Barnegat Salts
From Barnegat Bay, behind Island Beach State Park on the Jersey Shore. Atlantic brine through the inlet, Pine Barrens freshwater from the west — a specific barrier island ecosystem that most of the oyster world has never heard of.
Copps Island
From the Norwalk Islands, western Long Island Sound. The Sound's more sheltered end: moderate brine, clean sweetness, firm Connecticut Eastern. Less intense than Fisher's Island or Mystic — different register, not lesser quality.
Fisher's Island
The Sound's eastern terminus, where Long Island Sound meets the open Atlantic. High brine, pronounced mineral character, limited production. One of the strongest Easterns the New York–Connecticut growing corridor produces.
Glidden Point
The Damariscotta River's prestige designation. Farmed at the river's mouth where Atlantic influence is strongest — the oyster that put Maine on the fine dining map.
Thimble Island
From the granite-island waters of Branford Harbor, Connecticut. Clean Long Island Sound brine, firm cold-water flesh, and a mineral character shaped by the specific rocky-bottom geography of the Thimble Islands.
Widow's Hole
From a small cove near Greenport, Long Island. Family-farmed in the Peconic Bay system where cleaner eastern water comes in — mineral, firm, briny, with a North Fork character distinct from generic Long Island Sound product.
Bluepoint
The name that became a synonym for Eastern oyster. The original Blue Point, Great South Bay harvest is largely gone. What remains is a name applied to Long Island Sound product of varying quality — and the genuine article, when you can find it, is still worth seeking.
Malpeque
The most internationally recognized Eastern oyster appellation in existence. Served at state dinners, listed on menus across Europe and Asia, used as the global reference point for Canadian shellfish.
Matunuck
Potter Pond, South Kingstown, Rhode Island. High-salinity salt pond water, cold Atlantic influence, and the direct farm-to-table model of the Matunuck Oyster Bar. One of New England's most distinctive salt pond Easterns.
Mystic
From the clean, cold waters of southeastern Connecticut's Fisher's Island Sound. Assertive Long Island Sound brine, firm cold-water flesh, clean finish. The Connecticut Eastern at its most genuine.
Shigoku
Shigoku means 'ultimate' in Japanese. Taylor Shellfish chose the name deliberately. Deep-cupped, firm, and briny with a cucumber finish that the tumbling method produces consistently — one of the most precisely engineered half-shell oysters on the market.
Watch Hill
From the southwestern tip of Rhode Island where Little Narragansett Bay meets Block Island Sound. High salinity, assertive brine, the mineral character that Block Island Sound exposure produces. The most marine of Rhode Island's named Eastern oysters.
Bouzigues
The French Pacific that breaks the mould — grown in the warm Mediterranean Thau Lagoon, with aggressive iodine and brine that has nothing in common with Breton or Norman production.
Caraquet
The finest Eastern from Atlantic Canada outside PEI — cold Chaleur Bay water, high brine, and a clean mineral finish that outperforms its modest profile.
Raspberry Point
PEI's most visually distinctive Eastern — a deeply ridged, plump oyster from the Gulf of St. Lawrence where the brine and sweetness arrive in proportion rather than in sequence.
Colville Bay
Prince Edward Island at its most expressive — colder and saltier than Malpeque, with the firm flesh and clean mineral finish that places it among the finest Eastern Canadians.
Blue Point Oysters
The Eastern oyster that built American oyster culture — the brine doesn't push, the sweetness doesn't hide, and the Sound does the rest. From the tidal waters of Long Island.