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    <title>Lobster Hide Out</title>
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    <updated>2008-10-09T19:50:58Z</updated> 
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        <name>SeafoodGuro</name>
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    <entry>
        <title>Live Lobsters:  A Short History</title>   
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        <published>2008-10-08T21:52:24Z</published>
        <updated>2008-10-09T19:50:58Z</updated>
    
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        <p>Close your eyes, and picture that large, mouth-watering lobster waiting on your plate for you to crack open and enjoy.&#160; You&#39;d be hard-pressed to think of anything that sounds better.&#160; However, don&#39;t rush out for a live lobster dinner just yet. Wouldn&#39;t it be fun to learn a little bit about the critter you&#39;re craving before you indulge?</p><p>We all know that the original citizens of America were the Native Americans.&#160; There were so few of them back in those days and so many lobsters just lying around in tide pools, that they could have all they wanted.&#160; If the truth were told, though, they didn&#39;t want any to eat. To them, a lobster was just fertilizer for their fields. They also used the meat as fish bait.</p><p>The early colonists didn&#39;t like them much, either.&#160; They also considered lobsters to be fertilizer and used them only as food for the poor.&#160; They fed them to their children, slaves, and indentured servants.&#160; Indentured servants eventually started fighting back and refused to sign contracts until they were guaranteed to only have to eat lobster three times a week.&#160; Unfortunately, the children and slaves didn&#39;t have contracts.</p><p>Up until the early 19th century, people could get all the lobsters they needed by snagging them from tide pools. They had no need for technological advances in the harvesting of <a href="http://www.qualityfreshseafood.com/">live lobsters</a>. The first lobster traps didn&#39;t come on the scene until the 1850s. The reason harvesters needed traps is because they had become able to sell their lobsters to canneries.&#160; No one ate the lobsters fresh, and the canned version was so tasteless that few people ate them canned, either.</p><p>When our transportation system developed sufficiently to transport live lobsters, the meat finally caught on with the public. They were shipped to the finest restaurants in America&#39;s largest cities where only the well-to-do were able to afford to eat them.</p><p>Have you ever felt a little funny about watching a lobster resting quietly in a fish tank only minutes before he appears on your plate?&#160; Don&#39;t worry. That&#39;s been a common feeling since people began eating lobsters years ago. But if you want to experience lobster in its freshest form, this is the way it has to be done.</p><p>My great-grandmother lived most of the way through the 1960s. People around her were eating lobsters and other seafood, but she refused to even consider the possibility. It&#39;s not that she was a picky eater, because she had been raised to eat everything that was put on her plate. It&#39;s just that her sensibilities had been honed during America&#39;s Victorian era when ladies would never even think about something as ghastly as tossing a <a href="http://clearblogs.com/lobsterhaven/149455/Treat+Yourself+to+a+Live+Maine+Lobster.html">live maine lobster</a> into boiling water. Pass me the smelling salts, please!</p><p>It&#39;s amazing how tastes change over the years. For centuries the succulent meat of much-maligned lobsters went unnoticed and unappreciated.&#160; Then, almost overnight, lobsters moved from obscurity into the fanciest restaurants of the time. </p>   <p style="clear:both;"> 
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