BWF
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- 31 Oct 2013
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I once tasted this amazing dish in Bordeaux several years ago. Apparently it is a specialty of Bordeaux and is a seasonal dish only available in spring. The lamproies (or lamprey eels in English) are a prehistoric blood-sucking eel that attaches itself to other larger fish and sucks their blood! Despite it's gruesome reputation (and quite horrific appearance), the French make an amazing dish from this fish!
Apparently. it is the only fish that the French ex-sanguinate (or bleed) alive! Yes, the chef hangs the live eels and cuts their tails to allow the blood to flow into a bowl. The blood is mixed with cognac to make a rich sauce. Meanwhile they blanch the eels in boiling water to make removing the skin easier. Then they remove the entrails and cut up the fish into large chunks. I believe the chefs then cook the chunks in their own blood with cognac, white wine, leeks and bouquet garni.
The flesh is incredibly tender and tastes somewhat like sardines. Lampreys have no bones, only a cartilaginous spinal cord so you can eat the whole fish.
Apparently. it is the only fish that the French ex-sanguinate (or bleed) alive! Yes, the chef hangs the live eels and cuts their tails to allow the blood to flow into a bowl. The blood is mixed with cognac to make a rich sauce. Meanwhile they blanch the eels in boiling water to make removing the skin easier. Then they remove the entrails and cut up the fish into large chunks. I believe the chefs then cook the chunks in their own blood with cognac, white wine, leeks and bouquet garni.
The flesh is incredibly tender and tastes somewhat like sardines. Lampreys have no bones, only a cartilaginous spinal cord so you can eat the whole fish.