Scotland sits on some of the richest shellfish waters in Europe. Every year, tonnes of langoustines, crabs, and oysters are hauled from cold Scottish seas — and sent almost entirely abroad. While visitors order fish and chips, the prawns they should be eating are already on a lorry to Barcelona.

The Waters That Make Scotland’s Shellfish Special
The cold, clean Atlantic waters wrapping around Scotland’s west coast and island chains are ideal for shellfish. Low temperatures mean slower growth, which means denser, sweeter meat.
The sea lochs of Argyll, the tidal currents around Orkney, the sheltered bays of the Hebrides — all produce crustaceans that chefs in France and Spain have been pursuing for decades.
Scotland is the largest producer of langoustines in Europe. These pink-shelled crustaceans — also called Dublin Bay prawns or Norway lobster — live in burrows on the seabed. In Scotland, they’re simply called “prawns.” Fishermen have been pulling them up in creels and trawls since the 1950s.
Why Scotland’s Prawns End Up in Paris
Around 70 per cent of Scotland’s langoustine catch leaves the country. Spain, France, and Italy are the biggest buyers. French restaurants prize Scottish langoustines above almost all others.
Back in Scotland, the story is different. Many coastal pubs and tourist restaurants don’t list langoustines at all. Fish and chips are easier, cheaper, and what visitors expect. Some of the finest seafood in Europe passes through Scottish fishing villages without ever ending up on a local plate.
This is starting to change. Smaller restaurants, harbour-side cafés, and fish stalls are putting langoustines, velvet crabs, and Orkney scallops at the centre of their menus. But you still have to know where to look.
What Else Lives in Scottish Waters
Langoustines aren’t the only treasure. Brown crabs from the waters around Orkney and the Hebrides are among the best in the world — sweet white meat, rich brown meat, sold for a few pounds at the quayside.
Velvet crabs, smaller and more striking in appearance, are a particular delicacy in Spain. Orkney scallops are hand-dived, meaning a diver picks each one individually from the seabed — an entirely different product from the dredged scallops sold everywhere else.
Loch Fyne on the west coast is famous for its oysters. The loch’s sheltered waters and rich plankton make it one of the finest oyster habitats in Europe. The Loch Fyne Oyster Bar at Cairndow has been serving them since 1978, and locals still drive hours for a seat by the loch.
Creel Fishing — The Old Way
Creeling is one of the most sustainable ways to catch shellfish. A creel is a wicker or metal pot lowered to the seabed, baited, and hauled up the next day. It catches only what enters it.
Along Scotland’s west coast, small boats still go out to their creel lines every morning. These are often family operations, running the same routes for generations. If you see a boat pulling creels at a harbour, the fisherman may well sell direct from the dock — fresh langoustines, still alive, bought for less than a café lunch.
That is an experience you will not find in Paris.
Where to Find Scotland’s Best Shellfish
If you want the real thing, head for the coast. The villages along Scotland’s rugged coastline — Tarbert, Crinan, Inveraray, Tobermory — have fish merchants and harbour stalls selling direct.
Oban, known as the seafood capital of Scotland, has a famous shellfish shack beside the ferry terminal. Queue at lunchtime, order a box of langoustines, and eat them looking out over the sound. Few meals in Scotland beat it.
On the islands — Islay, Jura, Arran — many hotels and restaurants serve what was caught that morning. Keep an eye out for chalkboard menus in harbour-side pubs. If you spot “langoustines” or “velvet crabs,” order without hesitation.
Don’t stop at shellfish. A bowl of Cullen Skink — Scotland’s smoky haddock chowder — makes a perfect companion to fresh shellfish on a cold coastal day.
The Most Scottish Thing You Can Eat
Scotland’s reputation for whisky and haggis is well-earned. But the country’s real secret may be in the water. The langoustines hauled up by creelers every morning — sweet, fresh, barely touched before they reach you — represent Scotland at its most honest.
The next time you sit down in a coastal pub and see “prawns” on the chalkboard, order them. They may well be the most Scottish thing you eat all trip.
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