Grilled Baby Squid
- 1 pound cleaned baby squid or 1 1/2 pounds whole baby squid
- Coarse salt to taste
- About 3 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
- 1 tablespoon fresh lemon juice or sherry vinegar, or to taste
- Start a charcoal or wood fire or preheat a gas grill; the fire should be quite hot (on a gas grill, as hot as you can get it) and the rack no more than 4 inches from the heat source and preferably less.
- Or preheat a heavy pan over high heat (and turn on an exhaust fan if you have one) for about 5 minutes.
- If you need to clean the squid, pull off the head and tentacles and separate them by cutting just behind the head; save the tentacles and discard the head.
- Rinse out the inside of the bodies and dry well.
- Sprinkle the squid with coarse salt and toss them lightly with a tablespoon or two of olive oil.
- If you are grilling, skewer the squid.
- Grill or pan-grill the squid quickly, about 1 minute per side; they should brown nicely but remain moist inside.
- Put the squid on a plate.
- Drizzle with a little more olive oil and sprinkle with lemon juice or vinegar and a bit more salt.
- Serve immediately.
- Here the grill is requisite, because the soy sauce coating would burn on a griddle: After cleaning the squid, marinate them briefly in a mixture of 1/4 cup soy sauce and 2 tablespoons mirin (or 1 tablespoon honey mixed with 1 tablespoon white wine).
- Grill and garnish with toasted sesame seeds (page 596).
- (Black sesame seeds are more commonly used here, and they look nice against the white squid, so if you can find them, by all means use them.
- Look in Japanese, Chinese, or Indian stores.)
baby squid, salt, extra virgin olive oil, lemon juice
Taken from www.epicurious.com/recipes/food/views/grilled-baby-squid-385679 (may not work)