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  John B. Deitz

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Maryland Crab Cakes

Maryland Crab Cakes

While the blue claw crabs (Callinectes Sapidus) are found near our home in the Great South Bay and contributing estuaries such as the Carman's River, they are harvested commercially along the entire East Coast from the Gulf of Mexico to the Mid-Atlantic states. They are especially renown in the Chesapeake Bay of Maryland and Virginia, hence the fame of Maryland crab cakes.

Blue crabs are generally caught in baited "crab pots" during the late summer months.  But crabs are easily caught with patience, a chicken neck on a string and a crab net even by little children.  When the children were young, we kept a stock of frozen raw chicken necks in the freezer, and a crab net in the garage.  Females are distinguished by wide "aprons" on the belly and red tips on their claws.  Males claws have the blue coloring without the red tips, and a narrow inverted T apron on their belly.  They are also usually larger.  Some advocate returning the females to the water to encourage reproduction.  Fresh crabs should be steamed live until they turn red-orange before extracting meat—like lobster.

Fortunately, blue crab meat is typically also sold in one-pound containers in three forms:

bullet jumbo lump - which has the largest pieces with little shell,
bullet backfin - large white pieces of crab meat from the backfin cavity, the pieces are smaller than jumbo lump and
bullet claw meat which is darker, sweet and rich in flavor.

Sadly, it's a bit pricey, especially when compared with a chicken neck, string, and patience.

My ex-wife was a Marylander;  I can't find her recipe but I think it was nearly the same as the one that follows, adapted from a cook book put together by the Women's Auxiliary of Seven Lakes, North Carolina, which became the retirement home of my aunt Margaret and uncle Bill in the 1970s, and was among my mother's collection of cook books.

Recipe

bullet

1 lb crabmeat, preferably backfin or a mixture of backfin and claw meat.

bullet

2 Tbsp. mayonnaise

bullet

˝ tsp.  Worcestershire sauce

bullet

1 egg

bullet

1 Tbsp finely chopped fresh parsley

bullet

1/2 tsp black pepper

bullet

Fresh cracker crumbs

  1. Hand pick crabmeat, removing any cartilage pieces.  (You won't get them all—a genuine crab cake should have a piece or two in it.)  Place meat in mixing bowl.

  2. In a separate bowl, combine wet ingredients and pepper.  Mix well with a whisk.

  3. Sprinkle parsley over crabmeat, then pour beaten mixture over crabmeat.  Toss or mix lightly, until reasonably well distributed, and so as to leave lump crabmeat in whole pieces.

  4. Pack a 1/3 cup measure with crabmeat mixture.  Empty onto wax paper and form firm cake with hands.

  5. Lightly coat cake with cracker crumbs.

  6. Fry or deep-fry until cakes are golden brown.

Hint:  If cakes are refrigerated for a few hours, they are easier to handle when frying.  They can also be broiled, in which case omit cracker crumbs and brush lightly with butter.  True Maryland crab cakes should have no cracker crumbs in the body of the cake.  They are held together by the egg.

Makes about 6 cakes.

Revised: May 02, 2010

 

 

 

Creamed Beef
Maryland Baked Chicken
Chicken Marsala
Chicken in Sour Cream Sauce
Crusted Pork Chops
Apple Ham Steak
Corn Bread
Mashed Potatoes
Potato Salad
Mushroom Gravy
Spinach Quiche (of the Covered Dish Variety)
Mushroom Quiche
Flounder with mushrooms and tomatoes
Clam Pie-Deitz/Tooker
Maryland Crab Cakes
Scallops Scampi
Tuna Salad
Oyster Dressing
Chopped Liver
Sauteed Chicken Livers
John's Famous Chilli
Green Beans
Pinto Beans and Corn Bread
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Sweet Cucumber Pickles
Jan's Eggnog
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