Key Largo festival has visitors clutching at claws
To those who know their crabs, stone crab claws are the best-tasting crab in the world – which is why ‘crabbies’ flock to Key Largo, in the Florida Keys, for the annual Stone Crab Festival each January (30-31, 2010).
Attendees at the Stone Crab Festival feast on fresh stone crab claws along with locally caught fish and the shellfish conch, another Keys speciality. Music and entertainment is also on tap, with scheduled events including competitions, cooking demonstrations and even a ‘Conch Cook-Off. Saturday evening’s festivities are to culminate in a fireworks display.
Stone crabs live and breed in the waters around the Florida Keys and have a very unique feature: the ability to regenerate their claws, essentially making them a renewable resource. Local commercial fisherman harvest claws from crabs using baited traps. By law, only one claw can be taken at a time and it must be bigger than 2.75 inches. The live crab, still with one intact claw, is then returned to the ocean to grow a new limb.
Many crustacean gourmets believe that the meat from Florida’s stone crab claws is sweeter, tastier and more tender than that from any other crustacean. Claws are most commonly served warm with clarified butter or chilled with mustard sauce.
The stone crab season runs from 15 October to 15 May each year.
Key Largo Food Festival