THE TYPHOON-SHELTER GARLIC SHRIMP
“WHERE THE FUCK IS MY TYPHOON SHELTER?”
I. CAN’T. STAND. THIS. ANYMORE!
What the hell’s going on? Is… is there a forest fire nearby? Nope, I don’t think so! Has a meteor hit China and created tidal waves of dust clouds that’s taking forever to settle? Nope, nope but I wish! But then what the hell in this apocalyptic country is going on that I can’t see beyond five buildings for the past five six consecutive days?! I mean seriously, I could duct tape myself naked to the window and I doubt my neighbours would have enough visibility to notice! I could hang a freakin’ brisket outside my apartment and it’d be smoked up like hickory and death! I’d laugh at these photos if I hadn’t realized I live here, too…
Aaaarrrggghhh it’s too depressing to even… no, no I’m too pissed to even chat which is a shame because this dish deserves my every last bit of dying enthusiasm to gush over, but now I only see anguish and mockery in everything. So before I can soil the fun and scream “fuck shrimp!” uncontrollably, let me quickly do this justice, because you really really need this on your table.
(Deep breath with my triple air-purifier blasting…) Have you heard about the typhoon-shelter garlic crabs from Hong Kong, an iconic culinary heritage from a bygone sentimental and nostaligic time? This thing, is a legend. A “fisherman’s” dish back in Hong Kong’s fishing-village-era, of hot-woking fried crabs together with a crazy boat-load of fried garlics and chilis, releasing aromas that will draw salivation from the mountain nearby. It became so popular, it outlived the time it was born into and became, to this day, immortal in every dai-pai-dong and seafood restaurants in Hong Kong. It even outgrew crabs, extending its awesomeness to every types of crustaceans that crawl this earth.
If I were to eat one thing, and one thing only during my Hong Kong-retreat, this would be it.
You want this. You need this. Looks intimidating but is actually quick and easy to make, and it’ll be your latest addiction. Trust me. I’m in too much negativity right now to gush over anything if not facts.
Facts like the irony of me saying I go to Hong Kong for a breather now. Did I mention that I wasn’t very fond of Hong Kong, and now I go there for a breather? It’d be equivalent to say that it’s relaxing to go to McDonald’s to take a dump. Oh shit… I told you we shouldn’t go there. Let me put myself back into the straitjacket where I’ll behave myself…
Serves: 2 miserable souls
Even though it’s really fast to make fried garlic, I still like to do it in large amount and freeze the extra for whenever I need it. It comes very handy in sprinkling onto savoury oatmeals and noodle soups. So we’re making twice the amount this dish will need (or if you want to double the recipe for a bigger crowd, you’ll need all of the fried garlics).
If you don’t have fish sauce, I know it’ll be very tempting to just replace it with salt, instead of making a trip to buy a bottle. DON’T. It will make a night-and-day difference in the depth of flavour, and… just don’t. Buy a bottle of fish sauce. And also, while we’re at it, don’t think about using peeled shrimps either. The shell will give a ton of flavour to the frying oil, which is then going to give a ton of flavour to the garlics, and if your shrimps have semi-soft shells, they can even turn into crispy deliciousness. Oh no what?… please don’t ask me if you can use head-less shrimps… just when I thought we were getting along so well!?
Ingredients:
- Fried garlic: (this is twice the amount you’ll need)
- 5 heads of garlic, smashed and peeled
- 1 cup of vegetable oil
- 1/2 tsp of salt
- 3/4 tsp of ground white pepper
- 1/4 tsp of ground black pepper
- Zest of 1/2 lime
- 240 grams (6 extra large/8 medium) of shell-on, head-on shrimps
- 2 tbsp of all-purpose flour + 2 tbsp of fine cornmeal
- 6 dried chilis (more if you’d like it spicier), cut into small pieces
- 1 large scallion, cut into segments
- 1 stalks of Asian celery, cut into segments
- 1 tsp of fish sauce
To make the fried garlic: Pulse the peeled garlic cloves in a food-processor until finely minced. On the side, set up a large fine sieve resting over a large bowl.
