翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Oyri
・ Oyrières
・ Oyré
・ Oysho
・ Oyskhara
・ Oysonville
・ Oystar
・ Oyster
・ Oyster (album)
・ Oyster (company)
・ Oyster (disambiguation)
・ Oyster (fowl)
・ Oyster (magazine)
・ Oyster (novel)
・ Oyster Bar
Oyster bar
・ Oyster Bay
・ Oyster Bay (hamlet), New York
・ Oyster Bay (inlet), New York
・ Oyster Bay (LIRR station)
・ Oyster Bay (town), New York
・ Oyster Bay Bank Building
・ Oyster Bay Branch
・ Oyster Bay Cove, New York
・ Oyster Bay Guardian
・ Oyster Bay High School
・ Oyster Bay History Walk
・ Oyster Bay Main Street Association
・ Oyster Bay National Wildlife Refuge
・ Oyster Bay Regional Shoreline


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Oyster bar : ウィキペディア英語版
Oyster bar

An oyster bar, also known as an oyster saloon, oyster house or a raw bar,〔MacMurray, p. 131.〕〔The term raw bar is more commonly used to describe more than just oysters. A raw bar usually offers a wide selection of raw oysters as well as raw clams and raw fish or sushi. It may also offer cooked but cold shrimp, mussels, scallops, conch, and calamari. See: Koo, Poon, and Szabo, p. 43; Rosso and Lukins, p. 21.〕 is a food service term that describes a restaurant specializing in serving oysters, or a section of a restaurant which serves oysters buffet-style. In France, the oyster bar is known as ''bar à huîtres''.〔Williams p. 83.〕 Oysters have been consumed since ancient times and were common tavern food in Europe, but the oyster bar as a distinct restaurant began making an appearance in the 18th century. Oyster bars usually strive to offer only the freshest, tastiest oysters available.
==History==
Human consumption of oysters goes back to the ancient Greeks and Chinese. Oyster consumption in Europe was confined to the wealthy until the mid-17th century, and by the 18th century even the poor were consuming them.〔Reardon, p. 1-3.〕 Sources vary as to when the first oyster bar was created. One source claims that Sinclair's, a pub in Manchester, England, is the United Kingdom's oldest oyster bar. It opened in 1738.〔Kemp, p. 337.〕 London's oldest restaurant, Rules, also began business as an oyster bar. It opened in 1798.〔Porter and Prince, p. 128.〕
In North America, Native Americans on both coasts ate oysters in large quantities, as did colonists from Europe. Unlike in Europe, oyster consumption in North America after colonization by Europeans was never confined to class, and oysters were commonly served in taverns. During the early 19th century, express wagons filled with oysters crossed the Allegheny Mountains to reach the American Midwest.〔Reardon, p. 4-7.〕 The oldest oyster bar in the United States is Union Oyster House in Boston, which opened in 1826. It features oyster shucking in front of the customer, and patrons may make their own oyster sauces from condiments on the tables. It has served as a model for many oyster bars in the United States.〔Kerr and Smith, p. 14.〕
By 1850, nearly every major town in North America had oyster bar, oyster cellar, oyster parlor, or oyster saloon—almost always located in the basement of the establishment (where keeping ice was easier).〔Reardon, p. 7.〕〔Betti and Sauer, p. 70.〕 Oysters and bars often went hand-in-hand in the United States, because oysters were seen as a cheap food to serve alongside beer and liquor.
By the late 1880s, an "oyster craze" had swept the United States, and oyster bars were prominent gathering places in Boston, Chicago, Cincinnati, Denver, Louisville, New York City, and St. Louis.〔 An 1881 U.S. government fisheries study counted 379 oyster houses in the Philadelphia city directory alone, a figure explicitly not including oyster consumption at hotels or other saloons. In 1892, the ''Pittsburgh Dispatch'' estimated the annual consumption (in terms of individual oysers) for London at one billion, and the United States as a whole at twelve billion oysters.
This enormous demand for oysters was not sustainable. The beds of the Chesapeake Bay, which supplied much of the American Midwest, were becoming rapidly depleted by the early 1890s. Increasing restrictions on oystering seasons and methods in the late 19th-century lead to the rise of oyster pirates, culminating in the Oyster Wars of the Chesapeake Bay that pitted poachers against armed law enforcement authorities of Virginia and Maryland (dubbed the "oyster navy").〔
According to the ''New York Times'' in 2014, about 90 percent of oyster bar sales in the United States come from farmed (not wild) oysters.〔(Stabiner, Karen. "Loss Leaders on the Half Shell." ''New York Times.'' February 22, 2014. ) Accessed 2014-02-22.〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Oyster bar」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.