The first time you see it, your stomach drops. That strange green goo hiding inside your perfectly cooked lobster. Is it poison?
A delicacy? Or something you should never, ever swallow? Chefs whisper about it.
Seafood lovers argue over it. And scientists warn it can quietly store the ocean’s dirtiest secr… Continues…
Tucked inside the lobster’s body cavity, the green “tomalley” is far more than a weird surprise;
it’s the animal’s liver and pancreas, the organ that filters, digests, and quietly collects whatever the lobster has lived through.
That’s exactly why some diners worship it for its deep, briny richness, spreading it on warm bread or whisking it into sauces, while others push their plates away the moment they see that vivid smear of green.
Tomalley can be safe in small amounts from clean waters, but it’s also where toxins, pollutants, and algal byproducts tend to accumulate. Its flavor is bold, its texture creamy, and the decision is entirely yours. Inspect it carefully, enjoy it sparingly, and never feel pressured to eat it. The real luxury isn’t the green stuff at all—it’s knowing enough to choose what you’re truly comfortable putting on your plate.