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Pickled Shrimp from John Besh
Posted on 5/3/13 at 11:06 pm
Posted on 5/3/13 at 11:06 pm
I watched him make this on one of the episodes of his new show and it looks so good. He did it a little differently than the recipe below.
ETA: I watched the episode again. The brine was the same except I saw some spring onions in it and he used lime juice, Meyer lemon juice and just put the halved orange in the pot. No zest was used.
He boiled the shrimp in spring onions, garlic, onion, celery and a small sachet of crab boil. He brought the water to a boil, put the shrimp in and then lowered the water to almost off. He said he didn't want to cook the shrimp all the way. He stirred them around in the water a bit. He took the shrimp directly from the pot with a slotted spoon and added them in layers to the jar, alternating the vegetables. After this, he poured the hot brine in. He said the brine would cook the shrimp a bit more.
He didn't blanch any of the vegetables. He had some baby green beans, whole, purple and yellow cauliflower florets, whole okra, peeled baby carrots, garlic, spring onions. It looked like he had some peppers in it, maybe red and yellow, but I didn't see them put in.
His Recipe:
Here is my recipe for Pickled Shrimp that's included in the Bon Appetit Magazine and Longines Guide on how to throw the perfect Kentucky Derby party.
PICKLED SHRIMP
Serves 10
This recipe requires high-quality wild shrimp. Of course, I prefer wild Gulf shrimp from the waters I know. It’s better to find the best shrimp than to worry about whether they’ve been frozen or not. Unless the shrimp come straight from the net to your kitchen, sometimes the highest quality are frozen. This is where a trusty fishmonger makes all the difference.
You can mix up your vegetables with the shrimp, using whatever’s fresh and local. I love to add cauliflower, carrots, daikon, beans, onions, mirliton, and/or okra.
FOR THE BRINE
2 cups rice wine vinegar
Zest and juice of 1 lemon
Zest and juice of 1 orange
1/2 cup sugar
5 cloves garlic, thinly sliced
1 tablespoon coriander seed
1 tablespoon mustard seed
1 tablespoon peppercorns
1 tablespoon red chili flakes
2 bay leaves
Pinch kosher salt
FOR THE SHRIMP
12 baby carrots, peeled
12 green beans
12 pearl onions, peeled
12 okra pods
2 pounds boiled wild Gulf shrimp, peeled and deveined
1. For the brine, combine all the ingredients in a large saucepan. Add 2 ½ cups water and bring to a boil. Remove from the heat and allow to cool slightly.
2. Pack all the vegetables and shrimp into a very large glass jar, alternating layers. Pour the hot brine into the jar to cover. Cover the jar and let cool. Refrigerate overnight. Serve right from the jar when you’re ready.
—From My Family Table: A Passionate Plea for Home Cooking by John Besh/Andrews McMeel Publishing
.
ETA: I watched the episode again. The brine was the same except I saw some spring onions in it and he used lime juice, Meyer lemon juice and just put the halved orange in the pot. No zest was used.
He boiled the shrimp in spring onions, garlic, onion, celery and a small sachet of crab boil. He brought the water to a boil, put the shrimp in and then lowered the water to almost off. He said he didn't want to cook the shrimp all the way. He stirred them around in the water a bit. He took the shrimp directly from the pot with a slotted spoon and added them in layers to the jar, alternating the vegetables. After this, he poured the hot brine in. He said the brine would cook the shrimp a bit more.
He didn't blanch any of the vegetables. He had some baby green beans, whole, purple and yellow cauliflower florets, whole okra, peeled baby carrots, garlic, spring onions. It looked like he had some peppers in it, maybe red and yellow, but I didn't see them put in.
His Recipe:
Here is my recipe for Pickled Shrimp that's included in the Bon Appetit Magazine and Longines Guide on how to throw the perfect Kentucky Derby party.
PICKLED SHRIMP
Serves 10
This recipe requires high-quality wild shrimp. Of course, I prefer wild Gulf shrimp from the waters I know. It’s better to find the best shrimp than to worry about whether they’ve been frozen or not. Unless the shrimp come straight from the net to your kitchen, sometimes the highest quality are frozen. This is where a trusty fishmonger makes all the difference.
You can mix up your vegetables with the shrimp, using whatever’s fresh and local. I love to add cauliflower, carrots, daikon, beans, onions, mirliton, and/or okra.
FOR THE BRINE
2 cups rice wine vinegar
Zest and juice of 1 lemon
Zest and juice of 1 orange
1/2 cup sugar
5 cloves garlic, thinly sliced
1 tablespoon coriander seed
1 tablespoon mustard seed
1 tablespoon peppercorns
1 tablespoon red chili flakes
2 bay leaves
Pinch kosher salt
FOR THE SHRIMP
12 baby carrots, peeled
12 green beans
12 pearl onions, peeled
12 okra pods
2 pounds boiled wild Gulf shrimp, peeled and deveined
1. For the brine, combine all the ingredients in a large saucepan. Add 2 ½ cups water and bring to a boil. Remove from the heat and allow to cool slightly.
2. Pack all the vegetables and shrimp into a very large glass jar, alternating layers. Pour the hot brine into the jar to cover. Cover the jar and let cool. Refrigerate overnight. Serve right from the jar when you’re ready.
