Shrimp Recipes Category
To Saute’ Shrimp: Shell and devein shrimp and saute’ in butter until pink.
To Steam Shrimp: Bring water to a boil in the bottom of a steamer. Place washed unshelled shrimp in the top part of the steamer and cook until the shrimp are a good pink color. Serve in the shell and let every one pick his or her own. Serve with butter or *bleep*tail sauce for dipping.
If you are a lover of coconut shrimp, shrimp dip, shrimp creole or any other type of shrimp recipes then this is your place to visit often. Seafood Plus proudly brings to you these wonderful recipes which include shrimp as an ingredient.
Choosing fresh shrimp:
Fresh shrimp have a mild odor and firm-textured meat. Choose raw, shelled shrimp that are moist and translucent. The color should be bright and lively, and the texture firm, not limp. Unshelled shrimp should have shiny firm shells that are tightly attached to their bodies, not falling away.
Beware of black spots under and on the shells, which means the shrimp are past their peak.
If you want to eat the shrimp fresh, mix them with ice and store in
the refrigerator. Uncooked shrimp should not be kept on ice in the refrigerator for more than 3 to 4 days.
Freezing Shrimp:
Select high-quality, fresh shrimp for freezing. Shrimp can be frozen
cooked or raw, in or out of the shell. For maximum storage life and quality, freeze shrimp raw, with heads removed, but shells still on. Shrimp may also be frozen in water in a freezer container or zip-lock bag. Be sure to wash and drain the shrimp if frozen uncooked. Quickly chill cooked shrimp before freezing. Package in freezer containers or bags with cold tap water, leaving ¼-inch headspace. Seal and freeze.
Cooking Shrimp:
Raw shrimp turn pink and firm when cooked. Depending on the size, it
takes from 3 to 5 minutes to boil or steam 1 pound of medium-sized shrimp in the shell.
Some of the information above was obtained with permission from:
http://seafood.ucdavis.edu/pubs/freezing.htm and http://hgic.clemson.edu/factsheets/HGIC3482.htm
Peeling and Deveining Shrimp:
- Peel the shell off. This can be done by grasping the legs attached to the shell and pulling towards the side of the shrimp. This will crack the shell and if followed through, will take off quite a bit of the shell. Repeat if needed.
- Leave the tail on or off – your preference.
- Look at the end where the head used to be and near the top side of the shrimp should be a small flap. Pull this flap towards the tail until it comes off. Underneath is the “vein”, a small black tubule that resembles a chicken vein in a chicken leg. This is actually the digestive tract of the shrimp – stomach and colon in all.
- Put the shrimp in cold water and “wipe” the vein away and use the water to keep it from sticking to your hands.
- If you don’t find one, don’t worry, it just means that that shrimp didn’t get his last supper!
Simpler Version – Slice halfway through the shrimp from mid head to tail but make sure you peel the shrimp first. There’s a little black vein like a spinal cord in the shrimp, now that’s the vein that you want to remove. Just use your hands and pull the vein out. Deveining doesn’t have to be perfect.