资讯

“Eating the shrimp’s digestive tract doesn’t make you sick—as long as you cook it thoroughly,” says Dr. Love. That means ...
The dark line running through the backs of shrimp goes by many names—the dorsal tract, back vein, or sand vein, Tori Stivers, MS, a seafood specialist at the University of Georgia Marine ...
Save some of your seafood dollars by learning how to devein shrimp yourself. The process is simpler, faster, and less icky than you probably think, we promise. To prove it, we spoke with chef Yara ...
It turns out that a love of beets is not the only culinary opinion that Dwight K. Schrute and I share. The mustard-clad bureaucrat and I also share an objection to eating shrimp that have not been ...
The dark line that runs down the back of the shrimp isn’t really a vein. It’s an intestinal track, brown or blackish in color, and is the body waste, aka poop.
One woman considered that it probably isn't cost effective for the food manufacturer to peel and de-vein the shrimp. But many could not see past their aversion.