Best 3 Crispy Soft Shell Crabs With Pistou And Soft Fried Eggs Recipes

facebook share image   twitter share image   pinterest share image   E-Mail share image

**Crispy Soft-Shell Crabs with Pistou and Soft-Fried Eggs: A Symphony of Flavors and Textures**

Prepare to tantalize your taste buds with a culinary masterpiece that seamlessly blends delicate flavors and contrasting textures. Crispy Soft-Shell Crabs with Pistou and Soft-Fried Eggs is not just a dish; it's an experience that will leave you craving more. This recipe takes you on a journey through a harmonious symphony of flavors and textures, from the crispy exterior of the soft-shell crabs to the aromatic freshness of the pistou and the velvety richness of the soft-fried eggs. Each bite is a delightful explosion of flavors, leaving you with a lasting impression. But this article doesn't stop at just one delectable recipe; it also offers variations to suit every palate. Discover the equally enticing recipes for Pistou, Soft-Fried Eggs, and Tempura Batter, each contributing its unique charm to the overall culinary symphony. Embark on this culinary adventure and treat yourself to a feast that will satisfy your cravings and leave you with memories to savor.

Here are our top 3 tried and tested recipes!

CRISPY SOFT-SHELL CRABS WITH PISTOU AND SOFT FRIED EGGS



Crispy Soft-Shell Crabs with Pistou and Soft Fried Eggs image

Prepare a marvelous spring meal with this recipe for ale-battered soft-shell crab, pea-shoot pistou, and sauteed ramps from chef Sean Brock.

Provided by Martha Stewart

Categories     Food & Cooking     Ingredients     Seafood Recipes

Number Of Ingredients 14

2 tablespoons benne seeds, plus more for garnish
2 (12-ounce) bottles ale-style beer
3 cups White Lily self-rising flour
Coarse salt and freshly ground pepper
3 tablespoons unsalted butter
16 small morels, cleaned
4 ramps, trimmed and cleaned
1/2 pound shelled English peas
1/3 cup homemade or store-bought low-sodium vegetable stock
Canola oil, for frying
4 soft-shell crabs, cleaned
4 large eggs
Pistou
4 fresh pea shoots, for garnish

Steps:

  • In a large bowl, whisk together benne seeds, beer, and flour until well combined; season with a pinch of salt. Transfer batter to refrigerator and let chill for 30 minutes.
  • Heat 1 tablespoon butter in a large skillet over medium-high heat. Add morels and cook, stirring for 3 minutes. Add ramps, peas, and vegetable stock; continue cooking, stirring occasionally, until ramps are wilted and peas are bright green, 3 to 5 minutes. Remove from heat and set aside.
  • Meanwhile, fill a large Dutch oven 5 inches high with canola oil. Heat oil over high heat until it reaches 350 degrees on a deep-fry thermometer.
  • Remove batter from refrigerator and dredge each crab in batter, shaking off excess. Transfer crabs to hot oil and cover Dutch oven with a splatter guard (crabs will sizzle and pop while cooking). Cook, turning once, until crabs are golden and crisp, 4 to 5 minutes. Transfer crabs to a paper towel-lined baking sheet.
  • Place a tablespoon of butter in each of 2 medium nonstick skillets; heat skillets over medium heat until butter is frothy. Reduce heat to low and crack an egg into each skillet; cook, basting whites with butter using a spoon, until whites are set but yolks are still runny. Season with salt and pepper. Remove eggs from skillets and repeat process with remaining 2 eggs.
  • Divide pistou evenly among 4 serving plates. Place a crab on each plate and top each with an egg. Divide morels, ramps, and peas evenly among plates; garnish each with a pea shoot and benne seeds. Serve immediately.

