King Crab Legs with Drawn Butter
New Year’s Eve is a night for sacred foods in our family. We aways end the year eating nutrient dense foods — including oysters on the half shell, caviar, and king crab legs with drawn butter. Other favorites include pâté with toast and rillettes.
New Year’s Eve is a night for sacred foods in our family. We aways end the year eating nutrient dense foods — including oysters on the half shell, caviar, and king crab legs with drawn butter. Other favorites include pâté with toast and rillettes.
Note: This is one of the posts that got nuked when I moved my blog after I got de-platformed – I will be updating this recipe eventually. Thanks for your patience.
We spend more on the food, and save money on the bubbly. We ring in the New Year with a bottle of the Italian version of Champagne, Prosecco. Prosecco costs a fraction of what Champagne does, and it’s just as good. You can get it at Trader Joe’s for about $6 per bottle. Another cheap alternative to Champagne is Spanish cava.
Shellfish is the most nutrient-dense form of seafood. If your family doesn’t like organ meats, they’ll most assuredly love King Crab with melted butter.
According to the Weston A. Price Foundation:
“Many indigenous groups understood the necessity for special foods prior to conception, during pregnancy and during lactation. And crab was one of these foods. Of the photograph reproduced on page 400 of Nutrition and Physical Degeneration, Price described ‘a woman of one of the Fiji Islands who had gone several miles to the sea to get this particular type of lobster-crab which she believed, and which her tribal custom had demonstrated, was particularly efficient for producing a highly perfect infant.'”
To learn more about the benefits of eating crab, click here.
Equipment Needed for This Recipe
Ramekins or finger bowls
Optional: Steaming basket (can use a stainless steel colander over a saucepan)
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