Broiled Lobsters With Sichuan Peppercorns
- 1/4 cup Sichuan peppercorns
- 1 shallot, finely chopped
- 3/4 cup white wine
- 4 tablespoons cold, unsalted butter, diced
- Fine sea salt, to taste
- 2 1-pound lobsters
- Chopped chervil for garnish
- Place a small, heavy skillet over medium heat.
- Add the peppercorns and cook, shaking the pan, until they are fragrant and lightly toasted, about 3 minutes.
- Transfer them to a mortar and crush coarsely, or place on a cutting board and crush with the side of a knife.
- Set aside.
- Place the shallot and wine in a small saucepan and simmer until the mixture is almost dry, 5 to 6 minutes.
- Reduce the heat as low as possible and whisk in the diced butter a chunk at a time.
- Season with sea salt.
- Set aside.
- Place a small-enough cutting board in a sheet pan.
- (This will catch the lobster juices.)
- Lay a lobster on the cutting board.
- Place the tip of a large, heavy knife at the indentation where the carapace meets the lobster head, insuring that the cutting blade is facing toward the lobster's eyes.
- Swiftly and forcefully, plunge the knife through the lobster until the knife point hits the cutting board.
- Immediately force the blade down, splitting the lobster's head.
- (Although it's dead, it may still move.)
- Continue splitting the lobster so that the head and tail are split.
- Repeat with the remaining lobster.
- Remove and discard the intestine from the tail as well as the spongy green parts from the body.
- Twist off the claws, and using the flat of the knife, crack each claw and remove some of the shell to expose as much of the meat as possible.
- Preheat the broiler.
- In a roasting pan just large enough to hold the lobster pieces in a single layer, scatter all but 1 1/2 teaspoons of the cracked peppercorns.
- Lay the lobster pieces, flesh side up, in the pan and baste the shells and meat generously with some of the butter sauce and sprinkle them with the reserved peppercorns.
- Season the meat lightly with sea salt.
- Broil the lobsters about 8 inches from the heat for 5 minutes.
- Remove from the oven, brush again with butter sauce and broil until the meat is just opaque, 4 to 5 more minutes.
- Transfer the pieces to plates, surround with some of the peppercorns from the pan, garnish with chervil and serve.
peppercorns, shallot, white wine, cold, salt, lobsters, chervil
Taken from cooking.nytimes.com/recipes/8633 (may not work)