A romantic dinner straight from Newport’s waters
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Hard to believe today, but once upon a time, Newport was pretty
small potatoes. Sure we had the Rendezvous and the Pavilion, which
drew crowds of dancers, and the Drugless Drugstore and other
establishments that drew the drinkers.
But for the most part, Newport was a summer destination for people
who lived inland. Once September came, the place closed up shop. The
year-round population was pretty small, and this was true of all the
other towns along the coast.
These small populations didn’t have much of an effect on the
ocean. For a great deal of my life, I looked at the ocean much the
way I looked at the grocery store, as a place to get food.
Hungry? Put on your trunks, head over to the rocks south of Little
Corona, and get a couple of lobster for dinner, or maybe some
abalone. The same thing was true of the Back Bay. We’d go back there
and get scallops and steam them.
I remember one memorable meal. I had met a young woman at the
beach that day. We hit it off, and I invited her over to my place for
dinner that night. I will confess up front that I was intent on
seducing her.
I left the beach and headed over to Little Corona, where I picked
up a couple of abalone. On the way in, I saw a small octopus and
grabbed that as well.
That afternoon, I prepared the abalone, slicing it into steaks,
and then pounded away at those steaks with an empty milk bottle until
they were perfectly tender. When the time came, I’d roll them in
cracker crumbs and fry them with a little lemon juice. Once the
abalone was tenderized, I took the octopus and diced the tentacles
into a seafood cocktail, and everything was ready.
My date arrived. I offered her a drink, she accepted, and we had
that drink, then another, and I was practically rubbing my hands in
glee, so well were my plans proceeding.
I put the seafood cocktail on, while plying the young woman with
another drink. By this time, we were exchanging deep, meaningful
glances, and I could hardly wait to get through dinner and to the
main purpose of the evening, at least from my eager young man’s point
of view.
My date had virtually demolished the seafood cocktail and was
fishing around with her fork for the last little morsel. A woman of
appetite! I liked that. She speared the last piece of the cocktail
and looked at it. This piece had an intact circle of the little
suction cups that line the bottoms of octopus tentacles. She looked
at it more closely. She frowned.
“What is it?” she asked.
“It’s the octopus -- .” I didn’t even get the word tentacle out of
my mouth before she threw up all over herself and the table. So much
for my romantic evening.
Of course, nowadays, everyone and his mother, brother and cousin
twice removed wants to live at the beach. There are no coastal towns
with small populations, and the ocean has paid a price for its
popularity.
Today, if you want a lobster, you go to the market. Abalone have
become like diamonds in their scarcity, and I don’t think anyone
would want to eat anything that came out of the Back Bay. I don’t
dive anymore, but I occasionally snorkel around, and you don’t even
see Garibaldi, which used to be extremely common.
I understand there’s some move afoot to protect certain areas of
the ocean like we protect our national parks. It might be something
to consider.
* ROBERT GARDNER is a Corona del Mar resident and a former judge.
His column runs Tuesdays.
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