Gastropod looks at food through the lens of science and history.
Co-hosts Cynthia Graber and Nicola Twilley serve up a brand new episode every two weeks.
Co-hosts Cynthia Graber and Nicola Twilley serve up a brand new episode every two weeks.
More than a hundred thousand baby eels—known as elvers or glass eels—swim in a tank at the American Unagi facility in Waldoboro, Maine. These eels will live at the facility for between 7 months and 3 years, until they reach a harvest-ready size. Photo by Claudia Geib.
Sara Rademaker, founder of American Unagi, gives Nicky and Cynthia a sniff of the food that she gives her eels. (And, of course, they couldn't resist tasting it as well. Tasted kind of like anchovies.) Photo by Claudia Geib.
Patrick Svensson is the author of The Book of Eels, a New York Times bestseller that explores humanity's long fascination with the eel, alongside the author's personal history catching and eating eels in his native Sweden. He is also an arts and culture journalist for the newspaper Sydsvenskan.
Our friends at Eater visited American Unagi last year, and got a chance to see some of the adult eels Sara was raising in her pilot facility. You can read more about their visit at the Eater website.
Sara Rademaker is the founder of American Unagi in Waldoboro, Maine—the only commercial eel farm in North America. From humble beginnings in Sara's basement, American Unagi is now completing a facility capable of raising more than a million eels per year to adulthood. You can order whole and smoked eel to try for yourself through the American Unagi online store.
Samples of American Unagi's delicious whole (left) and canned (right) smoked eel that we sampled at the facility. Photos by Claudia Geib.
Eel fishers Pat Bryant and John Taylor were indispensable sources of information about the history of eel fishing in Maine, and John Taylor served as our guide to spotting (and catching!) wild eels at Pemaquid Falls.
On the hunt for wild eels at Pemaquid Falls: left, Nicky and Cynthia look for eels with the help of fisherman John Taylor; center, Nicky holds one tiny glass eel in her palm; right, hundreds of glass eels swim upstream, illuminated by John's flashlight. Photos by Claudia Geib.
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