VOA标准英语2012--US Jellyfish Land on Asian Dinner Tables
时间:2012-03-22 07:52:28
搜索关注在线英语听力室公众号:tingroom,领取免费英语资料大礼包。
(单词翻译)
US Jellyfish Land on Asian Dinner Tables
Jellyfish are lovely creatures to
behold1 underwater, as their gelatinous,
tentacled2 bodies undulate in the currents. They are also a nuisance and a hazard. They can sting swimmers and
clog3 fishing nets.
But, along the coast of the southern U.S. state of Georgia, jellyfish are a valuable export, which end up on dining tables across Asia.
Early on this
chilly4 February morning, most everyone in the tiny
coastal5 town of Darien is still asleep, but on the docks of Marco
Seafood6, along the Darien River, there’s plenty of activity. The
shrimp7 trawler, Kim C. King, has just
moored8, and nearly 100 workers are ready to start processing last night’s catch of jellyfish, which the locals call jellyballs.
“Basically jellyballs have been a nuisance to fisherman for 100 years,” says Thornell King.
TK, as everyone calls him, owns three shrimp boats, but each winter, when shrimp season is over, he sets his nets for jellyballs. That’s just his part time job.
“Actually other than
catching9 jellyballs, I’d much rather catch criminals," he says. "I’m a Georgia State Trooper.”
TK has been jellyballing for 14 years. Jellyballs - they’re actually cannonball jellyfish - are found in the warm coastal waters of the southeastern United States. They’re
seasonal10 - starting to appear in late winter and continue to be seen through the beginning of shrimping season in June and July
According to Georgia state
marine11 biologist Jim Page, they’re very common. “We always kind of laugh but, when they’re abundant, you could just about walk on water with them, you could walk from one to the next.”
They look like big floating mushrooms.
“They have a pretty solid core, a fairly
rigid12 core, on the underside of a
dome13 shaped cap," Page says. "The cap is real soft. It is clear typically, usually has a
maroon14 coloration around the outer edge of that cap, the soft dome that’s on top.”
Their
tentacles15 are shorter than those of other jellyfish, and cannonballs don’t sting. Most are about the size of grapefruits, although some can be as big as basketballs.
During shrimping season, they often get trapped in nets, so shrimpers have installed special devices - called jellyball shooters - in their nets to clear them out.
Darien became a jellyfish hub two decades ago, when a man named George Tai started catching them and exporting them to Asia. When he left Darien, he sold the processing plant and his fishing equipment to TK and his partner. Today, Marco Seafood is the area’s only jellyfish processor and exporter, even though the creatures can be found all along the southeastern coast, from North Carolina to Florida.
Georgia jellyfish are dried, preserved and packaged before being sold to a seafood distributor that ships them to Japan, China and Thailand.
There, dried jellyfish are a
delicacy16, used in soups and salads.
TK says they’re crunchy. “Actually they taste a little like the gristle of a chicken bone. It’s got that crunchy taste and that’s what the people in Japan and China, they like that
crunch17.”
Marine biologist Page has tried them, too. He’s not a fan. “One time and that was gracious plenty for me. They were more salty than anything. It was not my favorite, but fortunately there’s others out there that found it to be a favorite.”
Jellyball fishing is Georgia’s third largest commercial fishery - after shrimp and
crabs18 - but only five boats are permitted to catch them. That’s because Marco Seafood can handle only about 22,000 thousand kilos of jellyfish - one boat load - at a time, and there are no other processors.
So for now, although there’s an almost
unlimited19 supply of jellyballs, and TK thinks demand for his dried jellyfish will only increase, Asian
gourmands20 will have to be satisfied with a limited supply of Georgia jellyfish.
分享到: