Pearl Couscous With Shrimp and Clams

- Total Time
- 1½ hours
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 1pound/about 400 grams raw head-on, shell-on shrimp or tiger prawns (preferably 12 extra-jumbo shrimp or king-size prawns, but any size will work)
- 7tablespoons/105 milliliters olive oil
- 5roughly chopped garlic cloves, plus 1 crushed garlic clove
- Salt and black pepper
- 1small fennel bulb, finely chopped (about 1 heaping cup)
- ¾pound/300 grams cherry tomatoes
- 2lemons, 1 finely shaved to get 5 strips of peel and squeezed to get 1 tablespoon juice, and the other cut into wedges for serving
- 5tarragon sprigs (about ½ ounce/10 grams)
- 2tablespoons tomato paste
- ⅔cup/150 milliliters Pernod (or a similar anise liqueur)
- 1¼cups/300 milliliters chicken or vegetable stock
- 2teaspoons fennel seeds
- ¼teaspoon red-chile flakes
- 1¼cups/200 grams pearl (or giant) couscous
- ½pound/250 grams small clams (about 12), such as Dorset, littleneck or Manila, rinsed well
Preparation
- Step 1
Twist the heads off the shrimp and place the heads in a medium bowl. Leaving the tails attached, peel off the shells, add them to the same bowl and set aside. Devein the shrimp, then add them to a medium bowl with 1 tablespoon oil, 1 crushed garlic clove, ¼ teaspoon salt and plenty of pepper. Mix together and set shrimp aside to marinate for 30 minutes or so.
- Step 2
Meanwhile, heat a large sauté pan, for which you have a lid, over high heat. Add 1 tablespoon oil, the chopped fennel and ⅛ teaspoon salt. Fry for about 5 minutes, stirring every now and then, until browned. Transfer the fennel to a plate, wipe the pan clean and return to a high heat. Add the tomatoes and cook for 3 to 5 minutes, tossing the pan every now and then until charred in places. Set the tomatoes aside. Leave the pan to cool for a couple of minutes, then wipe it clean and return to a medium heat.
- Step 3
Add 3 tablespoons/45 milliliters oil to the pan along with the lemon peel, tarragon and the 5 chopped garlic cloves. Slowly fry for 5 minutes until the garlic is golden and the tarragon becomes bright green and crisp. Remove half of the tarragon and set aside, to serve.
- Step 4
Increase the heat to medium-high, add the shrimp shells and heads and fry for 7 minutes, stirring every so often until crisp and pink, adjusting the heat as necessary so the garlic doesn’t begin to burn. Add the tomato paste and ½ teaspoon salt, and fry for another 2 minutes, stirring frequently.
- Step 5
Carefully pour in the Pernod and let it bubble away for a minute (it may flame), then add the stock and 2½ cups/600 milliliters of water and simmer gently for 12 minutes, stirring occasionally. Use a potato masher to crush the shrimp heads a few times as they cook to release as much flavor as possible.
- Step 6
Meanwhile, in a separate small pan over medium heat, add the fennel seeds and 2 tablespoons oil and cook until the seeds begin to pop. Set aside until ready to serve.
- Step 7
Strain the stock, discarding the shells, heads and aromatics, then return to the same pan. (You should have about 3¼ cup/775 milliliters stock.) Add the lemon juice, chile flakes, cooked fennel, ¾ of the charred tomatoes and plenty of pepper and cook at a bare simmer for 5 minutes, or until the tomatoes begin to split.
- Step 8
Stir in the couscous, bring to a simmer then reduce the heat to medium. Cover the pan and cook for 5 minutes, until the couscous is cooked through but still retains a bite.
- Step 9
Add the clams, cover the pan and cook until they all open, 4 to 5 minutes. Top with the remaining charred tomatoes and set aside while you fry the shrimp.
- Step 10
While the clams cook, place a large, nonstick frying pan over a high heat. Once it’s very hot, add half the shrimp, so as not to overcrowd the pan. Fry for about 1½ minutes on each side, or until crisp and golden-brown on the outside and cooked inside, then repeat with the remaining shrimp.
- Step 11
Arrange the shrimp, along with the garlic and any oil, over the couscous in the pan, then drizzle the fennel seed oil over everything. Top with the fried tarragon and serve with the lemon wedges alongside.
Private Notes
Comments
This sounds wonderful, and I'm sure it would be best with the stock prepared as described with the heads and shells of the shrimp. Still. For the lazier among us, would it be a tremendous loss to buy shelled and deveined shrimp, and use clam juice instead of the shrimp heads and shells, and the chicken stock? A cheat, I know, but would it ruin the dish entirely?
Pernod is delightful playmate for shellfish. But be cautious of using "or other similar anise liquer". Because Anisette & so on will be much too sweet. (Ex: Pernod has 1.8 T sugar/C & anise liquers up to 6T.) See link here to Pernod 101 by food scientist Harold Magee. Pernod really has no substitute. I use it in cooking & agree with Prof. Magee "Pernod is best treated gently." See his #5 point. https://www.starchefs.com/pernod/html/pernod_101.shtml
I find clam juice helpful, but salty. Here, I'd wait for a day when you have a bit of extra time. Cleaning a pound of shrimp is not terribly tedious or time consuming. Pop NPR on the kitchen radio and pour a glass of sauvignon blanc and have it...
This was delicious. I used instead of the Pernod, and seafood stock.
This was quite tasty, but took hours, and also with 3 or 4 pans, various plates and bowls, colander, and almost a half cup of oil. I may try to alter the recipe.
Great recipe for a celebratory meal to impress. Like others said, it takes up to 2 hours of prep and cooking, so plan ahead and do it not in a rush. We doubled the amount of clams since our local store didn't have shrimps with heads on. Served with broccoli on the side to soak up the extra broth.
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