Roasted Tomato Shrimp-and-Octopus Cocktail
- 1 1/2 pounds octopus, cleaned (I love the small ones-about 1/2 pound each)
- 1 small red onion, sliced about 1/4 inch thick
- 2 bay leaves
- Salt
- 12 ounces small to medium (40 to 60 pieces) shrimp
- 1 pound (2 medium-large round or 6 medium plum) ripe tomatoes OR 1 1/2 cups canned tomatoes in juice (preferably fire roasted), drained (you will need about 3/4 of a 28-ounce can)
- 3 garlic cloves, peeled and halved
- 1 tablespoon olive or vegetable oil
- 2 tablespoons balsamic or sweet sherry vinegar
- 2 tablespoons brown sugar
- 1/4 cup Tamazula hot sauce (or whichever is your favorite Mexican offering)
- 1 small ripe avocado, pitted, flesh scooped from the skin and cut into 1/2-inch cubes
- 3 tablespoons chopped cilantro (thick bottom stems cut off)
- 2 to 3 dozen crackers (standard-issue soda crackers or artisanal crackers)
- Cook the octopus.
- If you bought cleaned octopus, the eyes should have been removed; if not.
- Cut them off.
- (Not a great way to start a recipe for most Americans, but something you need to know.)
- Cut open the head cavity and wash it out.
- Making sure the ink sac has been removed.
- Check to make sure the beak (the hard mouth area where all the tentacles come together) has been cut out: if not.
- Use a small knife to cut it away.
- Cut off the straggly last inch or so of each tentacle.
- In a large (4-quart) saucepan, combine the octopus, 1/3 of the onion, the bay and 1 teaspoon salt with 2 1/2 quarts water.
- Bring slowly to a simmer over medium heat.
- Reduce the heat to maintain a gentle simmer, and cook until very tender when pierced with a thin-blade knife, about 1 1/4 hours.
- (Weight with a heat-proof plate to keep submerged.)
- Remove the cooked octopus to cool on a plate and raise the heat to high under the pan of cooking liquid.
- Cook the shrimp.
- When the liquid comes to a boil.
- Add the shrimp, cover and time 1 minute.
- Remove from the heat.
- Set the lid askew and pour off all the delicious liquid-but no shrimp-into a heat-proof bowl to save for making seafood soup.
- Re-cover the pan and let the shrimp steam for 5 minutes, then fill the pan with cold water to stop the cooking.
- Let stand a minute or so.
- Drain thoroughly.
- Peel the shrimp.
- Make the sauce.
- If using fresh tomatoes, roast them on a rimmed baking sheet about 4 inches below a very hot broiler until splotchy black and thoroughly soft, 5 or 6 minutes per side.
- Remove and cool.
- While the tomatoes are cooling, reduce the oven temperature to 425 degrees or heat to 425 degrees if using canned tomatoes.
- Spread the remaining onion and the garlic on a baking sheet and drizzle with the oil.
- Toss to combine.
- Roast.
- Stirring a few times, until richly browned, about 15 minutes.
- If you have roasted fresh tomatoes, pull off their blackened skins.
- Scoop the tomatoes (fresh roasted or canned roasted) into a food processor and pulse several times to chop them into small pieces.
- Scrape into a large bowl.
- Without washing the food processor, scoop in the onion and garlic, then pulse until chopped into pieces about 1/8 inch.
- Scrape in with the tomato and stir in the vinegar, brown sugar and hot sauce.
- Taste and season highly with salt.
- Usually about 1 1/2 teaspoons.
- Finish the cocktail.
- If youre a person who likes shrimp cocktail really cold, refrigerate the sauce until chilled.
- Add the octopus, shrimp, avocado and cilantro to the sauce and stir to combine.
- Coctel de Camaron looks beautiful presented in martini glasses or little glass bowls (especially if they are nestled into a larger bowl filled with crushed ice).
- Serve with crackers on the side.
octopus, red onion, bay leaves, salt, shrimp, tomatoes, garlic, olive, balsamic, brown sugar, hot sauce, avocado, cilantro, crackers
Taken from www.cookstr.com/recipes/roasted-tomato-shrimp-and-octopus-cocktail (may not work)