When Lobster Wasn’t Considered a Delicacy

Daniel Ganninger
Knowledge Stew
Published in
2 min readJul 15, 2021

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Think about this the next time you’re out at your favorite local seafood restaurant enjoying an expensive lobster platter. The lobster hasn’t always been considered a delicacy like it is today.

In Colonial America, lobsters were so plentiful on the shores of the northeastern United States that they were called the “poor man’s protein” or the “cockroach of the sea.” Because of their utter abundance, they were fed to prisoners and servants, eaten by the poor, and having a shell in a house was looked upon as a sign of poverty. Native Americans even used lobsters as fertilizer. The lobster had such a bad reputation that servants made stipulations in their contracts that they wouldn’t be forced to eat lobster more than three times a week.

So what events made the change from lobster as a “trash” food and turned them into a fancy delicacy? It started with the success of the canning industry in 1840, which allowed the growing demand for Maine lobster to be met in other areas along the east coast. Factories began to spring up in the coastal cities, where four to five-pound lobsters were thought of as small, and two-pound lobsters were thrown out since the meat was considered not worth the effort to remove.

But by 1880, the canneries were having to use half-pound lobsters to fill the cans, which brought about much needed…

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Daniel Ganninger
Knowledge Stew

The writer, editor, and chief lackey of Knowledge Stew and the Knowledge Stew line of trivia books. Connect at knowledgestew.com and danielganninger.com