Indian BBQ Shrimp
The Ingredients for BBQ Shrimp
Main ingredient (#1)
Raw shrimp with shell, head, whiskers, and tail -- You have three
choices. 1 Lb. 15-20 count (medium) or 10-15 count (large) or 5-10
(jumbo). Hyped as large, jumbo and super jumbo in supermarkets.
Buy in "China Town" there is no hype. Just smell. Seriously, we are buying a
smelly product, not diamonds. Do not get precooked, or shelled shrimp.
If you do, the recipe will yield a rubbery product good for your
ex-spouse, or not in favor in-laws. It may also ruin the relationship
that you currently are in. Dead shrimp should not be given that
privilege. Do not turn a shrimp into a shrink. Peeling the shell will
make it so. You are alerted. Lets get on.
Base ingredients (#2)
1 diced large onion (red or yellow depends on your bio rhythm)
1 Tbl Sp crushed ginger root (or 1 tsp ginger powder if you are from a
different planet)
6 cloves crushed garlic (only way to confront a smelly shrimp)
5 curry leaves (optional… if you are geographically challenged)
2 green chilies (cayenne) slit lengthwise.
1/2 lb butter (This will kill you. Don’t worry you will die one day.
Enjoy while you can.)
1/2 lb margarine or butter (Lets not go to the dark side)
Hot ingredients (#3)
2 Tbl Sp crushed red pepper (The kind you will kill for, to put on a pizza pie while away from home, and with a nagging family.)
1 Tbl Sp Black crushed pepper (Cannot get any easier.)
1 Tbl Sp White crushed pepper (Revert to black, if you are pepper variety challenged)
Sauces/Pastes (#4)
2 Tbl Sp Perrin’s Worchester shire sauce (Soy, if you are cheap!)
2 Tsp hot mustard (Dejon/Frenches or the stuff you can palm away from McDonalds, or ball park concession stands)
3 Tbl Sp red Tabasco Sauce or Red devil hot sauce (This will improve your comprehension scores in GRE, GMAT, LSAT, FMG and H1-Visa)
1 tsp Thai or Vietnamese fish sauce (This is a powerful substitute for
salt.)
Indian Spices (#5)
1 tsp crushed coriander seeds
1/2tsp cumin seeds
1 tsp yellow curry powder (turmeric is an option; ignoring is fine too)
1/2 tsp black mustard seed (adds intrigue and to dentist bills)
4 leaves bay leaves (Indian kind are different from Laurel.)
2 whole red dried peppers (mirchi, for the natives)
Herbs (#6)
2 tsp dry oregano (Alert!. Without oregano you might as well order a pizza, and stop cooking)
1/2 tsp dry dill (It is heartless not have this! Many Hindi movies depend on this spice in story lines.)
1/2 tsp dry parsley (This, and the following three herbs are dedicated to Ann Brancroft. For the clue less, the Graduate movie- 1968.)
1/2 tsp dry sage (A calming effect)
1/2 tsp rosemary (Male chefs feel deprived without this. Females do
just fine.)
1/2 tsp dry thyme (To keep the recipe in rhythm)
1/2 tsp lemon peel (Shavings of a lemon. Please do not peel the squeezable plastic RealLemon)
Cooking Fluids (#7)
1 12 oz. can Clam Juice or fish stock or water (Whatever turns you on)
4 oz. Beer (Buy a case it is cheaper. Drink the rest to be happy, happy while cooking)
2 Tbl Sp cooking oil
Whew! We are done assembling the ingredients in the groups we want.
Method
In a large Dutch oven (Fancy name for a deep pot) heat the cooking
oil to medium heat.
- Fry the Indian spices (#5) to release the flavor. (Do not answer if,
the phone rings at this time.)
- Add half the margarine and let it melt.
- Add the herbs (#6) and fry gently (If you do it right, nobody living
in the subdivision should have a coughing fit).
- Add the whole shrimp. The main ingredient (#1). (Washed, nothing is
peeled or discarded. This could be traumatic for first timers. Think of
your childhood sweetheart that some else has married currently. It will
give you courage to proceed. Otherwise, you are on your own.)
- Fry till the shrimp turns light red in color. (This will happen, not
withstanding our prior loves, or arranged marriages.)
- Add the base (#2), and hot ingredients (#3) and the rest of butter
and margarine. Stir fry for ten minutes without abusing the shrimp.
- Mix all the sauces and pastes (#4) in a cup, and then, add it to the
stuff on the stovetop.
- Reduce heat from medium to low. Simmer for 15 minutes. (Now, answer
that phone. Feed your kids regular food. They will make faces at this
recipe while in progress. Ignore them. Just as you would, your in-laws.)
- Preheat your oven to 375 F.
- In a deep flat pan or a large casserole disk transfer the stuff in
the Dutch oven. (Flatter the better. Deep is bad. It will not expose the
stuff to heat. You should expose it all. Somewhat of a confessional. Non
Catholics will not understand this.)
- Add the cooking fluids (#7) and cover it with aluminum wrap. Do not
crimp the foil around the edges. Just, let it lay. Cook for at least 90
minutes. The water based liquids should evaporate. Adjust for salt. You
should have the shrimp with very loose jackets floating in nice
clarified butter. Be cautious! Everything is at 375 F. The kitchen is
smelling shrimp. If you do not like it light two incense sticks
(agarbathhi). Above all, do not apologize. We did this with love.
13. Invite your mother-in-law for dinner. If you do not have one, borrow
mine (angel@motherOfAllRecourse.org). Just kidding! [This is the
obligatory last 13th step in all my recipes.]
Note: My nephews Nikhil and Sameer call this dish "Head'NTail Shrimp"
and they can't wait for me to cook it when I visit them. The hot stuff
mellows with butter. Don't skimp on it. Butter is the secret of the
recipe. Just, peel and eat. Dunk french bread in the sauce. Messy, but
oodles of fun! Wash your hands with vigour before you retire. The
fingers can be toxic, otherwise.