Classic Shrimp Scampi

Scampi is one of those confusing words that in America may refer to large shrimp or to a method of cooking different kinds of meat. When people hear the word “scampi,” they are probably thinking of shrimp scampi, but there are also versions of scampi made with pork, chicken or scallops. All of them feature a basic sauce made with butter, olive oil, garlic, wine and spices.

Some add Parmesan cheese, like my recipe for Scallop Scampi, while others, like our version of Chicken Scampi, add a few vegetables. However, every scampi recipe is light and flavorful with a suggestion of Mediterranean cuisine. Since “scampi” is the Italian word for small lobster-like crustaceans, it is easy to understand why the sauce tastes as it does.

It was created to enhance the flavor of a delicate seafood, and we honor the invention by using it to enrich our enjoyment of everything from barnyard hens to enormous Alaska prawns like my sister gave us not long ago.

My mother did not make scampi, but there were many good supper clubs in the Hayward area that included it on their menus. I am pretty sure that my first plate of scampi was at Club 77 where my date and I went for dinner after a spring prom dance. In any case, I have been hooked ever since.

Once you make shrimp scampi, you will probably add it to your repertoire of dishes that are easy to make but look elegant and taste wonderful. Just be careful not to overcook the shrimp.

INGREDIENTS:

1 lb. large raw shrimp
2 T extra virgin olive oil
2 T unsalted butter
Salt (1/8 tsp. or to taste)
3 large garlic cloves
Scant half tsp. red pepper flakes
1/2 cup dry white wine
2 T chopped parsley
1/2 lemon
Freshly ground black pepper
Rice or pasta of your choice

PROCEDURE:

If, like us, you live in the midwest, the shrimp will probably be frozen. If they are in a plastic bag, submerge the bag in a bowl of cold water until the shrimp have thawed. If they are loose, just put the shrimp in cold water. I like to stir them gently a couple of times to speed the thawing.

Peel and devein the shrimp once they have thawed. The vein is the dark tube running down the tail. Sometimes the shrimp supplier will have removed the vein by pulling it out before freezing. If you see a dark dot on the cut end of the tail, use a sharp knife to slice down the back of the tail to the vein and remove it. It is easy to do.

While the shrimp are thawing, put a large pot of water on to heat or get the rice ready to cook. It will take only ten or twelve minutes, from start to finish, to cook the shrimp, so you need to plan ahead to have the pasta or rice ready when the shrimp are done.

Chop the parsley and set it aside in a small bowl and juice half a lemon. Remove the paper from the garlic and mince the cloves while the butter and olive oil are heating in a skillet. Add an eighth teaspoon of salt if you are using unsalted butter. Sauté the garlic and red pepper flakes in the butter and oil for about a minute.

Add the shrimp and wine to the pan and cook for about two minutes. Remove the shrimp with a slotted spoon and boil the wine for three or four minutes until it is reduced by a third. Return the shrimp to the pan and cook for another minute.

Remove the pan from the heat. Add the lemon juice, parsley and a grind of pepper. Toss the shrimp with the sauce.

Serve over rice or pasta with a green salad and good bread.

NOTES: If you use small or medium-sized shrimp, reduce the cooking time a little. For the wine we usually use sauvignon blanc, but a Chardonnay or dry vermouth would also be okay.

If you don’t have half a lemon handy, you can substitute one and a half tablespoons of bottled lemon juice.

If you don’t have unsalted butter in the fridge, use salted and don’t add any more salt.

Michelle’s Coconut-Walnut Coffee Cake

For the morning coffee at church one Sunday, Michelle served this delicious coffee cake. I asked for permission to publish the recipe on my blog, and she was kind enough to email me her recipe for Coconut-Walnut Coffee Cake.

She introduced it with a brief explanation.

“When I do coffee at church I like to make something new. So I go through my many many cookbooks and find something that I have all the ingredients for and make it. It’s a fun challenge and I find things that I wouldn’t have made otherwise. Sometimes it’s good and sometimes it’s not, but most of the time it’s good.”

A woman of courage and imagination: I am not sure that I would be brave enough to try a new recipe when I was committed to serving the result to a hundred or more people the next morning.

Michelle also noted that the recipe called for a teaspoon of salt, but that she used only a quarter teaspoon. Since I think that salt is a flavor enhancer, I used a half teaspoon the first time I made this cake, and we liked the result. Later I made it exactly according to the recipe, and we liked that also. I would not use more than half a teaspoon, but use your judgment. Either a quarter or half-teaspoon seems okay, but I agree with Michelle that a full teaspoon seems excessive.

This cake is a version of spiced coffee cake, but the combination of flaked coconut and walnuts makes it especially flavorful.

INGREDIENTS:

1 cup vegetable oil
1 cup sugar
1 cup packed brown sugar
2 large eggs
1 tsp. vanilla extract
2 1/2 cups flour
1 tsp. baking soda
1/4 tsp. salt
1 tsp. cinnamon
1 cup buttermilk
1 cup flaked coconut
1 cup chopped walnuts

PROCEDURE:

If necessary, chop the walnuts, then grease and flour a nine by thirteen-inch pan and preheat the oven to 350º.

Beat the sugars, eggs and vanilla into the oil in a large mixing bowl. Measure the flour, baking soda, salt and cinnamon into a sifter and sift the dry ingredients by thirds into the egg mixture, alternating with the buttermilk. Stir just until everything is well moistened. Fold in the coconut and walnuts.

Pour the batter into the pan and bake for forty to forty-five minutes. Test for doneness with a toothpick. If it comes out clean when you insert it near the center of the cake, the cake is done. Be careful not to overbake it.

Cool on a rack and enjoy.

NOTE: Michelle also noted that she didn’t have any buttermilk in her refrigerator, so she soured a cup of regular milk with a tablespoon of lemon juice. Thanks to my wife’s advice, I do the same when I forget to buy buttermilk, and the results are always fine.