Placeholder Image

Subtitles section Play video

  • - [Narrator] If you walked into a kitchen and saw a pig

  • cooked alive on the stove, you'd probably be horrified

  • and lose your appetite.

  • Yet this is how millions of lobsters meet their fate

  • in American kitchens each year.

  • Some people even relish choosing

  • which lobster's time is up at restaurants

  • or markets across the country.

  • But is a lobster really any different

  • from the other animals that we eat?

  • Why do we boil lobsters alive and why do places

  • even sell live lobsters?

  • Well, come to find out this seemingly barbaric way

  • of cooking lobsters could actually save your life.

  • Turns out, humans were boiling lobsters alive

  • thousands of years ago.

  • The first recorded case came from recipes

  • attributed to the famous Roman cook,

  • Caelius Apicius, in the first century.

  • American chefs later adopted the process by 1880

  • when they discovered that the dish looks and tastes better

  • when the animal is boiled alive.

  • It wasn't until later that we realized this also

  • reduces the risk of severe food poisoning.

  • And it's all because of these little guys.

  • They're a type of Vibrio bacteria and they thrive

  • on the decaying flesh of lobsters and other shellfish.

  • If a lobster dies you only have a few hours

  • before these bacteria show up to the party.

  • And once they're in, it's nearly impossible

  • to get rid of them.

  • Even cooking lobster meat won't kill all the bacteria.

  • So it's safer just to keep the animal alive

  • right up until you serve it.

  • If Vibrio bacteria end up in your system, it's not pretty.

  • You can experience abdominal cramping, nausea, vomiting,

  • fever, chills, and sometimes even death.

  • Luckily, there's a pretty good way to tell

  • if you've got meat that is gone bad.

  • Just smell it.

  • - I can smell the ammonia.

  • - Yeah, you can smell that?

  • And that's what that man's just eaten.

  • That's ammonia, that's what releases.

  • The body starts to decompose, it's been pulled apart,

  • and then decompose.

  • - That's what makes it bad--

  • - [Narrator] So boiling lobsters alive saves us

  • from a world of pain, but what about the lobsters?

  • For starters, lobsters don't scream when you boil them.

  • In fact, they lack lungs and don't even have

  • the proper biological equipment to form a scream.

  • What you do hear is air and steam escaping

  • from their shells.

  • In any case, we don't do this to chickens or pigs

  • because it's pretty obvious that they can feel pain.

  • For lobsters it's less clear

  • if their primitive nervous systems and brains

  • even know what pain is.

  • When a lobster thrashes around in the pot

  • does it mean it's in agony?

  • Or is it simply a reflex response

  • to the boiling water, not a conscious action?

  • Turns out no one really knows.

  • So more research is needed.

  • Regardless, some say this uncertainty

  • is exactly why we should think twice.

  • Lobsters we just don't know whether

  • they have conscious experiences or not

  • but there's a thing in ethics that we call

  • the precautionary principle.

  • When not knowing, we should err on the side of caution.

  • If there is a potential for something

  • to have the ability to suffer,

  • then we should treat that possibility very seriously.

  • So boiling lobsters alive is not a good idea.

  • - New Zealand and Switzerland certainly agree.

  • They've gone as far as to make it illegal

  • to boil lobsters alive.

  • Should America follow suit?

  • Let us know in the comments below.

  • (upbeat music)

- [Narrator] If you walked into a kitchen and saw a pig

Subtitles and vocabulary

Click the word to look it up Click the word to find further inforamtion about it