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How to Gather Turban Snails

Turban snails are sturdy top-shaped snails of Pacific rocky shores and kelp beds, a traditional hand-gathered food - small, briny and a little chewy, cooked much like periwinkles.

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Gives
Small, tasty foraged snails
Method
Hand-gathering at low tide
Season
Low tide
Effort
Beginner
โš ๏ธ Before you harvest

Gather turban snails only from clean, certified-safe rocky shores and take modestly. Mind the surf and slippery rocks. Cook thoroughly; shellfish is a serious allergen.

Turban snails are the easy, overlooked forage of the Pacific rocky shore - sturdy, top-shaped snails that graze the rocks and kelp and gather in enough numbers to be worth a bucket. Traditionally eaten by coastal peoples and still enjoyed by shore foragers, they are small and a little chewy but pleasantly briny, and you cook them almost exactly as you would periwinkles. All it takes is a low tide, clean water and a bit of patience with a pin at the table.

Why go for them

They are free, abundant and about as simple to gather as shellfish gets - picked by hand off rocks you can reach on foot at low tide. The briny little snails make a fun, sociable dish eaten winkle-style with a pin, and gathering them is a relaxed, low-effort way to bring an unusual, traditional shellfish home from the rocks.

Where and when to find them

Turban snails live on rocky Pacific shores, in tide pools and among kelp and rock in the mid-to-lower intertidal zone, exposed at low tide. Gather them on a good low tide where they cluster on rocks and weed. As with all rock-clinging shellfish, water quality matters more than finding them.

How to catch them

Simply pick them off the rocks and out of pools by hand into a bucket at low tide - no gear needed beyond gloves. Take a modest number of the larger snails, leave the small ones, mind the slippery rock and the surf, and only gather where the water is clean.

Handling, cleaning and cooking

Rinse and purge the snails in clean seawater, then simmer them for a few minutes until the meat firms. Pull the operculum door off and pick the meat out with a pin or fork, discarding the hard operculum and the coil of gut behind the meat. Eat them warm like periwinkles, tossed with garlic butter or added to rice and pasta. Cook thoroughly.

Safety and the law

Gather turban snails only from clean, open, certified-safe rocky shores, heed any local closures or take limits, and harvest modestly. Wave-washed and weed-covered rocks are slippery and the surf is dangerous, so watch your footing and the sea. Cook thoroughly; shellfish is a serious allergen. See our shellfish safety guide.

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