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Peel and Eat Boiled Shrimp

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A platter of boiled shrimp with bay leaves and sliced lemons.
Photo by Joseph De Leo, Food Styling by Drew Aichele

I like to boil shrimp with the shells on because it’s less work for me. It also keeps the shrimp more tender, juicy, and flavorful, and it creates a fun ice-breaking project for dinner party guests to peel shrimp themselves and get a little dirty as they eat. Ask your fishmonger for deveined and “easy-peel” shell-on shrimp if you can, or follow the instructions for prep below. Set out a few empty bowls around the table for people to dump shrimp shells in and save them to make a shrimp stock! Serve with aioli, French bread, and a green salad.

This recipe was excerpted from 'For the Table' by Anna Stockwell. Buy the full book on Amazon. This book was selected as one of the best cookbooks of 2022.

Recipe information

  • Yield

    Serves 8

Ingredients

2 pounds (910 g) jumbo (16 to 20 per pound) shell-on shrimp
2 lemons, halved, plus more for serving
½ cup (66 g) kosher salt
2 Tbsp. white sugar
2 bay leaves

Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Ask your fishmonger to give you deveined and “easy-peel” shell-on shrimp if you can. If you can’t, prep them yourself. Here’s how: Using scissors, snip down through the center of the curved back of each shell from the top to the base of the tail. You want to snip through both the shell and the very top layer of flesh, exposing the digestive tract of the shrimp. If you look at the severed head top, there’s a natural hole; start snipping from there and the digestive tract will be easily revealed. Then, using a paring knife, tease out and discard the vein that runs down the center. If this process makes you squeamish, wear gloves! You’ll get the hang of it quickly and find that it’s much easier than peeling raw shrimp.

    Step 2

    Fill a large pot with 12 cups (3 L) water, then squeeze in the juice from the lemons and add the squeezed halves to the pot for extra lemon infusion. Stir in the salt, sugar, and bay leaves and heat over high until boiling.

    Step 3

    Set a large bowl of ice water next to the stove to use to stop the shrimp from over- cooking.

    Step 4

    Add the prepared shrimp to the boiling water and cook, stirring often, just until all the shrimp are pink and opaque, about 3 minutes. Using a slotted spoon, immediately transfer the shrimp to the waiting ice bath and let sit until cooled. Then drain and pat dry with a clean towel. Chill in a resealable container or bag for up to 1 day, until ready to serve. Serve with lemon wedges alongside.

cover image of Anna Stockwell's FOR THE TABLE book, showing as salad on yellow table.
Recipe excerpt from For the Table by Anna Stockwell, published by Abrams. Text © 2022 by Anna Stockwell. Photography by Chelsea Kyle. Buy the full book from Abrams Books or Amazon.

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