Razor Clams/Spoot Clams – Edibility, Identification, Distribution and how to catch and cook them

AKA Razor Clams – Enis spp

spoot sunset

Spoot clams, aka Razor clams

I love all shellfish and spoots are one of my favourite. The sweet succulence of their flesh falls deliciously between scallops and squid. As with many wild foods, the manner by which they are foraged enhances their gastronomic qualities. Being out in the wide expanses of a sand flat at twilight watching your first spoot lurch mistakenly (and a little rudely) from its silty burrow is one of the great foraging experiences. Children of all ages will be transfixed.  Though you will have to actively seek them out, there is, for once, no danger of misidentification – not much else lurks beneath the low tide sands in a cut-throat razor shaped shell.

spooters haul

Its amazing what you can get from pouring salt into the sea!

CHECK THE FORAGING EVENTS CALENDAR FOR GUIDED SPOOT FORAGING DATES or contact mark@gallowaywildfoods.com to arrange a low-tide foraging trip

With a little bit of research, some planning and the right equipment, spoots are not hard to come by. You will first  need to identify a low spring tide – which normally occur a couple of days after a full moon (“spring” here refers to the elasticity of the tide, not the time of year, though the lowest do occur in March). You can get them when the tide isn’t so low, but not so many or so easily. Like all shellfish, spoots should not be collected during the summer, when they are spawning, and water temperatures are higher, bringing greater risk of shellfish poisoning. Avoiding months without an “R” in them is a decent rule of thumb, though around my way they are pretty hard to catch even on big autumn tides, and I see them predominantly as a spring food.

Very low tide at sunset, Wigtown Bay

Next you should equip yourself with salt – either a plastic tub from which dry salt can be accurately dispensed, or a strong solution that can be squirted (serious spooters use pump dispensers of the type used for spraying garden weedkiller). You will also require a good pair of wellies and a bucket the size of your optimism.

Spoot clams – Enis siliqua

Once suitably equipped and with the tides in your favour, you must select your hunting ground. Lots of empty shells washed up on the beach is an encouraging sign, but remember that waves and tides don’t always move debris directly in and out. Generally,  beds of fine sand of the type exposed in most of Galloway’s sandy shores are worth a look, though different sub-species thrive in different grades of grit and shingle. A certain amount of trial and error is necessary – and patience as you may only get the chance once or twice a month.

When you have selected a likely time and place, head out over the large expanse of exposed sea bed. This is an area that looks like a barren wet desert, but is actually teeming with life beneath the silt and sand. The further out you can go, the better the hunting will be.Coastal Foraging

If you are in a good spot, you should soon be alerted by small “spoots” of water being shot out of the sand – normally on the very periphery of your vision. This is the clam taking evasive action at the thunder of your foot-falls.  Often they are slow to react, and don’t actually start their downward journey until you lift your foot. For this reason, walking backwards will actually increase your chances of seeing a spoot spoot!

Their “default” feeding position is at right-angles to the sea bed with their “mouth” end flush with the surface. As they flee, they move rapidly downwards, and, in the fine silts of the Solway and Wigtown Bay, any digging on your part is likely to be fruitless – or mangle the clam beyond edibilty. In coarser sands off Orkney and Lewis they burrow more slowly and it is often possible to plunge your hand and grab them as they retreat. But even in these areas many will evade you. This is where your salt comes into play.

Keep your eye on the source of the “spoot”. You should be able to discern the clam’s escape route in the form of a small crater (sometimes this can look like an elongated 8). Liberally apply you salt and wait. If both your salt and the sand are dry, it may help to wash your salt down the hole with some sea water. You should soon see pulsing movements of wet sand in the crater. This is the exciting bit –  for the first few hundred times anyway! Eventually, the clam should magically, and quite rudely, emerge. Don’t get panicked into grabbing them as soon as they put their head above the parapet – they could easily slip from your grasp. Even if they seem to be retreating again, have faith! They move by pulsing motions in a two steps forward, one step back kind of way, and almost always fully emerge given time. Check out this video to see the process in action…

This is even more exciting for children and should give them the foraging bug for many years to come. My earliest foraging memory is hunting for shore crabs on Arran. My parents loved it – we could entertain ourselves for weeks with 20 square metres of beach and a bucket. Of course, we had no notion of eating the crabs – finding and tormenting them with lollipop sticks was pleasure enough…

A friend of mine from Shetland sneers a little at the salt method. It is seen as a wee bit “soft” up there and anyone turning up at low tide with salt will get sideways glances. Their technique is a much fairer contest whereby you creep up on their burrows and cut a long-bladed knife through the sand until it makes contact with the fleeing mollusc. Keeping a sideways pressure against the shell will stop its flight and you should be able to root them out quite easily. It certainly isn’t as easy as the salt method, but is ultimately more satisfying – but only once the novelty of seeing them erupt has worn off.

