Oursinado — Marseille Sea Urchin Tradition
Marseille coastline — the tradition of eating live-opened Paracentrotus lividus with bread, lemon, and white wine on the rocks or at port-side stalls. The oursinado is both a technique of handling and a seasonal ritual tied to the calendar: open season October through April. Associated with the Côte Bleue rocky coast west of Marseille.
Living Paracentrotus lividus are selected by weight and sound — a heavy, rattling specimen is full; a light or silent one has shed its roe. The urchin is held ventral side up, and a stout, short scissors blade inserted at the mouth-ring and cut around the equator. The top half is lifted away. The dark digestive tract and water are tipped out. Five orange coral segments remain arranged radially. Served on a wooden board with lemon quarters, country bread, and a small glass of chilled Cassis blanc or Bandol blanc. Eaten with a small spoon directly from the shell.