Lalada Bohle
Member
- Joined
- May 28, 2026
- Messages
- 3
Thank you for your response! What would you say with the size of it, will it be valuable?Looks like a quahog pearl-- congrats! Nice find!
Speaking of "cooking" pearls, how is blanching pearls (quahog in this case) embedded inside the clam different from using hot water to loosen pearls from their settings, or heating pearls during maeshori (IIRC being one of the steps)? Is it the time and/or temperature? Or something else?A quahog is a rare find. This one isn't terribly valuable, though. The color and white banding aren't ideal. It does look like it cracked when flash fried. That's an issue with a lot of the naturals that are found. People often bite into them after it's been steamed or fried. And a cooked pearl is usually a cracked pearl.
Pearls can crack from expansion during cooking for two reasons. First, thermal co-efficiency where dissimilar materials expand and contract at different rates, thus causing cracks. The other being gas expansion. Pearls in situ have a slightly higher moisture content than stored pearls and may expand when heated.Speaking of "cooking" pearls, how is blanching pearls (quahog in this case) embedded inside the clam different from using hot water to loosen pearls from their settings, or heating pearls during maeshori (IIRC being one of the steps)? Is it the time and/or temperature? Or something else?