14 February 2016

Love-me-knots

Lukót (sea hare eggs)

It took me a while to become comfortable with the idea of eating lukót. Here was a case of a little knowledge working to my detriment — or, to be apt, discouragement. If you don’t know it yet, lukót, despite appearances, is not a seaweed or some kind of marine plant. It is, in fact, the secretion of donsol (sea hare, a species of sea slug).

Animal secretion, you say? If it’s on the solid side, it could only be… ahem, y’know? Heck, let’s come right out and say it: poop. (Happy Valentine’s, by the way.) I only mention this misperception because it is so widespread, and for the longest time that was what held me back from trying lukót. Sea pasta, my ass.

Lukót (sea hare eggs)

What can I say? I was misinformed. Lukót are actually eggs in their casings, which makes the act of eating them more genocide than coprophagy; as it turns out, a single sea hare* can lay millions of eggs in one sitting, nearly a billion in a single season. Does that make me feel better? Once I dared try lukót, there was no going back. In soup or simply dunked in spiced vinegar, this shit’s good. See? I can even joke about it now.


* I had initially confused sea hare (a mollusk) with b’at (sea cucumber), which is a whole ’nother creature more closely related to starfish and sea urchin, but more distinctively does not produce lukót. «

This post has 2 comments.

  1. Thanks for clearing this, um, shit up. Pardon my French.

    ReplyDelete
  2. paborito jud ni nakong kauunon lame gani lubihan he he
    metronidazole for fish is an antibiotic (for anaerobic bacteria) and anti-protozoa medication used to treat a wide range of conditions internally

    ReplyDelete

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