—From My Family Table: A Passionate Plea for Home Cooking by John Besh/Andrews McMeel Publishing
.
This post was edited on 5/4/13 at 9:36 pm
Posted on 5/3/13 at 11:09 pm to Gris Gris
Gris, I saw the pics of the John Besh pickled shrimp on my Facebook newsfeed, but didn't take the time to check out the recipe. Dumb question, but how is it served, exactly?
Posted on 5/3/13 at 11:17 pm to Darla Hood
I saw the pics on mine, too. Funny you should ask about serving because that's exactly what I asked myself after watching the show. I'm assuming with a slotted spoon onto each person's plate. The jar was a big widemouthed jar. Same as in the picture.
The recipe isn't written well. He blanched the beans and the carrots, also, I think. Used a lot of spring onions you can see in the pic. I'm thinking he used the bag instead of some of the seasonings listed. I think it's beautiful and would be fun to serve or some smaller jars for gifts would be a treat. He said it keeps for 3-4 days in the fridge. I haven't looked it up in my book yet. I assume IRS in the current Bon Appetit issue.
The recipe isn't written well. He blanched the beans and the carrots, also, I think. Used a lot of spring onions you can see in the pic. I'm thinking he used the bag instead of some of the seasonings listed. I think it's beautiful and would be fun to serve or some smaller jars for gifts would be a treat. He said it keeps for 3-4 days in the fridge. I haven't looked it up in my book yet. I assume IRS in the current Bon Appetit issue.
Posted on 5/3/13 at 11:20 pm to John McClane
Yes. Right out of the fridge. They're pickled.
Posted on 5/3/13 at 11:20 pm to Gris Gris
I wouldn't mind being served some John Besh. 
Posted on 5/3/13 at 11:26 pm to Darla Hood
I'd be thrilled if someone brought me a large mayo jar full of this. Not the food service size. The family size.
Posted on 5/4/13 at 5:53 am to Gris Gris
Man, I was just looking at that recipe in his book. I got a copy at Tuesday Morning yesterday for $10. I thought it was a steal, but then I checked, and they're available plenty of places for about that price. Looks like a solid cookbook to me.
Posted on 5/4/13 at 12:19 pm to Stadium Rat
Rat, does the recipe in the book talk about using the crab boil bag instead of the list of ingredients he has? Does it talk about how to serve it?
Posted on 5/4/13 at 12:45 pm to Gris Gris
Man that looks amazing!!!!
I'm interested in how it should be served as well
I'm interested in how it should be served as well
Posted on 5/4/13 at 1:19 pm to eyepooted
Recipe says serve out of the jar. I guess a slotted spoon and you dip in and get a serving. If you're serving all at once, I think you could drain and put it all in a serving dish, but I love the look in the jar.
Posted on 5/4/13 at 1:21 pm to Gris Gris
quote:
Recipe says serve out of the jar. I guess a slotted spoon and you dip in and get a serving. If you're serving all at once, I think you could drain and put it all in a serving dish, but I love the look in the jar.
I would eat that with a fork out of the jar. That looks wonderful!
Posted on 5/4/13 at 1:24 pm to AHouseDivided
I immediately thought of a bloody mary garnish.
Posted on 5/4/13 at 1:28 pm to Gris Gris
I've found that cookbook to be unfortunately poorly written from top to bottom. It seems like every recipe I've tried from My New Orleans has a step or two that isnt completely explained.
As for pickled shrimp I really like the version in Susan Spicer's book and to serve it as she suggests with warm, French bread and cold beer.
As for pickled shrimp I really like the version in Susan Spicer's book and to serve it as she suggests with warm, French bread and cold beer.
Posted on 5/4/13 at 1:44 pm to BlackenedOut
I haven't looked at the new one that much, but I know the old one had recipes that were different from the way he made them on the show.
I assume he omitted the bag of crab boil since the recipe was going in Bon Appetit and that's a national magazine. I think he could have put in a note, though, on substituting some of the ingredients for the bag so those who have access could use that.
I'll have to look at Spicer's recipe. I love the look of this one and I can wing it on flavors, but many folks follow recipes to a "t". This one would be hard to follow for the strict constructionists.
I assume he omitted the bag of crab boil since the recipe was going in Bon Appetit and that's a national magazine. I think he could have put in a note, though, on substituting some of the ingredients for the bag so those who have access could use that.
I'll have to look at Spicer's recipe. I love the look of this one and I can wing it on flavors, but many folks follow recipes to a "t". This one would be hard to follow for the strict constructionists.
Posted on 5/4/13 at 2:29 pm to Gris Gris
This looks really good and easy to make. How long will this last? few weeks?
Dumping some crab boil in it sounds like a great idea. Most boils are loaded with salt so maybe a liitle plus some liquind boil will be the truck. ??
Dumping some crab boil in it sounds like a great idea. Most boils are loaded with salt so maybe a liitle plus some liquind boil will be the truck. ??
Posted on 5/4/13 at 3:36 pm to Gris Gris
quote:
Rat, does the recipe in the book talk about using the crab boil bag instead of the list of ingredients he has? Does it talk about how to serve it?
I'll check when I get back home in a while.
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