May 21, 2012
Mauricio Mora-Bonilla Tour Details

Mauricio
Mora-Bonilla
Mauricio Mora-Bonilla
 

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Phone
415-434-1100

 
   
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Market Bar
One Ferry Building San Francisco, California 94133
Details:
We buy only Dungeness crab that weighs at least two plus pounds
(for those meaty legs) and is harvested from the nearby Pacific
Ocean. The whole crab is roasted and drizzled with our crab
butter sauce.

It's Addictive!!

San Francisco's Fisherman's Wharf is a landing spot for many
kinds of seafoods, but a glance at the big sign overlooking the
parking lot (or at the smaller signs posted around the city
pointing the way to the wharf) gives a clue to which is most
important. Both signs feature the distinctive shape of Dungeness
crab, one of the treasures of the West Coast fish market, and the
symbol of the Golden Gate fishing industry.

Most of the year, but especially in winter, the air around the
wharf carries the scent of crabs boiling in large outdoor pots,
to be sold in walk-away crab cocktails, or taken home to serve as
simple cracked crab. Inside the nearby restaurants, they may be
combined with other seafoods in a thick tomato-based stew called
cioppino, or as chunks of crab meat heaped on top of a salad with
Louis dressing.

Native to coastal waters from southern California to the
Aleutians, Dungeness crab (Cancer magister) is the main
commercial crab species south of Alaska, with important landings
in nearly every fishing port north of Santa Barbara. It's a
fairly large species, weighing about a pound and a quarter apiece
in the minimum legal size (6-1/4 inches across the carapace, or
upper shell) and running up to about 3 pounds. Most of the catch
is consumed close to home, but some gets shipped to other parts
of the country both fresh and frozen.

Around San Francisco, the season usually begins in November, and
cracked crab is as much a tradition at some Bay Area Thanksgiving
tables as turkey.

The common name of Dungeness crab comes from the town of the same
name on Washington's Olympic Peninsula, which in turn was named
after a point on the English coast near the strait of Dover.
Perhaps coincidentally, the waters off southern England are home
to a close cousin of Dungeness crab, the European common or
edible crab (C. pagurus).
Last Tour Update: May 15, 2012
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