CRISP-FRIED SOFT-SHELL CRABS RECIPE



Crisp-fried soft-shell crabs Recipe image

Convenience foods have a horrible reputation, in most cases entirely justified. In the quest for ease, other attributes -- such as flavor -- get tossed willy-nilly by the wayside.But there is an exception. In fact, let's go even further: One of the world's most inconvenient foods also comes in a convenient easy-to-cook package. Soft-shell crabs: what a great invention.Soft-shell crabs are blue crabs (genus: Callinectes: "beautiful swimmer"; species: sapidus: "delicious") that have been captured in mid-molt. Blue crabs (the toast of the East and Gulf coasts, which nature has tragically deprived of our vastly superior Dungeness) are sweet enough, it is true. But when it takes five minutes of determined cracking through sharp bits of shell to get at a paltry couple of ounces of meat, you really begin to recalculate the cost-benefit ratio.Once a year, though, blue crabs give us a break. Freed from that poorly designed packaging, they deliver all of the sweet crab flavor with none of the fuss. But wait, it gets better. Once a regional specialty or restaurant splurge, they are now available at fancy groceries in Southern California. Imagine, soft-shell crabs whenever you want them.Well, it's not quite that simple. In the first place, soft-shells are seasonal: They're here only in the late spring and early summer. And then there's the price. Even when you cook them yourself, they are still expensive -- almost $6 a piece.Don't let that put you off, though. There are few things that are easier to fix and there are almost none that are better. Roll a crab in a little flour and fry it quickly. Do it just right and you get an irresistible combination of crunchy crust and sweet, buttery, briny crabmeat. Serve it with a nice tart salad and a simple sauce and you've got a meal you'll remember for years.That soft-shell crabs cost so much is no mystery. In fact, it's just short of a miracle that we get them at all. Harvesting soft-shell crabs is as much craft as catch.To grow, crabs need to shed their hard shells. Essentially, they get so big they simply burst out of them (a feeling with which many soft-shell crab eaters probably have some sympathy). When the crabs are young, they grow rapidly and may do this as often as every several days. When they get bigger, eating size, it can take several months.Watermen who catch crabs have learned to recognize signs that tell them how soon this will happen. The next-to-the-last small swimming leg is the key: when a trace of white appears, the crab will molt within a couple of weeks. When it turns pink, it's a matter of days. When the leg shows red, they're just about ready to bust.Just-caught crabs are sorted accordingly and stored in saltwater cages. There they are inspected three or four times a day in order to be harvested at just the right moment -- when they have shed their old shells and before the new soft skin has had a chance to harden (something it will begin to do within a matter of hours if left alone).That's when we get them, flown in and, ideally, still alive but stored on ice so their metabolism has slowed enough that they may appear otherwise.The trickiest part about cooking soft-shells is cleaning them, and that's not so much hard as horrific. It's definitely not for the squeamish. The first step is cutting off the crab's "face" about a quarter-inch behind its eyes. This kills the crab, though it may still twitch a bit. Remove the gray sand sac inside. Lift the tips of the shell and cut out the gills, or "dead man's fingers." Cut off the apron underneath and the crab is ready for cooking.At most seafood markets (at least the ones fancy enough to sell soft-shells), the counterman will clean them for you. This is fine as long as you're planning on cooking the crabs within a couple of hours.When you're shopping for soft-shells, try to get the biggest, plumpest ones you can. Most places air-freight the crabs in several times a week, but if you're not picky, sometimes you'll still get crabs that are limp and drained.There really is only one best way to cook soft-shell crabs -- frying (there are recipes for broiling, but these are to be tried only after you've had your absolute fill of fried). Even within the narrow realm of frying, there are many choices to be made.The simplest way to prepare crabs for frying is merely to dip them lightly in flour. This gives you a very light, slightly crisp crust. Other cooks use cornmeal or a mixture of flour and cornmeal. Some use bread crumbs or even crushed saltines.All of these may be fine for everyday eating, but when I get soft-shells only once or twice a season, I want something with more bang for my buck. My ideal of a soft-shell crab is more like the seafood version of chicken Kiev: a very crisp crust that practically explodes with juice when you cut into it.To get this crust, you need to use some egg. But pure egg makes the crust too heavy and too thick to coat evenly. Beating in a bit of milk is the key. It lightens the batter and thins it so it will cover every nook and cranny of the crab. The lactose sugars in the milk also make the crust a nicer brown than you would get if you used egg by itself.The process of flour-egg wash-flour is a bit messy, but it can be done well in advance. In fact, refrigerating the battered crabs for even half an hour before frying sets the crust so it won't fall apart during cooking. You can prepare them as much as a couple of hours ahead if you'd like.I find it easiest to batter the crabs and chill them on a wax paper-covered cookie sheet while I prepare the sauce and the side dishes. That way, the entire meal is ready when it is time to fry.Although you can deep-fry soft-shells, I think just a quarter to half an inch of oil in a heavy skillet is sufficient. Just make sure the oil is hot before you start. This much oil isn't deep enough to allow the accurate use of a thermometer, so fall back on the old bread test: Dip the corner of a piece of bread in the oil; when it sends up a thick rush of bubbles, the oil is hot enough. (Be sure to remove the crust, which hardly bubbles at all.)The frying should be fast and furious. Keep the fire at medium-high and the surface of the oil boiling. The crabs will take only four or five minutes for each side to brown, time enough for them to be cooked through.From Louisiana to Maryland, it seems that the classic accompaniment to a fried soft-shell crab is tartar sauce. Don't snicker. A good homemade tartar sauce is to the commercial version what a home-grilled hamburger is to the drive-up window kind.And it couldn't be simpler to make: Spike a good quality commercial mayonnaise with minced green onions and cornichons and a dab of mustard and there you are.Forget convenience food, this is a convenience feast.Russ Parsons can be reached at [email protected]