Warm up (not hot) 1 cup of vegetable oil in a wok/pot over medium-high heat. Drop a piece of garlic into the oil, and if it slowly bubbles up and floats to the surface, the oil’s ready (remove the tester-garlic or it’ll burn). Lower the heat down to medium, then add all the garlic at once. Keep stirring and keep stirring with a wooden spoon (don’t stop stirring or the garlics close to the edge of the wok/pot will brown faster) until the garlics start to turn into pale-golden (think lightly roasted peanuts). Turn off the heat completely at this point, and keep stirring with the residual heat. Once the garlics turn into light-golden, immediately drain them through the fine sieve. You want to remove the garlics from heat just a little earlier because they will continue to darken into medium-golden once drained. Any darker than a medium golden-brown will taste bitter. You should have about 1 1/2 cup of fried garlic.
The fried garlic could stick to each other after cooking, so break them up with a fork and divide in half. Freeze half in an air-tight bag for next use. Reserve the garlic oil.
To make the typhoon-shelter garlic shrimp: Mix 1/2 of the fried garlic with 3/4 tsp of ground white pepper, 1/4 tsp of ground black pepper and the zest of 1/2 a lime. Set aside. Have all the dried chili, scallion, Asian celery and fish sauce ready on the side.
Use a scissor to cut the shrimp-shells open along the back, all the way to the tails. Devein the shrimps, then score the meats open with a small knife without cutting through (see picture). Evenly mix together 2 tbsp of all-purpose flour and 2 tbsp of fine cornmeals, season with a small pinch of salt. Light coat the shell of the shrimps in the flour-mixture, then dust off any excess flour. Set aside.
Heat up 3 tbsp of the reserved garlic oil in a wok/deep skillet on high heat until smoking. Lay the shrimps flat on one side in the wok/skillet to fry, then don’t move them. Once the first side is blistered and crispy, add the diced dried chili and turn them over to fry the other sides. It’s important not to stir them or move them around too much, otherwise they won’t fry properly. Once both sides are crispy, add the scallions, celery and 1/2 tsp of fish sauce, stir gently and cook until the scallions have just wilted. Now turn off the heat completely, and add the fried garlic-mixture, and the remaining 1/2 tsp of fish sauce. The residual heat is enough to do the rest of the job, but won’t burn the garlics. Fold gently again to have everything combined.
Serve immediately, meaning you suck the heads, chew on their crispy legs, down the meats and spoon the garlics over rice or savoury congee. It is excellent on both.
Belinda@themoonblushbaker
02.26.2014at6:47 PMWow that has got to be very event full for you. I hope the smoke ain’t cracking your style. In fact I think it has made you are more drool worthy cook. If you think deep fried garlic seafood is the dish to save us all.
Shanna
02.26.2014at8:20 PMAs always i want to run into the kitchen to make this ASAP :-) ! Do you think the dish would also work with other proteins?
mandy@ladyandpups.com
02.26.2014at10:18 PMBELINDA: Kiss your wonderful herb garden for me… nature is so far away from me right now…
SHANNA: Basically any types of crustacean (shrimps, crabs, soft-shell crabs, lobster, crayfish, etc) would work beautifully. But if you want to toss batter-fried fish, batter-fried clams or oysters in here, that’s taste superb, too. I’m not sure about meats/poultry… that would be an uncharted territory, but hmmm… fried pork ribs sounds pretty fitting actually….
Jack Guard
12.24.2015at12:02 AMI make a crispy fried pork riblet dish in the restaurant “shrimp ribs” which has a thai shrimp sauce/chilis/brown sugar that intrigues and has had gorgeous results……AND btw I’m going to attempt these gorgeous shrimp at the New Years party at the restaurant too…..should be quite deliciously scandalous here in Upper Michigan! :) Cheers Lady and Pups…..if you had a restaurant male customers would be required to affix a condom before eating to prevent UCO or unintentional culinary orgasms…. :) Happy New Year—–can you tell I was a sailor for 20 years?
mandy@ladyandpups
12.24.2015at7:57 PMJack, hahaaa I shall take every words as a great compliments!
Bob Beck @bobskitchenblog
02.27.2014at12:06 AMYES YES YES! that is all
Erika
02.27.2014at12:25 AMDamn that sounds awful.. You needed this garlic shrimp and perhaps some strong vodka… I love everything about this garlic frying masterpiece.
