Lobster With Pasta and Mint

Lobster With Pasta and Mint
Andrew Scrivani for The New York Times
Total Time
an hour
Rating
5(208)
Comments
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Ingredients

Yield:4 servings
  • Salt
  • 11½-pound live lobster
  • 4tablespoons olive oil
  • 1tablespoon minced garlic
  • Crushed red chili flakes to taste
  • 1pound long pasta, like linguine
  • ½cup chopped mint, or to taste
Ingredient Substitution Guide
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Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Bring a large pot of water to a boil and salt it. Put about an inch of water into another large pot, add a not-too-big pinch of salt, put in lobster and cover pot. Steam lobster until it is red, about 3 minutes; you do not have to cook it through. Remove it and keep water simmering with cover off. As soon as you can, remove lobster’s tail and claws; return body to simmering liquid. Remove meat from claws and tail and return shells to pot; chop meat roughly.

  2. Step 2

    Put olive oil in a large skillet over medium heat. Add garlic and lobster meat and toss; cook until it sizzles, then add chili flakes and lower heat. Strain lobster-cooking water, discarding body and shells; you will want a couple of cups.

  3. Step 3

    Meanwhile, cook pasta until it is not even close to tender, but just bending. Drain it, reserving some cooking liquid if you have less than 2 cups of lobster liquid. Add pasta to lobster/garlic mixture, with about a cup of lobster liquid. Cook, stirring occasionally, until pasta is tender, adding more liquid as necessary. Stop cooking when pasta is tender, taking care not to add too much liquid.

  4. Step 4

    Taste and add more salt, chili flakes or olive oil if you like. Stir in the mint and serve.

Ratings

5 out of 5
208 user ratings
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Comments

'Lobster water' is really clumpy and has a lot of stuff in it. Best to use several layers of cheesecloth over your colander when straining this cooking liquid. Even then the water will be far from clear.

Used basil instead of mint. Finished with basil chiffonnade and lemon juice - for us it required a little brightness from the lemon. Otherwise, excellent.

Great recipe, but I think it results in slightly overcooked lobster. In future I would steam for a shorter period or further cook the pasta before adding it to the skillet so that the total lobster cooking time is shorter.

I strongly disagree with those who think this recipe would be better with one lobster per person. One leftover small lobster tail ( when you live in Maine leftover lobster happens) was plenty for two. I finished cooking the linguini in our own lobster stock, adding the cut up tail for the last two minutes or so. Added a bit of butter left over from the earlier lobster dinner and a dash of heavy cream. The pasta really stretched the lobster taste perfectly. Don’t overdo the hot pepper flakes.

This recipe is excellent IF you follow the directions - specifically, if you know and agree with the power of STOCK to add a whole other world of flavor. In other words, it isn't just cooked lobster meat thrown on top of pasta. Make the lobster stock, cook everything in at at the end, and you will be rewarded with an elegant pasta dish. * I added app. 2- 3 TB of cream at the end - delish.

I made it with lobster tails and gluten free noodles. I tweaked the instructions to prevent overcooked lobster and omitted the mint. It was delicious!!! Loved the flavor the lobster water added to the noodles.

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