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Is it okay to eat raw oysters and drink alcohol at the same time? I have heard different stories as to whether it is truly a good idea to do this. Some people say that it is not bad, others say that the alcohol can be dangerous with the bacterium (Vibrio vulnificus) contained in shellfish, while some people have told me that the alcohol can actually kill the bacterium contained in shellfish.

Is it safe to drink alcohol and eat raw oysters? If it is okay what drinks go well with oysters?

Ben Hare
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Ken Graham
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    @Paparazzi ["As a matter of fact, most bacteria are not harmful and many are beneficial or even essential to our wellbeing."](http://www.chicken.org.au/foodsafety/page.php?id=8) – Ken Graham Jun 25 '16 at 21:58
  • Convenienet change of word http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/bacterium – paparazzo Jun 26 '16 at 01:02
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    I don't get the down-votes... seems like a reasonable, though perhaps uninformed, question. But then, if everyone was informed, we wouldn't need Stack Exchange, amiright? – Chris Steele Jun 30 '16 at 15:50
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    I wasn't aware that anybody could eat those things *without* alcohol. After two drinks, though, they don't bother me a bit. – Ed Plunkett Jul 08 '16 at 20:10
  • Regarding Ed Plunkett and user 23466; great answers! Thank you! You answered my question and concern I have had for many years and have denied myself the much enjoyed combination. Why some people have to be so literal is beyond me. Stress will hurt a lot more folks! – Pete Espinoza Oct 03 '18 at 20:52

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I do this about once a month and can confirm that it's more than safe, it's delicious. In fact during the 19th century half of London lived on porter and oysters!

I'd recommend oyster stouts, London porters or champagne with them. Stouts and porters are particularly traditional in London

MD-Tech
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You are confusing the issue with alcohol and raw oysters. Alcoholism can lead to liver damage which can predispose folks towards a dangerous Vibrio infection. So folks with liver damage (including alcohol abusers) should avoid raw oysters due to the risk of vibrio. Alcohol itself has no affect on Vibrio. The low alcohol content in beer won't sterilize anything anyway (it is the boiling wort part of the MAKING of beer that made beer a "healthy" option in the olden days :)

Vibrio vulnificus Health Education Kit Fact Sheet

Ken Graham
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Jason K
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If you enjoy wine, melon de bourgogne (aka Muscadet) or a chablis are a classic pairing for oysters. I also enjoy champagne or a Spanish txakoli with oysters.

user5637
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Yes you absolutely can get sick from mixing oysters and alcohol. Some folks like myself do not produce enough of a certain enzyme to block the histamines produced by consuming oysters. That plus the alcohol turn into one of the most painful and throw up filled could not eat anything for two days sicknesses I have ever experienced

user13474
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    This is interesting. If you have a name for the condition and an idea of how common it is, it would improve the answer. – Eric S May 23 '21 at 20:24