The Grilling Gourmet

The Best Grilling & BBQ Articles on the Web

Wednesday
May 22nd
Text size
  • Increase font size
  • Default font size
  • Decrease font size
Home * Everything Else * Salads * Mixed Seafood Salad

Mixed Seafood Salad

Email Print PDF
Mixed Seafood Salad Calabrians keep their seafood salad simple so the shellfish flavor stands out. It's a juicy dish, so be sure to offer bread for dipping. Prep and Cook Time: about 1 1/2 hours, plus 2 hours to marinate. Notes: Squid (also called calamari) are frequently sold, cleaned and cut up, as tubes (mantles), tubes and tentacles, or rings (sliced tubes). Fresh squid is sometimes available at fish shops and Asian groceries; call ahead to have it cleaned, or use thawed frozen, which is easier to find. Sometimes a few uncleaned tubes slip through; just pull out and discard any long, clear quills and rinse out tubes. You can make this salad up to a day ahead through step 10 and keep it, covered, in the refrigerator. Bring to room temperature before serving.

Ingredients

1 pound mussels

1 pound Manila clams

Ice

1 pound shrimp (20 to 24 per lb.), peeled and deveined

1 pound fresh or thawed frozen squid (whole tubes or whole tubes and tentacles; see Notes), cleaned and cut into 3/4-in. rings or pieces

1/2 cup extra-virgin olive oil

About 1/2 cup freshly squeezed lemon juice

2 or 3 green onions

3 garlic cloves, minced

2 tablespoons flat-leaf parsley, finely chopped

About 1 tsp. kosher salt

Freshly ground black pepper

Preparation

1. Scrub mussels with a stiff brush under cold running water. Remove any fibrous “beards� from mussels. Throw away any mussels with open shells.

2. Soak clams in a bowl, covered with cold water, 15 minutes. Lift out and scrub with a stiff brush under cold running water. Rinse bowl and put clams back in. Cover with fresh cold water, soak 15 minutes, and lift out, leaving any sand in bowl. Keep rinsing clams until no sand remains in bowl.

3. Bring a large pot of salted water to a boil over high heat. Set a bowl of ice water nearby. Boil shrimp just until pink, about 2 minutes. Using a strainer, transfer to ice water to stop cooking.

4. Add squid to boiling water. Once pot has returned to boil, cook squid until tentacles curl back and rings are opaque, 45 seconds to 1 minute. Drain well, pat dry with paper towels, and add to bowl of shrimp.

5. Put 1 tbsp. water (to just cover the bottom) in a 4-qt. saucepan and add cleaned mussels. Cover and cook over high heat until mussels open, 1 to 1 1/2 minutes. Pick out and throw away any mussels that fail to open. Transfer mussels to a clean bowl and let cool 20 minutes.

6. Add cleaned clams and 1 tbsp. water to pan and steam, covered, over high heat until they open, 1 1/2 minutes. Pick out and throw away any clams that fail to open. Let cool 20 minutes in pan.

7. Add cooled mussels and clams to bowl of squid and shrimp (leave liquid behind).

8. In a small bowl, whisk together olive oil, 1/2 cup lemon juice, the garlic, and parsley. Whisk in 1 tsp. salt and several grinds of black pepper.

9. Pour dressing over seafood and stir gently to bathe with dressing. Let salad marinate at room temperature for 2 hours, tossing occasionally so flavors blend.

10. Just before serving, taste and season with additional lemon or salt if you like. Serve in shallow bowls, with plenty of the marinade spooned over.

Note: Nutritional analysis is per serving.

 

Last Updated ( Thursday, 12 May 2011 10:22 )  
More articles :

» Cajun Barbecue Sauce

This fantastic tart and spicy sauce is sure to liven up anything from grilled chicken breasts to pork chops.

» Stuffed Bacon-Wrapped Jalapenos

A few things you must note before trying this recipe. The amount of membrane you scrape out of the pepper will determine how spicy these end up in your mouth. Also, it is important to use the thin-sliced bacon, preferably at room temperature. The...

» Grilled Spiny Lobster With Basil Butter

FRENCH WEST INDIES This imposing dish is the specialty of a New Age inn called Hostellerie des Trois Forces in St. Barthélemy. Astrologer-chef Hubert Delamotte makes it with spiny lobster, which has a broad tail and fiercely barbed carapace,...

» A Marinating Tip

From time to time, pit masters are required to perform feats of surgery. Consider the strange process of placing a rub or marinade under the skin of a chicken or other bird before grilling.As far as seasonings are concerned, at least, chicken skin...

» Grilled Fennel

You've probably seen it in the produce section of the supermarket: the weird vegetable with the fern-like, feathery leaves, crisp green stalks, and bulbous, green-white bottom. The taste of fresh fennel might well be described as licorice-flavored...

Browse In 35 Languages

Browse this website in:

Most Read Articles

Links

Please login to Automatic Backlinks and activate this site.