The caviar starter
How do you eat caviar?
Cold. Small spoonfuls. Let it pop. It's easier than you think.
The cheat sheet
The 30-second version
If you only remember five things, make it these.
Keep learning-
Serve it cold — straight from the fridge or on a bed of ice.
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Non-metal spoon only — mother-of-pearl, bone, or plastic. Metal tastes tinny.
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15–30g per person as a starter; ~50g if caviar is the main event.
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Let the pearls pop — don’t chew.
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Once opened, finish within 2–3 days, kept cold and tightly covered.
The method
How to eat caviar, step by step
Four steps. Two minutes. Zero fuss.
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Keep it cold — leave the tin on ice until the moment you serve. Caviar tastes best straight from the fridge or a bed of ice.
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Use a non-metal spoon — serve with a mother-of-pearl, bone, or plastic spoon. Metal (especially silver) can give caviar a tinny taste.
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Start small — spoon 15–30g per person onto blini or lightly buttered toast, or eat it straight off the spoon.
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Let it pop — press the pearls gently against the roof of your mouth instead of chewing, so they burst and release the brine.
Caviar isn’t complicated, and it isn’t only for special occasions. Here’s everything you need to actually enjoy it — at home, this week.
What does caviar taste like?
Good caviar tastes clean and briny, a little buttery or nutty depending on the species, and never “fishy.” The texture is the point: small pearls that pop and release a salty, savoury liquid.
Build a bite
What to eat it on
Classic or everyday — caviar plays both. Start here, then make it yours.
Start classic
- Blini
- Buttered toast
- Crème fraîche
- Chopped egg
- Chives
Or keep it everyday
- Potato chip
- Scrambled eggs
- Baked potato
- Cacio e pepe
- Oysters
“Great caviar needs nothing — try one spoon plain first.”
Pour something
What to drink with it
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Classic
Chilled vodka, or a dry champagne.
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Everyday
A crisp lager, dry sparkling wine, or just sparkling water.
Keep it cold and not too sweet — let the caviar lead.
When should you eat caviar?
When to eat it
A tin belongs on a Tuesday, not just a wedding.
Caviar is a quick, no-cook way to make dinner feel like something — on eggs, on a chip, on pasta. Open it any day of the week.
A few don'ts
Don't do this
- Use a silver spoon
- Rinse it
- Drown it in toppings
- Let it sit out warm
- Save it for “someday”
Caviar, explained
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How much caviar per person?
Plan on 15–30g of caviar per person as a shared starter, or about 50g per person if caviar is the main event. A 30g tin comfortably serves two people as a snack.
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How do you store caviar?
Keep caviar in its sealed tin in the coldest part of the fridge (0–4°C / 32–39°F), ideally on ice, and eat it within the use-by date. Once opened, cover it tightly and finish it within 2–3 days. Don't freeze sturgeon caviar — it ruins the texture.
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Put it to use
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appetizers
Caviar and Potato Chips
The easiest, most addictive way into caviar — sturdy kettle chips, a dab of crème fraîche, and a cold spoon of caviar. No cooking, about five minutes.
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quick
15-Minute Caviar Pasta
A glossy, buttery weeknight pasta finished with a cold spoon of caviar off the heat — ready in fifteen minutes, no fuss.
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party
Caviar Deviled Eggs
Classic deviled eggs topped with a glossy spoon of caviar — a make-ahead party appetizer that looks fancy and takes minutes.
Frequently asked
Do you eat caviar with a metal spoon?
No — metal, especially silver, can give caviar a metallic taste. Use mother-of-pearl, bone, or even plastic to keep the flavour clean.
What do you serve caviar on?
Blini, lightly buttered toast, or a plain potato chip. Crème fraîche, chopped egg, and chives are classic additions, but good caviar is great on its own.
How much caviar per person?
Plan on 15–30g per person as a shared starter, or about 50g if caviar is the main event. A 30g tin comfortably serves two as a snack.