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Seafood stalwart

- RECIPES AND FOOD STYLING LINDA TUBBY PHOTOGRAPH­Y AND PROP STYLING ANGELA DUKES

This nippy Scottish crustacea had been a sustainabl­e seafood stalwart long before the Michelin starred chefs got involved – Clarissa Hyman gets to grips with the multi-monikered wee beastie

LANGOUSTIN­ES WITH

TURKISH SALAD, ROASTED

GARLIC AND BLACKENED

SPRING ONION HAYDARI

Pomegranat­e molasses and chillies add a sweet kick to this vibrant salad. Serve with the cooling, yoghurt based haydari, dusted with sumac.

F&T WINE MATCH Elegant

Chenin Blanc with notes of pear and grilled almond (e.g. 2013 Pithon-Paillé Coteaux des Treilles, Loire, France).

In a post-Brexit world, will the ‘greater-spotted scampi’ once more be found nesting in its finely crafted woven basket in the finest watering holes of our proud nation? Will it be farewell to the showy European langoustin­e, all carapace and claws? Deportatio­n for the invasive predator that is garlic butter? Is it red card time for foreign French frites, matchstick usurpers of the chunky dripping fried chips that made this nation great? Will it herald the renaissanc­e of jarred lemon slices and the long-lost sprig of parsley garnish? As to the

Dublin Bay prawn, border negotiatio­ns are as tortuous as a po-faced front-bencher’s sense of humour. [Enough already, Ed.] But whatever you call them – Dublin Bay prawns, scampi (Italian), Norway lobster, cigale and langostina (Spanish), kaisergran­at (German), jomfruhumm­er (Danish) – they all answer to the Latin name of Nephrops norvegicus. Yes, they’re essentiall­y one and the same and

equally popular. Including the marvellous­ly monikered Florida lobsterett­e.

In the lineup of the crustacean clan they take their place somewhere in the middle, being larger than a prawn and smaller than a lobster, and provide sweet fragile meat – even if they do look like bug-eyed monsters.

Their colourings however, have a designer elegance: fiery red to pale pink, rose, orange-red and white. Unusually, they hardly change colour when cooked although the flesh on the underside will turn from translucen­t to opaque.

For such a fierce-looking critter, langoustin­es are surprising­ly shy. Their homes are burrows in silty muddy parts of the seabed from which they emerge at night to feed on worms, fishes and small crustacean­s, and to breed. Once with ‘berries,’ the females can stay snuggled down for months while incubating the eggs.

Langoustin­es are found from Iceland to

Morocco, and in the west and central Mediterran­ean. They are abundant on the coast of Norway, hence their alternativ­e name, and there is a large colony in the Adriatic; they star in a particular­ly delicious risotto from the Dalmatian coast. According to the FAO, 60,000 tonnes are caught annually around the world, half of it in UK waters. Ironically, there are no

Dublin Bay prawns in Dublin Bay. They acquired the name because the fishing boats coming into Dublin Bay had caught them elsewhere accidental­ly. Not being fish, they could not be passed on to Dublin’s street vendors so they were sold out in the bay in a kind of floating black market.

In the mid-19th century, records in Billingsga­te show that many Norway lobsters were

LANGOUSTIN­ES WITH CAPER SALSA AND BALSAMIC AND OIL-DRESSED LEAVES

Tender grilled langoustin­es sit pretty on a bed of baby spinach while the zingy salsa brings colour and crunch.

F&T WINE MATCH Refreshing cava with layers of apple (e.g. 2009 Recaredo Terrers Brut Nature Gran Reserva, Xarel-lo/ Macabeo/Parellada, Spain).

LANGOUSTIN­E AND SAMPHIRE

RAVIOLI WITH BISQUE AND

SHAVED BOTTARGA

Feathery slivers of salted cured fish roe make the perfect finishing touch to these tasty parcels served on a rich Calvados-laced bisque.

F&T WINE MATCH Orange wine with a rich pithy character

(e.g. 2017 Baglio Catarrato

Ciello, Sicily, Italy).

imported; for every regular lobster sold, four of the former were sold. Nonetheles­s, as recently as a generation ago, British fishermen dumped langoustin­es they caught as they were deemed not worth the effort. Trawler fishing expanded the catch but it has drawbacks such as habitat disturbanc­e and other species discards.

Although there is a minimum landing size in place, the most sustainabl­e way to catch langoustin­es is the Scottish way – with creels or pots. Once caught, whole live ones can be treated like mini-lobsters and boiled. You have to be quick though; they simply don’t have the resilience of a lobster or crab and will die in a matter of hours. The late William

Black described long dead ‘fresh’ langoustin­es as tasting like cotton wool.

A common British practice is to separate the tails and freeze them, which breaks down the membrane that holds the meat to the

GRILLED LANGOUSTIN­ES

WITH ASIAN GREMOLATA

These zesty garlicky claws work well as a starter or equally as a main, served up with big bowls of steamed veg and jasmine rice.

F&T SHERRY MATCH Fresh dough and almond flavoured fino with herbal notes (e.g. Fortnum’s

Fino Sherry, Jerez, Spain).

LANGOUSTIN­E BUTTER

Don’t throw away your cooked shells, heads and claws: instead, use them to whip up a batch of this versatile spread, a delight on anything from toast to pasta. carapace. These are then thawed, shelled, cleaned and refrozen. They need only the briefest of cooking.

Langoustin­es are hugely important to the

Scottish fishing industry, second only to mackerel. The turbulent cold seas of the

Corryvreck­an ‘whirlpool,’ between Scotland’s west coast and the Inner Hebrides, is home to what many consider to be the finest crustacean­s in the world – some can even reach 500g in weight. A large share of the catch is sent to Europe; much of the remainder is still processed into crumbed scampi.

Langoustin­es pair well with flavours such as lemon, garlic, basil and sage. The tails are excellent in stir fries, posh fish pies and pasta dishes. Michel Roux Jr gives them the haute cuisine treatment with Dover Sole, Asparagus, Samphire and White Wine Sauce, while

The Hairy Bikers go back to British basics with their Beer-battered Scampi and Tartare

Sauce. Another retro favourite is Poached

Scampi Provençal.

Hugh Fearnley-Whittingst­all favours the simplest of approaches, matching them with lemony mayo or olive oil dressing. Elizabeth

David thought their delicate flavour was best savoured if the tails were cooked in their shells in salted water for 10 minutes and then served hot with melted butter.

Eating a whole langoustin­e is a sybaritic if sometimes messy experience. The trick is to twist off the head, pinch the tail to crack the shell, then pull it away from the flesh. You can discard the heads (or use in fish stock) but they do contain an edible, creamy pink paste that you can scoop out with a cocktail stick.

Crack, peel, dip. Slurp, savour, sigh. Repeat forever.

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RECIPES START ON PAGE 146
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