Provided by Russ Parsons

Categories     MAINS, APPETIZERS, FISH & SHELLFISH

Time 1h

Yield Serves 6

Number Of Ingredients 7

2 cups flour
2 teaspoons salt
Freshly ground pepper
6 soft-shell crabs
2 eggs
1/2 cup milk
Oil

Steps:

  • Mix together the flour, salt and pepper to taste in a large bowl.
  • If you haven't purchased cleaned crabs, clean them: With kitchen scissors, cut off the "face" about one-fourth inch behind the eyes. Gently probe the opening with the tips of the scissors and, if there is a gray-black sand sac, remove it. Lift the points of the shell on either side and cut away the pale gray finger-shaped gills underneath. Turn the crab over and cut away the loose apron folded underneath. As each crab is finished, put it in the bowl of flour.
  • In another large bowl, stir together the eggs and milk until thoroughly blended.
  • Turn the crabs in the flour until completely coated. Lift them out and gently shake loose any excess. Turn them in the egg-milk combination until completely coated and then return them to the flour mixture, turning over to coat them again. Gently shake loose any excess flour and arrange the crabs on a baking sheet lined with wax paper. Refrigerate at least 30 minutes.
  • When almost ready to serve, heat one-fourth to half an inch of oil in the bottom of a heavy skillet. The oil is hot enough when a piece of crust-less bread touched to the surface sends up a rapid, steady stream of bubbles. Place the crabs in the pan, arranging them so the claws are tight against the body. Fry until nicely browned on one side, then turn and fry the other side. This will take about 4 to 5 minutes per side. The oil should be fiercely bubbling the whole time.
  • When the crabs are cooked, remove to a baking sheet lined with paper towels or a brown paper sack to drain. Serve each crab with a generous tablespoon of homemade sauce tartare and pass the rest.

FRIED SOFT-SHELL CRAB



Fried Soft-Shell Crab image

These crabs are fried to a light crisp, and you can eat the whole crab. It is my favorite food.

Provided by WESBRYANT

Categories     Main Dish Recipes     Seafood Main Dish Recipes     Crab

Time 35m

Yield 4

Number Of Ingredients 6

4 soft-shell crabs
1 egg
½ cup milk
1 cup all-purpose flour
salt and pepper to taste
4 cups oil for frying, or as needed

Steps:

  • Clean each crab. Lift one pointed side of top shell and remove the gills by pulling them out. Put top shell back down and repeat on other side. On the bottom side remove tail flap by twisting and pulling off. Using a pair of scissors, remove the face by cutting behind the eyes. Rinse the crabs thoroughly with cold water. Dry on paper towels.
  • Heat oil in a deep fryer to 365 degrees F (180 degrees F). In a shallow dish, whisk together the egg and milk using a fork. In a separate bowl, stir salt and pepper into the flour. Lightly salt the crab, then dip in the flour, dip in the egg, then in the flour again.
  • Carefully place crabs into the deep-fryer. Cook for 1 to 2 minutes, or until golden brown on one side. Carefully turn over, and cook until golden on the other side. Drain on paper towels. Serve as soon as they are cool enough to eat. You can eat the whole crab.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 357.9 calories, Carbohydrate 25.4 g, Cholesterol 65.2 mg, Fat 24.4 g, Fiber 0.8 g, Protein 9.1 g, SaturatedFat 3.7 g, Sodium 76 mg, Sugar 1.6 g

### Tips

  • Use the freshest soft-shell crabs you can find. They should be alive and moving when you purchase them.
  • Clean the crabs thoroughly before cooking. Be sure to remove the gills and mouthparts.
  • Dredge the crabs in flour before frying. This will help them to get crispy.
  • Fry the crabs in hot oil until they are golden brown and cooked through.
  • Serve the crabs immediately with your favorite dipping sauce.

### Conclusion

Crispy soft-shell crabs are a delicious and unique seafood dish. They are perfect for a summer meal, and they can be served as an appetizer or main course. With a little bit of effort, you can make this dish at home. Just be sure to follow the tips above to ensure that your crabs are cooked perfectly.

Are you curently on diet or you just want to control your food's nutritions, ingredients? We will help you find recipes by cooking method, nutrition, ingredients...
Check it out »

Related Topics