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Pan-Fr. Shrimp w/Ginger, Cumin, and Paprika

Dedicated to KYH for his encouragment to me in Moroccan cooking!

This is a quick easy, way of preparing shrimp for a snack or a meal. Simply serve the juicy, piquant shrimp from the cooking vessel with chunks of crusty bread to mop up the oil and spices left behind.

3 tbsp. olive oil
2-3 garlic cloves chopped
a 2 in. piece of fresh ginger, peeled and grated
1 chile, seeded and chopped
1 tsp. cumin seeds
1 tsp. paprika
1 lb. raw jumbo jumbo shrimp, unshelled
a bunch of cilantro, finely chopped
sea salt & freshly ground pepper
1 lemon, cut into wedges, to serve
bread to serve

Heat the oil in the base of a tagine or a wide, heavy-based frying pan. Stir in the garlic, ginger, chile, and cumin seeds. As soon as a lovely aroma rises from the pan, add the paprika and toss in the shrimp. Fry quickly over med. heat, until the shrimp are just cooked and have turned opaque. Season to taste with salt & pepper and sprinkle with cilantro. Serve the shrimp immediately with the lemon wedges to squeeze over them.
FROM: Flavors of Morocco cookbook

Hope ya' like it Brook, we are having your best pork loin ever recipe, it is in the oven already and after I seared it I placed it in the tagine to bake!:) I can hardy wait to eat:p
 
Some night this week for sure, Cathy. That really sounds good.
 
We had this tonight. It is so fabulous, you will not even need the lemon wedges I had them on a plate we never even used one.

Next time I make it I am going to double the sauce, but the cilantro was just the perfect amount (didn't need doubling).
 
I find that many published Morrocan and other North African recipes are like that, Cathy. There's nowhere's near enough sauce for the meat-protein involved. Or they've been adapted to work in a casserole or Dutch oven, and there's far too much liquid.

It's definately a balancing act.
 
This recipe went right into the "to try" file. Thanks for posting it.
 
Made this tonight, Cathy, and it is a winner. Taste and texturewise it would be hard to beat. But, with no other liquid but a little oil, there really wasn't much sopping to do.

I did use the lemon, but squeezed it onto the shrimp as they cooked, just before serving. It really perked it up doing that.

Thanks, again, for posting it.
 
This indeed does sound like a yummy one!

I had an extra 30 bucks tonight sent from an Aunt in a very early birthday card, so I splurged (as she would want me to!) and picked up 24 pieces of beautiful U-8 Shrimp, on sale. Haven't spent so gluttonously for quite some time- it felt wonderful!

For tomorrow night, I have a couple of fav monster-prawn preparations ranging from the simple: 1.) wrapped in bacon and broiled or grilled and served with maltaise- OR 2.) served scampi style with garlic, butter and white wine... to the sublime: 1.) sauteed and served a vol au vent pastry shell smothered in vodka sauce with sweet corriander seeds & cayenne, OR 2.) skewered, grilled and tossed with fajita-style veggies and folded into warm flour tortillas and teased w/ fresh pico de gallo and a squeeze of lime... Decisions, decisions! Thanks Aunt Lila!
 
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I am so glad you enjoyed it Brook! We had a nice Navy Bean dish tonight that I cooked in the tagine and it tasted wonderful. I am becoming a big fan of tagine cooking! Thank you so much for sparking my interests by your many posts regarding Moroccan and tagines.

When I knew nothing what so ever about either, I read your posts and just wondered, it helped me make my decision in purchasing my cookbook, and just look at where it has now carried me, I love it!
 
Chubby, why would you even consider fajitas with those monster U-8s? I mean, that's what 35s are for.

The vol au vent saucing sounds good. But, again, I think I'd want to leave them whole, rather than cut them up to fit the pastry shells. I think, were it me, that I'd saute them whole, sauce them, use a fresh epi or even plain baguette to chase that wonderful sauce.

Hey! You remember that conversation/recipe for the spot prawns with butternut squash slaw and blood orange? The U-8s make a great sub for the spots---I know, cuz that's what I did the first time. And, because blood oranges were out of season, I subbed tangerines and that worked too.

I can repost that recipe if it intriques.
 
>Thank you so much for sparking my interests by your many posts regarding Moroccan and tagines.<

It's just bread on the waters, Cathy. Let's face it, had I not done that I wouldn't be privy to this marvolous shrimp dish.
 
Great ideas all, Brook! Please re-post recipe!

I'd actually keep these monsters whole no matter which preparartion I chose.

For the vol au vents I'd hook a few over the "rim" around the perimeter of each pastry cup and maybe fill the center w/ summery grilled corn or some such that would be complimented by the sauce and go well w/ the prawns.

If I did the fajitas, I'd still keep them whole, rather than chop and dismember- and rather than make one large traditional fajita I would likely gather a couple warm tortillas near, along with the pico, guac and sour cream and build it bite-by-bite using the whole prawns and tearing-off smaller portions of the tortilla, wrapping it around the shrimp and garnishing with the condiments- choke it down, then do it all again until NO MORE PRAWNS!

This morning while laying in bed I also thought I might ought to capitalize on their huge-ness by making a light, crispy tempura... hmmm... and I still like the skewer idea too...

Will be cooking for my sister and bro-in-law and they'd likely enjoy the fajitas or tempura the most...
 
