Bachelor, Meet Shrimp
posted November 5, 2008
by Josh Gunn, Bachelor Chow
It has been a while since I graced these pages with my favorite kind of cuisine, Louisiana and low-country food. In part that's been because I've tried to focus a bit more closely on the food or food-related concerns of bachelorhood. As someone said to me weeks ago, I might not be the best guy for writing this column because I don't cook like a typical bachelor, and my recipes are sometimes fancy. My response, however, is in the form of a question: who better to improve the culinary repertoire of the average bachelor than someone who is both a bachelor and obsessed with cooking good food? Can I get a witness? A hand clap? A swift kick in the buttocks?
The challenge of bachelor cooking is that recipes must be (a) simple; but (b) delicious and not seem simple. It's all about, in a sense, making things look and taste more complex than they actually are. I've gotten really good at this with food preparation, and so I like to share. Incidentally, I've also gotten good at making my home appear cleaner than it really is for guests (hint: try one of those "fabric fresheners" on the couch before guests arrive).
This week I'd like to introduce a very easy but very delicious recipe that is a great appetizer for supper or an excellent, light-ish meal for lunch: shrimp rémoulade. Shrimp rémoulade is basically a kind of salad you can find all over New Orleans and other parts of Louisiana. It has a spicy, tangy flavor that appeals to the lighter affinities of those who dislike heavy, meat-and-potatoes type cuisine, yet the chunky shrimp helps to appease the meat-eating carnivores among us. In other words, this dish seems to make just about everyone happy. Everyone, of course, except those who are allergic to shellfish. Don't serve this to them. They may turn red, swell up like a balloon, and need to be rushed to the emergency room. You don't want that.
Like a lot of Louisiana food, the rémoulade sauce is French in origin, but tastes nothing like it would in France. French rémoulade is basically a mayonnaise-based sauce served on fish, meat, and sometimes with French fries; it often has small pickles in it. As the sauce traveled to Denmark, the Danes added coriander, substituted cabbage for the pickles, and made it sweeter.
In Louisiana, though, the dominant rémoulade is made with oil, not mayo, and is reddish in color owing to the paprika and red pepper. Moreover, this dish needs to be prepared the day before you want to serve it, because you want the shrimp to slowly season in the rémoulade sauce. You also serve it chilled, which is something guests don't usually expect.
Classic Lousiana Shrimp Remoulade Recipe
http://www.cdkitchen.com/
Serves/Makes: 6
Ready in: > 5 hrs
* 1 1/2 pound fresh, cooked shrimp
* 1 tablespoon red wine or red wine vinegar
* 2 tablespoons Creole mustard
* 1 cup olive oil
* 2 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
* 1/2 cup parsley, finely chopped
* 1/2 cup finely chopped celery
* 1/2 cup chopped green onions (more if desired)
* 3 cloves minced garlic (or to taste)
* 3 tablespoons freshly grated horseradish (or to taste)
* OR
* 2 tablespoons creamed horseradish
* 1/2 teaspoon ground cayenne
* Salt and black pepper to taste
* Shredded lettuce, Romaine or Green Leaf
* tomato wedges
* lemon wedges
* medium, whole and pitted black olives
Basically, you make the rémoulade and dump the shrimp in an let chill over night.
To make the sauce, first whisk the mustard, red wine, salt, and pepper together in a bowl large enough to hold all ingredients. Then, SLOWLY whisk in the olive oil, never stopping. Whisk in the remaining ingredients (your arm will be tired), and then dump in the shrimp last. Make sure all the shrimp are covered in the sauce, then cover the bowl with a lit or some plastic wrap and chill overnight.
Serve the shrimp and rémoulade sauce over a bed of lettuce and garnish with a tomato wedge, a lemon wedge, and a few black olives.
©2009 CDKitchen, Inc. No reproduction or distribution of this article is allowed without express permission from CDKitchen, Inc.
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Visitor Comments
RE: Amen comment by Shaunessy at 2008-11-12 23:17:03
Testify, brutha! Nothing ups one's date cred (or friendship appreciation) like culinary spoiling!
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author bio
Josh Gunn
Occupation: Author, University Professor
Specialty: Southern Cuisine, Bachelor Food
Education: George Washington University, University of Minnesota
Lives: Austin, Texas
Weekly Column: Bachelor Chow
::read full bio::
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