Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The hot dog buns have to have the crust sliced off on both the inside and out - and have to be grilled.
Fish Net, Blue Hill, Maine - hands down the best lobster roll anywhere.
They don't have to have the crust sliced off. You just have to use a top split hot dog roll available in New England. Yum.
Anonymous wrote:Coastal Flats in NoVA does a pretty decent one. (I grew up in MA.)
Anonymous wrote:The hot dog buns have to have the crust sliced off on both the inside and out - and have to be grilled.
Fish Net, Blue Hill, Maine - hands down the best lobster roll anywhere.
Anonymous wrote:I'm from Maine and would never recommend Red's Eats in Wiscasset. A classic Maine lobster is as the pp stated above. A hot dog bun (preferably JJ Nissan brand) toasted with butter and filled with lobster and mayo. Nothing else. Call me a snob but I will not eat lobster outside the state of Maine. The best places are Shaw's in New Harbor or Miller's lobster on the St. George peninsula.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What about making them at home? What would you dress the meat with? Mayo and what else? Is there a special type of roll anybody recommends?
As far as bread is concerned, use the cheapest hot dog or hamburger rolls you can find. Butter them up and grill them like you would a grilled cheese.
For the salad, add mayo (or miracle whip) and anything else that sounds good to you - think tuna - onion, celery. Everyone makes it differently.
Anonymous wrote:What about making them at home? What would you dress the meat with? Mayo and what else? Is there a special type of roll anybody recommends?
Red's Eats is definitely good for those visiting coastal Maine, but still hyped. If I'm hungry and passing there and there's no line, Red's is worth a stop. But my Maine relatives shake their heads in total wonder at those who will stand in a line 30+ deep along Route 1 on an August afternoon.
BTW, lobster rolls are definitely high margin products for the vendors this summer. I've seen lobster rolls as high as $14-$18 even in Maine recently which is a rip off when you consider that the floor has fallen out of lobster prices -- retail is $3.25 to $3.50 a pound this August for shedders, which is what they use for lobster rolls).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:None of the lobster rolls I've had in this area compare to those you get in Maine. Just...not...enough...lobster. And lobster tail doesn't count. It has to be claws and knuckles only. If you're ever in mid-coast Maine go to Shaw's in New Harbor. Oh my, you'll be in heaven.
Red's Eats in Wiscasset. Done and done.
Native Mainer here. Definitely Red's Eats, but locally the best I've had was at Hank's (and I'm picky)[/quote
Red's Eats is definitely good for those visiting coastal Maine, but still hyped. If I'm hungry and passing there and there's no line, Red's is worth a stop. But my Maine relatives shake their heads in total wonder at those who will stand in a line 30+ deep along Route 1 on an August afternoon.
BTW, lobster rolls are definitely high margin products for the vendors this summer. I've seen lobster rolls as high as $14-$18 even in Maine recently which is a rip off when you consider that the floor has fallen out of lobster prices -- retail is $3.25 to $3.50 a pound this August for shedders, which is what they use for lobster rolls).