yes you can. there are actually recipes online for stingray scallops
Scallops are also called Bay Scallops or Sea Scallops, and/or Calico Scallops.
the lobster and scallops come from the ocean not from any bay in Canada.
I have been fishing, preparing, cooking and serving stingray, skate and shark meat for more than 40 years; and I can tell you, definitively, that the majority of seafood restaurants serve cookie-cutter plugs of stingray, skate and shark as "sea scallops"... Anyone who is well familiar with the texture of stingray, skate and shark can INSTANTLY identify the bogus scallops. True sea scallops and bay scallops DO NOT have striated (fibrous) muscle tissue, as do sharks, stingrays and skates. A bogus scallop will look like a cross-section of striated muscle tissue. A TRUE scallop has a smooth, uniform texture. There are many chefs out there who will SWEAR that it's illegal to market shark and stingray as "real" scallops, but that is simply not true. It's my conjecture that such chefs are covering their own practice of substituting shark and stingray for other delicacies on their menus. If there are such laws, then seafood restaurants all over the USA are violating those laws with impunity, no doubt because such laws are not stringently enforced. The argument that sea scallops and bay scallops are more plentiful and are cheaper than stingray, skate and shark meat is also preposterous. Bay scallop populations in U.S. waters are on the decline for various reasons, and many of their marine habitats have been declared endangered, under federal protection. Being on the endangered list DOES NOT precipitate lower scallop prices. Small, whitemeat sharks and stingrays, on the other hand, are abundant in U.S. coastal waters in the EXTREME, and very few sharks, skates and stingrays are on the endangered species list. These boneless, whitemeat fish are REGULARLY used as substitutes for a whole range of marine delicacies, and most unobservant consumers can't tell the difference.
bay scallops - 4-6 per person for appetizer sea scallops - 1 per person for an appetizer
Initially, Botany Bay was named Stingray Harbour (not "Bay"). The name was changed in the same year Cook discovered it - 1770. His ship's log from May 1770 recorded the name "Stingray Harbour", but when he transcribed his logs into his journal shortly afterwards, he changed the name to Botany Bay.
Per the Weight Watchers site, a serving of ten (broiled not fried) sea scallops (larger by comparison to bay scallops) is ten points. That works out to one point per scallop.
scallops are a separate species (shellfish). but You cansimulate scallops from stingray, or shark, or even skates (relatives of stingrays). All of these fish are naturally boneless and provide A LOT of clean, white fillets.Stingray, shark or skate fillets must be well drained of blood (usually at the time of capture), skinned, and trimmed of any cartilage. If using shark, DO NOT use the fins; instead, use the clean, white fillets from the main body. Use a fillet knife to slice the fillets into 1" thick steaks. Then use a round 2"cookie cutter to remove several "plugs" from the steaks - you can obtain DOZENS of "scallops" from a single fillet of stingray or skate or shark. Soak these plugs in 7-Up (or Sprite) overnight, then cook them like scallops.Cooking styles vary, you can fry, deep fry, bake or broil. Your preference.
They used to be the Tampa Bay "Devil Rays", which is a large type of stingray. They dropped the devil part years back and lost the stingray. The uniforms now feature a sun. Hence a inference to sun beams or sun "rays".
Botany Bay was originally called Stingray Harbor by Captain James Cook. It was first seen on April 29, 1770. Botany Bay was a harbor through which thousands of prisoner were transported to Australia.
Depends on if you live in Australia or not. There scallops are different from Western scallops.
People eat scallops. Otters do to.