How to Gather Limpets
Limpets are cone-shaped snails that clamp tight to intertidal rock, a traditional coastal food popped off with a quick knife flick - small, chewy and briny, grilled or simmered from clean rocky shores.
Gather limpets only from clean, open, certified-safe rocky shores. Mind the surf and slippery rocks. The meat is chewy and best cooked; shellfish is a serious allergen, so cook thoroughly.
Limpets are the little cone-shelled survivors of the rocky shore, clamped so tightly to the rock that prying one off is a genuine test of surprise and quickness. They have fed coastal people for thousands of years, and they still make a simple, free forage: pop a few off the rocks at low tide, grill or simmer them, and you have an honest, briny taste of the intertidal. Small and chewy, yes, but satisfying and easy to find on any rocky shore with clean water.
Why go for them
They are free, abundant and about as accessible as foraging gets - clinging to rocks you can reach on foot at low tide, needing nothing but a blade and a bucket. The briny, chewy meat is a traditional coastal food that goes well grilled with garlic butter or simmered into a rice or stew, and gathering them connects you to a very old way of eating from the shore.
Where and when to find them
Limpets live on wave-washed intertidal rocks, boulders and ledges across the mid-shore, clamped in place and exposed at low tide. Gather them on a good low tide, working the rocks where they cluster. Any rocky shore with clean water will hold them, so the concern is water quality more than location.
How to catch them
The trick is surprise: approach quietly and knock or slide a blade under the shell in one quick motion before the limpet clamps down, then flick it free into your bucket. If it senses you and seals to the rock, you will not shift it, so move on to the next. Wear gloves, mind the slippery rock and the surf, and take only what you will eat.
Handling, cleaning and cooking
Rinse the limpets and pull the foot from the shell, trimming the gut. The meat is chewy, so cook it briefly and hot or long and slow: grill them in the shell with garlic butter for a couple of minutes, or simmer the cleaned meat into rice, soup or stew until tender. Do not cook them for a medium length of time, which leaves them rubbery.
Safety and the law
Gather limpets only from clean, open, certified-safe rocky shores, heeding any local closures, and take modestly so you do not strip a patch. Wave-washed rocks are slippery and the surf is dangerous, so mind your footing and never turn your back on the sea. Cook thoroughly; shellfish is a serious allergen. See our shellfish safety guide.