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I have developed a technique which allows me to look down my nose at even the Shetlanders. I call it sporting spooting or mollusc wrestling. It requires launching your finger down a burrow when you see the spoot, and arresting the clam’s downward journey by pressing hard in a sideways direction with the tip of your finger. Next, wrestle your thumb in until you can pinch the top of the shell. From there it is a battle of stamina – the clam pulling down with all its (not inconsiderable) strength, while your hand and wrist locks into a spasm. See me demonstrating this ancient and noble art here:

If you have managed to locate a good colony, you should be able to gather a good number before the incoming tide spoils your fun. Try not to get carried away in the excitement of it all and take more than you can use – remember, they are shellfish and have limited fridge-life. I also recommend throwing the smallest 50% of your haul back. This means you don’t have to work out which sub-species you have been catching (each mature to a different size), and can be sure you aren’t catching immature specimens.wild salad+spoots 1

In my opinion, unlike most other filter-feeding bivalves, spoots do not require purging or depuration. I say this as somebody with a fairly robust constitution, who likes a lot of his shellfish as close to raw as possible. Some people might advise you to purge (24 hours in clean salt water) and thoroughly cook all molluscs before eating. I have never had so much as a wet fart from any seafood so am perhaps a little more relaxed than most. You should make your own mind up on this issue. I rinse them of sand and silt, then eat them raw, with perhaps a sprinkle of fresh pepper dulse and dried sea lettuce, maybe even wrap them in a wild garlic leaf. If you really feel you must cook them, briefly steam them open (30 seconds should be enough – they are ruined by over cooking), then rinse them again.

Spoot meat – all light parts are edible

The meat and gubbins should then come easily away from the open shell. The only part not recommended for eating is the darker coloured stomach, though the mouth can be a bit chewy. The “foot” is the “choice cut” – tenderest and sweetest. I can never resist eating some raw and wriggling on the shore. They taste like very fine, extra sweet squid and lend themselves to similar preparations such as marinading and stir-frying, or both. Cooking – if you must – should be kept to a bare minimum. They make superb sushi or sashimi. Roll with wild garlic, wood sorrel, cuckoo flower for a real gastronomic treat.

Making sushi rolls with spoot clams

 

Spoot clam and wild herb sushi

 

 

I developed my Scottish dashi broth recipe specifically to appease people on my coastal forays that couldn’t face them raw and wriggling. Spooning hot dashi broth over very lightly poaches them and provides a startlingly umami-heavy experience.

Foraged dashi broth made with spoot clams, seaweeds and garum

 

How to Make Spoot Clam Offal Garum

I use all the less choice cuts to flavour fish stock, or ferment them into garum – a salty condiment. The closest reference point most people will have to this is likely to be the fish sauce used in Asian cookery, though it is actually a preparation most associated with Western Mediterranean cookery, and predates the Romans. In UK cuisine, Geo Watkins Anchovy Sauce is the closest you will find to it commercially. XO sauce and even Worcester Sauce also use fermented fish to create pungent umami along these lines.

Garum very pungent, and not for the faint hearted. It is salty enough to use to spark further ferments and adds extraordinary fruity and super funky notes to fermented wild garlic. I have also made a passable garum with fungi. I also use it to season and add umami to meat stews and barbecued meat and shellfish.

The basic process with spoot clam offal (or any fish trimmings, including the guts – in fact especially the guts, as they contain enzymes that improve the fermentation), is to blitz/pound/stir them with about 20% by weight of sea salt, then leave them to ferment for about 6 months, stirring occasionally. Its a smelly process, and the end result is not for timid cooks. But used judiciously it is an amazing seasoning.

Garum fermented from spoot/razor clam offal

Related Posts:

Raw spoot with ramsons and spring herbs

Raw spoot with cuckoo flower, ramsons and wood sorrel

21 Comments

  • Tom Price says:

    Great post mate. Never heard the ‘Spoot Clam’ name before. I think i prefer it.

    cheers

    • mark says:

      Thanks Tom. It is a good name – peculiarly Scottish I think, but no reason not to spread it further afield…

      • alan Walker says:

        The name spoot originates from the Western Isles and means spout ie they spout out the water. I learned this from an old fishermans wife when I holiday’d in Lewis many years ago.

    • Helena says:

      Fabulous – thank you so much: I shall be salting away at the Nairn beach either in the autumn or more likely in the spring. These things always fascinated me, knowing they were delish but I had and ex-husband who refused to eat them as -“they look like dogs’ willies”… However, ignore the ignoramus. Your info on pepper dulce and sea lettuce is excellent and is shall immediately get those on tomorrow morning’s beach walk. Thank you! xx

  • Spoots are cool! Lovely fried with finely chopped bacon. I think the name “spoots” might originate in the Northern Isles.

  • Anne Anderson says:

    Great post Mark
    Love the video. Have eaten them often, usually abroad but never foraged locally for them. I haven’t lived! Must try at home.

  • John Dutton says:

    I live in Oregon, USA, Check out our razor clams. They are very American. Fat around the middle.

    http://www.clamdigging.info/#Anchor-Orego-4928

  • Irene says:

    HELLO !!! Great info here 🙂 thank you & Happy 2016!
    I’ve been seeking these bivalves for a few years now.
    I was told by a Greek fisherman that they make good sturdy fishing bait but he did not add that they are eatable nor that I must seek them out in low tide in the mornings.
    Thank you again … I’m off to another quest

    Irene

    • mark says:

      Good luck!
      I meet quite a few fishermen catching them for bait when i’m out spooting. They can’t believe I eat them, and I can’t believe they don’t! There are lots of lovely fish out there, but none are tastier than spot clams!

      • Irene says:

        🙂 I’m interested in all the wonderful items and information you are sharing with us! It’s pleasure reading your blog whether it’s about botany or marine life.

        I wish I was there (Scotland ) to try spooting razor clams myself! 🙂 – haven’t spotted any such mollusks on this side of the mid – Atlantic coastlines.
        The little island on the Aegean ( Chios) where I hail from … there we have a good variety of marine life as well as rare & wild botanicals.

        Thank you again 🙂 Stay warm! (We are in the midst of a snow blizzard here in Washington)

  • Tom Gulstad says:

    Hello Mark.
    After having a bit of a time finding out about Arsesmart, I found out that your recipe actually sounded quite delish, as well as funny, at least from the origins of the name.
    Much more boring in my lang, but nonetheless a bit of a challenge for a chili-connoisseur like myself.

    I love your page to bits, and wish you tons of spare time to research all those wonderful nibbles all around us.

    Cheers.
    Tom

    • mark says:

      Thanks Tom, glad you like it.
      Sadly, i’m finding less and less time to spend on the website, though I never stop playing and exploring. 🙂
      Mark.

  • Karen Williams says:

    How long does it take the razor clams to die after being pulled out?

    • mark says:

      Hi Karen, That depends on what you do with them. Like all shellfish, they taste better the sooner you kill and eat them. I eat most of mine within 30 minutes of catching. The rest I shuck and kill straight away, or put straight into the freezer, which seems to be accepted as a humane means of killing them, and also tenderises the meat. Steaming as soon as you get them home is another way to go. As far as I know, commercially traded spoot clams stay alive for up to 1 week, provided they are stored correctly, though I wouldn’t reccomend that for the clam’s or the eater’s sake!

  • Jo Hewitt says:

    Love, love, love razors. We use a pop bottle with a hole in the lid and sea water. Great excitement & lots of giggling guaranteed!

  • karl gibbson says:

    Hi we up galloway end of October and was wondering what’s the best tide size to go out razor calming.we might try sand head or if you got a better beach you could try would be appreciated. Many thanks karl.

    • Mark Williams says:

      I don’t usually find the tides to be low enough in October for this. But if you pick the lowest tide and have a go, who knows, you may get lucky. Happy hunting, Mark

  • Danny says:

    Hope your choice of footwear is appropriate for these excursions, Mark. I’m down that way quite often fishing for bass and I keep meaning to book myself on one of your events!
    https://www.amazon.co.uk/Sandy-and-the-Spoot-Boots/dp/0952429608

  • Jack Murphy says:

    I find your articals most interesting on razor clam foraging, and I will be up in Ayr at Craig Tara in September, just wondered what the foraging will be like in that area at that time, waiting in anticipation.

    • Mark Williams says:

      Foraging is good anywhere with any wild green space – but especially at the coast. Plenty sea buckthorn at Craig Tara. No idea about sports there.

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