Where to get BIG prawns?

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Discussion

anonymous-user

54 months

Tuesday 9th August 2016
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Yup you can legs, shell and pincers the lot, looks quite weird but so worth it.

They harvest them when they have moulted one shell, and the new one hasn't hardened yet, hence being able to munch the lot without breaking teeth.

addz86

1,439 posts

186 months

Tuesday 9th August 2016
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Saw some monsters at Costco last time I went, they were the size of bananas

KungFuPanda

4,330 posts

170 months

Tuesday 9th August 2016
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Mmmmm softshell crab tempura!!!

tomsugden

2,235 posts

228 months

Tuesday 9th August 2016
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Aren't langoustine essentially large prawns?

don4l

10,058 posts

176 months

Tuesday 9th August 2016
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FurtiveFreddy said:
but if you're anywhere near Camberley I'd also recommend checking out this fishmonger:

http://passionateaboutfish.co.uk/

Their fish is top quality, so you may find them over your budget for the prawns but they also currently make up their own BBQ skewers using various fish/marinades.


Edited by FurtiveFreddy on Tuesday 9th August 10:07
I agree that their fish is top quality. However, their prices are way over the top.

I used them several times when they first opened. The fish was superb and also very fresh.

The last time I used them, I bought a 900g side of salmon for home smoking. I was back in the car before I realised that I had paid £37.00.

I haven't been back since.

I'm happy to pay extra for quality, but you can get 900g of salmon in Costco for between £12 and £17.

IIRC, they had giant prawns for £7.00 each.




jet_noise

5,645 posts

182 months

Wednesday 10th August 2016
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tomsugden said:
Aren't langoustine essentially large prawns?
Yep. From W1k1:
Nephrops norvegicus, known variously as the Norway lobster, Dublin Bay prawn, langoustine (compare langostino) or scampi, is a slim, orange-pink lobster,

regards,
Jet

Evoluzione

10,345 posts

243 months

Wednesday 10th August 2016
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jet_noise said:
tomsugden said:
Aren't langoustine essentially large prawns?
Yep. From W1k1:
Nephrops norvegicus, known variously as the Norway lobster, Dublin Bay prawn, langoustine (compare langostino) or scampi, is a slim, orange-pink lobster,

regards,
Jet
No, lobsters and Langoustine have pincer type claws, prawns don't.

FurtiveFreddy

8,577 posts

237 months

Wednesday 10th August 2016
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'Dublin Bay Prawn' is like calling dogfish 'Rock Salmon'.

Nothing wrong with either BTW, but it's like Harry Hill says: "Hamburgers - beef does all the work, pork gets all the credit"

Evoluzione

10,345 posts

243 months

Wednesday 10th August 2016
quotequote all
FurtiveFreddy said:
'Dublin Bay Prawn' is like calling dogfish 'Rock Salmon'.

Nothing wrong with either BTW, but it's like Harry Hill says: "Hamburgers - beef does all the work, pork gets all the credit"
Indeed. I'd back a langoustine in a fight with a prawn anyday.

jet_noise

5,645 posts

182 months

Wednesday 10th August 2016
quotequote all
Evoluzione said:
FurtiveFreddy said:
'Dublin Bay Prawn' is like calling dogfish 'Rock Salmon'.

Nothing wrong with either BTW, but it's like Harry Hill says: "Hamburgers - beef does all the work, pork gets all the credit"
Indeed. I'd back a langoustine in a fight with a prawn anyday.
FIGHT

ZedLeg

12,278 posts

108 months

Wednesday 10th August 2016
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I'd take fresh Scottish Langoustines over frozen imported prawns any day.

Soov535

35,829 posts

271 months

Wednesday 10th August 2016
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jet_noise said:
Evoluzione said:
FurtiveFreddy said:
'Dublin Bay Prawn' is like calling dogfish 'Rock Salmon'.

Nothing wrong with either BTW, but it's like Harry Hill says: "Hamburgers - beef does all the work, pork gets all the credit"
Indeed. I'd back a langoustine in a fight with a prawn anyday.
FIGHT


captainzep

13,305 posts

192 months

Wednesday 10th August 2016
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OP (maybe this fits better with the cooking tips thread), assuming you get the prawns you want, if you've got time keep the shells (maybe a spare prawn or two as well) and use them to knock up a shellfish reduction. It's an ingredient that Rick Stein raves about and gives the recipe for (see below). You can freeze it. Comes down to what looks like half a mug of brownish tomato soup but tastes amazing, and I use it to make a rich crab and monkfish dish with a bit of cream.

Shellfish Reduction
The shells from 1 lb (450 g) prawns plus half a
dozen whole prawns
2 oz (60 g) carrot, peeled and chopped
2 oz (60 g) onion, peeled and chopped
2 oz (60 g) celery, chopped
½ oz (15 g) butter
1 fl oz (30 ml) white wine
1 tsp. (5 ml) tomato, roughly chopped
15 fl oz (450 ml) fish stock
Pinch of cayenne pepper

Cook the shells and whole prawns with the carrot, onion and celery in the butter without colour. Add the wine, tarragon and tomato and boil to reduce for a couple of minutes. Add the fish stock, bring to the boil and simmer for 40 minutes. Liquidize everything and pass through a conical seive, return to pan and reduce by three quarters.

brrapp

3,701 posts

162 months

Wednesday 10th August 2016
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captainzep said:
Shellfish Reduction
The shells from 1 lb (450 g) prawns plus half a
dozen whole prawns
2 oz (60 g) carrot, peeled and chopped
2 oz (60 g) onion, peeled and chopped
2 oz (60 g) celery, chopped
½ oz (15 g) butter
1 fl oz (30 ml) white wine
1 tsp. (5 ml) tomato, roughly chopped
15 fl oz (450 ml) fish stock
Pinch of cayenne pepper

Cook the shells and whole prawns with the carrot, onion and celery in the butter without colour. Add the wine, tarragon and tomato and boil to reduce for a couple of minutes. Add the fish stock, bring to the boil and simmer for 40 minutes. Liquidize everything and pass through a conical seive, return to pan and reduce by three quarters.
That sounds a bit like a magic stone for making soup if you've heard the old story.

PoleDriver

28,634 posts

194 months

Wednesday 10th August 2016
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What has happened to PistonHeads?
I can't believe that nobody has said the obvious yet!

THE SEA!

getmecoat

thebraketester

14,221 posts

138 months

Friday 12th August 2016
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Tesco do these. We had them a while back and they were good.

http://m.tesco.com/h5/groceries/r/www.tesco.com/gr...

Obviously a proper fish monger is going to be better but not always possible.


21TonyK

11,513 posts

209 months

Tuesday 16th August 2016
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These are 8.99 a box from cash and carry (frozen). Not *that* bad really.


FurtiveFreddy

8,577 posts

237 months

Tuesday 16th August 2016
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And you get a free bottle of tonic water! Bargain.

Hosenbugler

1,854 posts

102 months

Thursday 18th August 2016
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These people do some very interesting stuff, but not cheap, I'm afraid.

http://www.thefishsociety.co.uk/

Du1point8

21,606 posts

192 months

Thursday 18th August 2016
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So glad this is the standard across here.... $21-34 AUD have been known to buy a 1kg of the big tiger prawns and just sit there munching them.





I prefer the pre-cooked ones, but if I have to, I will cook them myself too.