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Oyster Guide | New England Oysters

Our New England oyster guide will help you find the best oysters to suit your needs and please your taste buds.

Oyster Guide | New England Oysters

Oyster Guide | New England Oysters

Photo Credit: Pixabay
Oysters are all about the place from which they hail, and New England oysters are no exception. Below you’ll find an oyster guide to some of the delectable oysters grown in the chilly waters of coastal New England. All are eastern oysters, but each type boasts a distinctive taste peculiar to the salty cove, plankton-rich bay, or brackish river where they are grown.
Oyster Guide | New England Oysters
Oyster Guide | New England Oysters
Photo Credit : Pixabay

New England Oysters

Bagaduce (Maine):

Deep cups, with a fruity, almost berry-like finish. The Indian name means “fast water.”

Barnstable (Massachusetts):

White to brown in coloring, with medium cups and light and clean brininess; somewhat sweet.

Cotuit (Massachusetts):

Medium to large size; silky-smooth meat, with a clean and lingering ocean essence.

Glidden Point (Maine):

Big boys from the Damariscotta River, with a slightly briny, crisp, and clean ocean flavor.

Island Creek (Massachusetts):

Large shells with small meat; sweet and slightly nutty in flavor.

Moonstone (Rhode Island):

Often power washed to produce pearl-white shells; silky-smooth meat with a full-bodied, rich saltiness.

Pemaquid (Maine):

Very plump, with a crisp, cold-water richness.

Stonington (Connecticut):

Deep cups filled with plump meats; mild saltiness and a sweet finish.

Ninigret (Rhode Island):

Medium size, with a creamy, nutlike taste at first and a clean, briny finish.

Wellfleet (Massachusetts):

Wild samples vary from very good to excellent; deep cups brimming with strong brininess and a sweet seaweed flavor. Farmed Wellfleets are also consistently good, with a similar sweet and briny taste and a coppery finish. This New England oyster guide was written in 2008 thanks in part to chef Gregg Reeves, B&G Oysters, Ltd., 550 Tremont St., Boston, MA; 617-423-0550. bandgoysters.com

SEE MORE: How to Shuck Oysters | Advice Jeremy Sewall’s Oyster Stew Fried Oyster Roll

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  1. I’m looking for canned oysters from New England farms or nearby ocean waters. Any suggestions?

  2. Great information and list. Just missing the oysters from New Hampshire.
    They are just as tasty and would love the recognition. Our beds are growing.

  3. Don’t leave Long Island out. Blue Point Oysters were once world famous. However, the South shore no longer supports the right conditions, but the North Fork is home to numerous oyster farmers (myself once included) Peconic Oysters are the classic flavor for us islanders. They are mellow and briny. I love mine with a touch of hot sauce. I often don’t even wait to take them home but eat them as I check my cages (I get quite a bit of ribbing about the bottle of hot sauce sticking out of my back pocket when I go out!)

  4. Do not forget Padanaram Oysters in Dartmouth, MA. Traditional family aquaculture venture that is making a name for Dartmouth’s historic Padanaram Harbor! Deep-cupped, clean shell and best tasting oyster on the East Coast.