A Plague Of Spiders
Shooting Times & Country|June 24, 2020
Delicious spider crabs are found in abundance off the coast of the UK, so why does nobody eat them any more?
Nick Fisher
A Plague Of Spiders

To be perfectly honest, 20 years ago, before I moved to West Dorset, I’d never even heard of spider crabs. Now they are so much a part of my recreational crab-potting and family-feeding fishing life that when talking to others about them, we only ever refer to them as ‘spiders’.

The irony is that, although the south coast of England is pretty much plagued with spider crabs at this time of year, practically nobody ever eats them, which is insane because they are delicious.

They’re like a beautiful mongrel cross between a brown crab and a lobster, having Tim Burton-monster cartoon-like spindly long legs and elongated claws, packed with lobster-like white meat. Inside their dinosaur-Esque spiky armored body shell, they have a sumptuous mixture of soft brown meat and even thicker chunky white muscle meat.

The claws and legs are thick-shelled and take some welly with a hammer to crack open. And the porcupine-like prickly shell makes them a pain to handle when they’re alive and even more precarious to yank open after boiling. But the effort and the odd spiked finger or hammer thumped thumb is more than worth it.

Especially if you make spider crab spaghetti or linguini using all the brown and white meat mixed together. Gently warm it in a knob of salty farmhouse butter with some crushed chili and garlic, then fold it into the freshly cooked pasta and serve with fresh parsley and a cold beer or a big glass of white wine.

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