Ixta Belfrage's Tropical Prawns with Plantain & Pickled Shallots

A fruity, fishy prawn and plantain plate from guest chef Ixta Belfrage's new book Fusão

10-12 minutes prep

17 minutes cook

Serves 4

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Ingredients

    Prawns and oil:
  • 12 x 35gshell-on prawns
  • 2 whole red bird’s-eye chillies
  • 2whole green bird’s-eye chillies
  • 120golive oil
  • fine sea salt
  • ¾ tsp ground urucum (aka annatto/achiote) plus a little extra to serve
  • 40gtomato purée/paste
  • Everything else:
  • 1banana shallot, peeled and sliced into 3mm rings (use a mandolin if you have one)
  • 3limes, juiced to get 60g
  • 15grice vinegar
  • 2 small, very ripe plantains
  • 1 tbsp ghee (homemade or from a jar, not from a tin)
  • 2½ tsp ginger–garlic mix
  • 2 tbspfresh coriander stalks, very finely chopped

Twisted's Cookbook Club returns with one of Ixta's fave recipes from her new book – prawns in prawn head oil with pickled shallots and plantain. Like pretty much all of Ixta’s recipes, the flavours here are BIG, inspired by a dish from a seafood bar called Adega Pérola in Rio de Janeiro. In fact, the whole cookbook is a love letter to Brazil, where her mother is from. If nothing else, let this convince you to try fruit and seafood together. Done right, it can be pretty special.

Method

  • Remove the heads and peel the shells from the prawns, keeping the tails on. Place the heads and shells in a frying pan off the heat. You should have about 260g of peeled, tail-on prawns.
  • Slice down the back of the prawns to slightly butterfly them open, then devein them.
  • Place the peeled, tail-on prawns in a bowl with the chillies,  1 tablespoon of the olive oil, ½ teaspoon of fine sea salt and the urucum. Gently mix and set aside.
  • To make the prawn oil, add the tomato purée and 100g of olive oil to the pan of prawn heads and shells. Place on a high heat and stir-fry until the shells become bright pink, about 3½ minutes. Place a sieve over a bowl and spoon the prawn heads, shells and oil into the sieve. Press down on the heads to extract as much liquid and flavour as possible. 
  • Put the sliced shallot into a separate bowl with the lime juice, vinegar and ½ teaspoon of fine sea salt. Mix and set aside.
  • Peel the plantains and cut into 2cm-thick rounds. Wipe the frying pan clean. Add the ghee to the pan and place on a very low heat. Once melted, add the plantain, spaced apart, and sprinkle over ¼ teaspoon of fine sea salt evenly. Cover with a lid and gently cook for 5 minutes, then flip the plantain and gently cook for another 5 minutes. You’re not trying to brown or fry the plantain slices, you want them to steam and soften, so keep the heat low. 
  • Pour the ghee into the bowl of prawn oil and set the cooked plantain aside. Wipe the frying pan clean and place on a high heat. Once very hot, add the prawns and chillies to the pan, spread out as much as possible and fry for 1½ minutes on each side.
  • Remove the pan from the heat, then add the ginger–garlic mix, the prawn head oil, the cooked plantain and the coriander stalks. Finely slice 1 of the red chillies and 1 of the green chillies, put them back into the pan and gently mix everything together.
  • Transfer to a platter and top with some of the pickled shallots (you won’t need them all) and a sprinkling of urucum. Drizzle over some of the shallot pickling liquid and serve with more fresh lime squeezed on top,
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