Arcachon
The Bordelais oyster — mild, mildly iodine, and eaten with rye bread and merguez on the lagoon's oyster-village jetties. France's second-largest basin and its most distinctly local oyster culture.
Taranto
Italy's oldest oyster growing site — the ancient Mar Piccolo of Taranto, a near-enclosed Puglian tidal sea producing warm-Mediterranean Pacific oysters with high iodine character and the sweetness of a very sheltered, very warm growing environment.
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.
Prat Ar Coum
The most mineral-intense premium French Pacific outside Gillardeau — grown in a narrow Breton tidal river where Atlantic and granite-filtered freshwater meet.
Tsarskaya
A premium Pacific oyster grown in Cancale's cold Breton bay — the tsar of French oyster marketing, with flavor that earns the name.
Belon
The original flat oyster appellation — defined by iodine, hazelnut, and metallic intensity from the tidal rivers of southern Brittany.