Shrimp Cocktail
October 29th, 2007Not every dish on Italian-American restaurant menus can claim lineage back to the old country. Born here, without known Italian antecedents, Shrimp Cocktail has held a prominent place for decades—on antipasto menus of American banquet halls and neighborhood Italian restaurants.
While the early 20th century origins of the concoction are well documented in numerous culinary tracts, the connection to Italians is not, though it can be easily inferred.
During the late 1800′s, the Port of New Orleans was second only to Ellis Island as a point of arrival for Italian—and particularly Sicilian—immigrants. In 1910, 80% of the population of the city’s French Quarter was actually Italian. During this period, the French Quarter acquired the nicknames “Little Sicily,” and “Little Palermo.”
The association of Gulf Coast shrimp and the gastronomically indulgent residents of New Orleans is common knowledge. Newly arrived Italians, many of whom worked on the docks, would have been aware of their city’s attention to food, shellfish in particular. And it’s highly likely that they would have been aware of New Orleanians enjoying a dish turn-of-the-century menus listed as Shrimps in Tomato Catsup.
As to why shrimp were ever served as a ‘cocktail,’ we need to consider Prohibition and the temporary end of alcoholic cocktails, as they had been known. It appears that some of the fancier restaurants sought to fill their equally fancy stemware with something other than martinis and champagne. Restaurateurs began presenting legal commodities—shellfish or macerated fruit—in martini glasses, and, with a bit of tongue in cheek, these offerings were called ‘cocktails.’
From elegant restaurants, the shrimp cocktails found their way to less exclusive venues and eventually to the neighborhood red-sauce restaurants. After WW II, when supper clubs offering dinner and a floor-show drew both Italians and non-Italians, the serving of a chilled, elevated glass of shrimp became a sophisticated prelude to the otherwise immutable pastas and main courses alla Parmigiana.
Even now, when Americans can choose from sushi, ceviche, and even the crudo of la nuova cucina Italiana, the refined minimalism of pink shrimp curling over the edge of a martini glass recalls an age of national self-assurance and optimism.
Shrimp Cocktail
Ingredients:
20 shell-on (21 to 25 count) shrimp in their shells (five shrimp per person)
For the brine:
1/4 cup kosher salt
1/4 cup sugar
1 cup water
2 cups ice
For the cocktail sauce:
1 Can(14 1/2-ounce) diced tomatoes, drained
1/2 Cup ketchup
4 Tablespoons prepared horseradish
2 tsp. Worcestershire sauce
Few grindings fresh black pepper
Grated rind of 1/2 lemon
Hot sauce to taste (Tabasco is the traditional hot sauce. I prefer Frank’s Louisiana Hot Sauce)
Lemon wedges
Preparation: (at least an hour before serving)
Using a pair of scissors or a serrated knife, make an incision down the backside of the shrimp. Remove the black intestinal tract, and rinse under cool water leaving the shells intact.
Place cleaned shrimp into a bowl with brine and refrigerate mixture for 20 to 25 minutes.
While shrimp are brining, place tomatoes, ketchup, horseradish, Worcestershire sauce, pepper, lemon rind, in a food processor and blend until smooth. Add hot sauce to taste, and refrigerate the sauce until ready to serve.
Remove shrimp from the brine, and steam basket over an inch of simmering water. After 2 minutes, turn the shrimp over so they cook evenly. After approximately five minutes or when they have turned pink, remove from heat and shock in bowl of ice to stop the cooking. Allow the shrimp to cool to room temperature and peel, leaving the tail intact. Refrigerate until serving time.
To Serve:
Once shrimp have cooled, arrange them around the edge of chilled Martini or Margarita glasses, placing sauce in a pool in the center of each glass.
Serves. 4
Tag: Almost Italian, Italian food, Italian immigrants, Italian restaurants


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