoto suggests serving this with daikon radish, a rich terriyaki sauce and then either with foie gras or with duck livers. A second suggestion from her is to serve it on a bed of spinach, prawns and edamame beans and gilded with a kind of tofu-based savoury egg custard. Buy her book, Hashi, for both these recipes.

Lampreys:

Lampreys are not eels, but they look a bit like them being about the same size and having no scales. Since Roman times they’ve been considered a bit of a delicacy, with Henry I of England liking them so much that he died of a surfeit of them. They are described by Nino Latini, Philip Kazan’s taste prodigy hero in Appetite as being a horrible task to prepare, but with regard to the taste he says:

“The flesh was sweet, not fishy at all, and the texture was a little like young rabbit. The tartness of verjuice fitted into the earthy richness of cinnamon like a sword into a scabbard. A dish to make the maestro smile”.

What to drink with eel:

You could try an orange wine from Slovenia or Italy. For more information on orange wine in Slovenia follow this link.

Eating eel in a restaurant:

If you want someone else to cook eel for you you can go to Ceviche Old Street in London where you will get eel served with sea bass belly, which, according to Zoe Williams in The Daily Telegraph is “punchy, rich, street-y, but suave”.

This post is dedicated to The Eel.

Read

The Book of Eels, by Tom Fort

Eel music

Below, listen to Kitty Macfarlane’s song about European eels migrating from the Sargasso Sea to the rivers of Somerset. The poetic lyrics end with the comment:

“…the irony that

While patient science adds fact to fact

Hasty man draws lines on maps.”

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