Grilled Oysters With Hot-Sauce Butter

- Total Time
- 30 minutes (plus time to open oysters)
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 8ounces butter
- 3tablespoons Crystal hot sauce
- 1small garlic clove
- 1lemon, zested, then cut into wedges
- 1anchovy
- 48oysters
Preparation
- Step 1
In a food processor, combine butter, hot sauce, garlic, lemon zest and anchovy, and pulse until there are no streaks of hot sauce and the butter is a uniform shade of pale pink. (If you don’t have a food processor, leave the butter out until it’s very soft, then beat the ingredients together with a spoon.) Scrape the mixture into a small bowl, and set aside in the fridge.
- Step 2
Put the oysters in a large bowl in the sink, and scrub off any sand or grit. Rinse well, drain and refrigerate until you’re ready to shuck. To shuck: Grip an oyster with a folded dishtowel so the shell is cupped side down, hinge side facing toward you. Push the tip of the oyster knife into the hinge, and twist so it cracks open. Make sure the knife is clean of shell and grit, then use it to release the top shell, and slide it under the oyster meat to release it from the bottom shell. Repeat with remaining oysters, discarding any that are already open or that have a bad smell.
- Step 3
Build a fire in your charcoal grill, or set a gas grill to high. Gently crumple a sheet of aluminum foil so its grooves can support the open oysters and keep them from spilling, and set it on the grate. Place 12 oysters on the foil, and top each with approximately ½ teaspoon of butter; use more for especially large oysters, but less for small ones. The idea is to cover the oyster with butter, but not to overfill the shell. Cover the grill, and cook until the butter and oyster juices are bubbling but the oyster is still plump, about 2 to 3 minutes.
- Step 4
Use tongs to transfer hot oysters to a platter lined with another piece of foil that will keep the shells upright, and serve immediately with a bottle of hot sauce and lemon wedges at the table. Repeat with remaining oysters.
Private Notes
Comments
Instead of shucking them can you put them on the grill for a minute or two to open? I've done this with clams and always wondered whether it would be OK with oysters
Yes you can! I do this frequently, then pop them on a saltine with some cocktail sauce
Much easier to melt the butter mixture and put unshucked oysters on the grill (yes, rounded/cupped side down). Take them off as soon as the top shell pops open and serve. Pass around the melted butter sauce for each person. We also like a cilantro/rice wine vinegarette with minced shallot, recipe from by Hog Island Oyster Co., in Tomales, CA. Splendid with Sancerre or a lean California Sauvignon Blanc.
On his cooking show on PBS, Jacques Pepin microwaved oysters for a few seconds and their shells opened enough to make shucking easy. Don't recall how he supported them. Not with foil, for sure. I think an empty egg carton would work well.
So, if making a large number of them, how about shucking all the oysters at once over a large bowl? You can go faster and gather the brine or oyster liquor in the bowl Then it can be strained and re-apportioned into the shells after the shells and oysters have been set on the grill, so there is no spillage and one can shuck at a faster rate.
We allowed the oysters to pop open on the grill since we didn't have an oyster knife. The butter sauce was delicious and we saved the extra for other uses.
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