The Greenhorn Of Little Peconic Bay
Saveur|Spring 2018

THE BOOMING DEMAND FOR OYSTERS MEANS THAT DITCHING OFFICE LIFE TO FARM THEM WAS (PROBABLY) A GOOD DECISION

Jamie Lauren Keiles
The Greenhorn Of Little Peconic Bay

LONG BEFORE IT WAS FAMOUS FOR PIZZAOR DIRTY-WATER DOGS OR CRONUTS,NEW YORK WAS A CITY OF OYSTERS.

Prior to the turn of the 20th century, oysters were both a junk food and a delicacy—sold from carts with hot corn and peanuts, and served in restaurants in dozens of styles. The oyster beds of New York Harbor were said to produce about half the world’s supply. When Charles Dickens came to town in 1842, he made a special point to go slumming and visit one of the city’s notoriously rough oyster cellars. Piles of discarded shells in the street were a smelly monument to a city on the rise. By the time city officials figured out it was best just to dump them back into the water, the moment had passed. By then, the harbor and surrounding rivers were toxic. The last local beds closed for good in 1927.

Now the closest oysters to the city of New York are raised off the coast of Long Island. This is where I went to visit Peeko Oysters, a farm near the village of New Suffolk that started doing business in 2016. The new operation is still small—founder Peter Stein and two employees, Mark Pagano and Chris Coyne. Nonetheless, in 2017, the three-man, one-boat shellfish startup had oysters on the menus of New York City restaurants such as Oceania and Gramercy Tavern.

This story is from the Spring 2018 edition of Saveur.

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This story is from the Spring 2018 edition of Saveur.

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