Wild Caught Spot Prawns w/Butternut Squash Slaw & Blood Orange

Yeah, that's a mouthful. In more ways than one. :)

This comes from the book "Yum! Tasty Recipes From Culinary Greats. I don't think I've discussed that book much, here. But, in it's own way, it's even better than Where Flavor Was Born. And y'all know how much I like that one.

You can find my review of Yum! in the cookbook review archives over at ChefTalk.com if you're interested.

This recipe was contributed by Helene Kennan, who, among other things, is the Executive Chef for Bon Appetit Management Co.

Anyway, blood oranges are out of season right now. But if you can find tangerines, they work just as well. In fact, other than color, they have the same citrus flavor, IMO.

Spot Prawns are available mail order, if you're willing to take out a second mortgage. They're native to the Pacific Northwest, from northern California to Alaska. Just imagine a shrimp about nine to eleven inches long. Any of the bigger ones will work, though. Last time I used U-15s. U-8s the first time. And once I used large Key West pinks, dusted with Old Bay for a little more flavor.

1 med to lge butternut squash
3 blood oranges
1/4 cup white balsamic vinegar
1/4 cup plus 1 tbls avocado oil or olive oil
1 cup fresh basil
1/4 tsp fresh grated cinnamon
1/3 tsp fresh grated nutmeg
1/4 tsp fresh grated ginger
Salt and pepper to taste
1 lb wild-0caught spot prawns, peeled and deveined
6-8 large pecans.

For the slaw: Place 3 cups of water in midium saucepan over high heat. Bring water to boil. Peel, seed and grate butternut swuah. Blanch the squash in boiling water for 1 minute. Drain well and spread out on a sheet pan to cool.
Segment 2 blood oranges and reserve any juice that might accumulate during this process in a separate bowl. Juice the remaining blood oragne into the bowl with the reserved juice.
In a small mixing bowl, whisk together the white balsamic vinegar, blood orange juice and 1/4 cup avodaco oil. Add cinnamon, nutmeg, ginger, salt and pepper. Set aside 1/4 cup of this dressing.
In a medium non -aluminum mixing bowl, combine squash and dressing minus the 1/4 cup set aside. Allow to sit for at lest 20 minutes so flavors meld properly.*

For the shrimp: Place a large saute pan over medium high heat and add a tablespoon of avocado oil or olive oil. Season the prawns with salt and pepper. Add prawns to hot pan and saute until just cooked through.

To assemble: As the prawns are cooking add blood orange segments and basil to squash and place a small amount of the slaw in the center of each plate. Place prawns just off the side of the slaw and drizzle a small amount of the reserved dressing over the prawns and the plate.
Garte the pecans over the plates.

* I found it best to shock the squash in cold water, after blanching, and then wring it out well so as to remove as much moisture as possible before adding the dressing.
 
I snatched this yummy-sounding recipe up KYH, 'cause I'm sure gonna try it before long- thanks for sharing!

Tonight though, for my sister and bro-in-law I ended up making coconut shrimp (coconut chicken tenders for my niece and nephew since they won't eat seafood).

The tempura idea crossed my mind so I bought some peanut oil... but then I went and forgot to open a can of seltzer water this morning so couldn't make my tempura batter afterall.

Just butterflied the HUGE shrimp, dusted in flour, dipped in eggwash that had a wee bit of coconut extract added, and pressed into flaked coconut and deep-fried them in the oil. FANTASTIC! Had a mango & some fresh pineapple on hand so made a tropical relish/salsa to serve alongside, then had jasmine rice and snow-peas along with. A yummy, yummy meal!
 
Sounds yummy, Chubbs. Friend Wife is a big fan of coconut. And, it goes without saying, shrimp. So maybe I'll do that for her some night this week.

Got a question I never thought of before, though. What's the difference between a relish and a fresh salsa?
 
That sounds just fabulous Kevin! I love cocnut fr. shrimp!!! And the salsa sounded just wonderful, you need to share that recipe for sure I would love it please!
 
Brook, without looking it up to see if there are truly specific differences, my thought is that a relish and a salsa are essentially the same. Some think of relish as being a cuke product, but then we're all familiar with onion relish, corn relish... Would the defining factor of a salsa require chilis? I make a blueberry relish for grilled salmon that's yummy, and a real winner- and pretty too.

My tropical salsa/relish last night (Sorry Cathy- I rarely measure!) was 1 diced mango, aprox. 1/3 c. diced fresh pineapple, 2 chopped spring onions, half a sweet red bell pepper, half a sweet green bell pepper and a large fresh jalapeno- all diced, a dash of salt, a pinch of jerk seasoning, a generous grating of cardamom, a squeeze of lemon and a squeeze from the honey-bear. It paired nicely with the sweet, crunchy shrimp- and with my super-finicky sister, trying unfamiliar things is risky, but if one goes SWEET she tends to like that...
 
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You may be right about the chilies, Kevin.

I just looked up a whole bunch of relishes in the Ball Blue Book and my recipe files. Conspicuous in their absence are chilies. Lot's of sweet peppers used, of course. But nothing on the hot side.

The only exception I've found is Mama Hall's Green Tomato Relish, which is the best of that breed, IMO. It calls for chilies as an optional ingredient.
 
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