Todd @ HonestlyYUM
02.27.2014at12:59 AMYou’ve convinced me, Mandy. I NEED this. So excited about the fried garlic!!
Abbe@This is How I Cook
02.27.2014at5:42 AMWell, at least the air smells like garlic. And that should be some consolation. It is for me!
Sofia // Papaya Pieces
02.27.2014at8:03 AMWOW! Hang on, all that garlic only serves 2 miserable souls?
Brianne
02.27.2014at9:56 AMOh, my god. Those photos of Beijing are terrifying. I want to send you some air. These shrimp, though. Dang. They canceled the Gulf of Maine shrimp season this year because overfishing last year decreased the population too much. What the shit is the world coming to!?!
mandy@ladyandpups.com
02.27.2014at2:09 PMSOFIA: Oh yes!!! And those garlics are for eating!! Some say (I for one), the point of the dish is the garlic and not the seafoods…
BRIANNE: Yes, overfishing…. the world’s coming to an end, girl… to an end…
bill
02.27.2014at10:20 PMLooks awesome. You have renewed my interest in making fried garlic! Agree with you on the the fried pork – sprinkle garlic and pepper mixture over the top with some red and green chiles. I mean if you got the pot of oil out – why not?
Jonny
03.01.2014at7:47 AMLove it. Going to have to make this soon, as it’s a rainy weekend in San Francisco.
Patty
03.03.2014at2:40 AMYou need to read “Crazy Rich Asians”…
TB
03.03.2014at3:30 AMRecipe sounds really yummy, but–please!–no “gutter” language. Thanks.
Lynna
03.03.2014at4:21 PMHAHA! Oh gosh, I love reading your posts!! The main reason I like visiting Hong Kong is because of the food! I can already smell this wonderful dish!
Trish
03.05.2014at7:43 AMI was wondering, can you use cornstarch instead of flour? I know cornstarch is used a lot in asian cooking for coating and frying. Thoughts? Have you tried it? If so, did it not turn out the way you thought it would?
mandy@ladyandpups.com
03.05.2014at3:05 PMTRISH: I tend to think cornstarch gets a little too soft/soggy afterwards… My first option for frying would be rice flour + flour + fine cornmeal, but I was out of rice flour so I didn’t write it into the recipe. If you want to try using cornstarch, let me know how it turns out (again, the breading may become soggy…).
ATasteOfMadness
03.05.2014at1:26 PMGarlic shrimp is one of my many weaknesses when it comes to food. This looks too good for words!
Susan
04.26.2014at11:18 AMI made this!! It was super good. Thanks for the recipe and instructions
june2
09.08.2014at10:48 AMHey, head’s up: extended anger is a major signifyer of a toxic liver – seeing that level of pollution it all makes sense. Consider checking out some Chinese herbs that purify the liver/blood/kidney’s. They are super knowledgeable about that stuff. Good luck!
Angela
12.27.2015at8:46 PMFabulously yum! I used the leaves and thin stalks of regular celery because I couldn’t find Asian celery (not even in the Asian grocery!). Had leftover fried garlic mixture, and am using it on top of rice :)
Johnny
03.04.2017at7:54 PMDo you think the recipe would work as well with crab claws?
mandy@ladyandpups
03.05.2017at12:38 PMJohnny, you mean pre-cooked?
Johnny
03.05.2017at4:43 PMI mean raw stone crab claws. They are on discount at my local asian market.
mandy@ladyandpups
03.05.2017at7:15 PMOh yeah sure!
Enlightenment
02.20.2018at12:18 AMLime zest, fried garlic, white and black pepper with dried chilli is a great combination. Should the fried garlic become dry and crispy? It seems there’s a risk that they will stay oily if so much garlic is fried. Would the garlic be more likely to dry out if it was hand chopped?
Organic limes are sometimes hard to find. I wonder what chemicals and wax might be on the outside of cirtus fruits?
mandy@ladyandpups
02.20.2018at12:03 PMEnlightenment, the garlic will crips up even more after leaving the oil and drained/cooled. The problem with hand-chopping is that you may not get the garlic to be as fine. If you can’t find organic limes, normal limes are just fine :)