Everyone loves a good shrimp boil, or crayfish if you're lucky enough to have connections to Louisiana. The problem? It's definitely saved for a special occasion and for a large crowd, so you might do it once a year? Once in your life?
The traditional crayfish/shrimp boil goes like this: you buy a ton of crayfish or shrimp, some quartered corn on the cob, sausage, potatoes, get a huge boiler and put it in your driveway, throw it all in, toss in your Cajun spice packet, when all the shrimp/crayfish float, you lift everything out and dump it on a picnic table covered in newspaper where everyone descends on the mess. It tastes good, gets people together, creating happy memories- and sore fingers from all that crustacean peeling.
Ingredients:
1 beer brat or andouille sausage
4-5 red new potatoes, cut into quarters
6-8 medium large raw shrimp with shells
1-2 Thai or Cayenne chile peppers minced, or sub in 1/2 tsp of crushed red pepper or ground dry Cayenne pepper. Fresh is best - far better flavor.
1/3 cup chopped fresh Italian parsley
1 tbsp chopped fresh sweet basil
1 1/2 tsp smoked paprika
1/2 to 1 tsp ground cumin (depends on if you want the cumin flavor upfront or in the background)
1/2 tsp turmeric or a pinch of saffron
salt and black pepper to taste
2 ears sweet corn, cut into thirds
a lot of olive oil, coat pan with 1/4 inch deep
Instructions:
Cook the corn and potatoes via your preferred method (corn is pretty much the only thing we ever microwave- a little water in a (gasp!) plastic bag, steamed for about 5 minutes, turns out perfect). When both are done, set aside.
Heat the pan on med-low and saute the garlic, crushed peppers, paprika, cumin, turmeric, salt and black pepper in the oil for about 5 minutes.
Add the parsley and basil, the sausage cut into 4-6 pieces and shrimp for 2 minutes. Flip the shrimp and cook for 2 more minutes. When the shrimp is done, add the corn, and potatoes into the pan. Remove the shrimp and continue to cook potato, corn and sausage for two more minutes....make sure eveything is well coated with oil/spice. Remove and plate.
I hate peeling shrimp and this sauce was particularly yellow, so I made AC peel them for me. He says that cooking them in the peel adds depth of flavor, I told him I would forgo the flavor in favor of nails that aren't yellow for days- he'll peel mine before cooking next time. Surprisingly, the real stand-out in this dish was the corn. The combination of the oil and spices rendered it perfectly sweet, buttery and spicy all at once.
So there you are, a quick down and dirty "cover" of a shrimp boil that turned out, dare I say, better than the real thing. Sometimes perfection needs to be tweaked to work with everyday life.
1 comment:
This looks so good and will be a hit here-we tried the large version of this at the lake-delicious!! Thanks!!!
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