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How To Make Asparagus and Shrimp Salad

Wait! Don’t click away yet. You might think you don’t like asparagus. Or you like it, but think that using it as the base of a salad — and pairing it with shrimp, no less — doesn’t sound all that great. But trust me on this one.

This was a leap of faith for me, too. My wife had a version of this at a nice restaurant. She came home raving about it, and I just couldn’t imaging it tasting good. But I trusted her. (Or at least I trusted that yes, she liked it.) So we made this.

Omigawd. Wow. And along the way, I discovered that blanched asparagus is freaking good.

Ingredients

2 pounds asparagus, cut into 1-inch pieces
1 pound shrimp, cooked
juice of ½ lemon
1 large yellow bell pepper, diced
1 large can (28 ounces) diced tomatoes

Dressing

1/3 cup red wine vinegar
½ cup extra virgin olive oil
1 teaspoon kosher salt
1 teaspoon fresh ground black pepper
1 tablespoon parsley
½ teaspoon basil
1 teaspoon garlic powder
juice of ½ lemon lemon
juice from canned tomatoes

Directions

The dressing

Combine all ingredients — vinegar, oil, salt, pepper, parsley, basil, garlic powder and lemon juice.




Add half the juice from the canned tomatoes. Don’t worry if a few pieces of tomato fall in, you’ll take care of that with the immersion blender.

Blend until the tomatoes are completely liquefied and the oil and vinegar are not separating.

Set the dressing aside while you work on the rest.

Blanching

Blanching vegetables softens the tough outer fibers without cooking away all the flavor inside. And more importantly, without turning them to mush. This is one technique that not enough grandmothers used. If you grew up thinking that all vegetables were the texture of baby food, you had a mother who didn’t know the magic of blanching.

To blanch veggies, you need a pot of boiling water and a bowl of ice water.

I prefer to salt the water pretty heavily. It really helps to get a bit of flavor into the veggies so they’re not just a way to get the dressing to your mouth.

Put the asparagus in the boiling water in small batches. If the water stops boiling, you’ve added too much.

After about 30 seconds, scoop the asparagus out. You’ll see that the color has changed from a dull, olive-like color to a bright green. Don’t cook much past the color change.

Drain briefly, then put the cooked asparagus immediately into the ice water to stop it from cooking.

Stop now and try a piece. Blanched asparagus is awesome. Surprisingly sweet, with plenty of the flavor I like from grilled asparagus. Why don’t I see this on more menus?

Prepping shrimp

Feel free to get fresh shrimp and cook them yourself. I’ll probably do that in a future post. For now, I just got the pre-cooked frozen shrimp and thawed it.

To remove the tail, don’t think of it as pulling the tail off. Think of it as squeezing the shrimp out of the tail. Pinch right at the base of the tail and squeeze. The shrimp should pop out clean without having to pull on it.

Chop the shrimp into bite-size pieces.

Squeeze in a little lemon and toss to coat. Besides adding flavor, this will help preserve the color of the shrimp.

Assembly

Pour a little of the vinaigrette into a large bowl and swirl it around.

Add the asparagus, shrimp, pepper and tomatoes.


Add most, but not all, of the vinaigrette and toss everything together.

Reserve a little of the dressing until after you taste it. If it needs more you can always add it.

Viola

Refrigerate for about an hour, and toss again just before serving.

And that’s it.

Options

Everyone who has tried this agrees that adding cheese would make it too heavy. As is, this is a great, light salad that’s still substantial enough to serve as a main course.

The original version that served as the inspiration was topped with generous handfuls of fresh cilantro. Try serving it with bowls of several different fresh herbs, so guests can top their however they like.

One change I’ll probably make in the next batch is to add a little diced red onion. Not just for flavor, but also for color.


Want more like this? For more recipes like this, that you can hold right in your hands, and write on, take notes, tear pages out if you want (Gosh, you're tough on books, aren't you?) you might be interested in How To Cook Like Your Grandmother, 2nd edition, Illustrated. Or to learn your way around the kitchen, check out Starting From Scratch: The Owner's Manual for Your Kitchen.

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13 Comments

  1. Posted March 30, 2010 at 7:50 am | Permalink

    A cheese that I think would be a GREAT addition, and wouldn’t make it heavy, would be Mozzarella. Real, wet, lump Mozzarella cubed up could make this salad into a well rounded lunch.

    Is the Shrimp interchangeable with anything else like Tuna or Crab or Chicken or Turkey? Or do you think it would kind of miss the point?

  2. Posted March 30, 2010 at 8:45 am | Permalink

    You can obviously substitute whatever meat you want, but the shrimp and asparagus end up having a surprisingly similar texture. I don’t know why that worked so well, but it does.

    • JC
      Posted March 30, 2010 at 1:50 pm | Permalink

      Thanks for that info. I was wondering if you knew of any other meat that would be a similar texture to the shrimp when prepared, then – I’m highly allergic to shellfish but I LOVE asparagus and would like to try this!

  3. Sueann
    Posted March 30, 2010 at 9:27 am | Permalink

    I agree wholeheartedly to adding sweet red onion and I think I would add a small amount of green onion to it also. This sounds heavenly.

  4. Betsy
    Posted March 30, 2010 at 1:54 pm | Permalink

    I cannot abide red or yellow peppers, and green would be a color problem, so what might you sub for the yellow peppers? It looks so good, otherwise.

  5. Jane
    Posted March 30, 2010 at 3:02 pm | Permalink

    OMG this looks soo yummy! I am so trying this!

  6. Posted March 30, 2010 at 3:31 pm | Permalink

    Let’s see, other substitutions … Instead of the yellow pepper, you might try Jícama. It would be lighter in color than the shrimp, but you’d still lose out on the color a bit. Unless you also added the red onion.

    For the shrimp, it has a pretty distinct texture, in my opinion. But for people who have medical issues with shrimp, when I did the seafood nachos I suggested imitation crab meat. It’s actually whitefish, so might not trigger your allergies. Go check my answer there for some other suggestions.

  7. Matthew
    Posted March 30, 2010 at 3:48 pm | Permalink

    I can’t wait to try this recipe with some garden fresh peppers (I’ll have to wait several months though :( )

  8. Sally
    Posted March 31, 2010 at 8:38 am | Permalink

    When I looked at the picture I thought the yellow was mango. Mango would be an interesting addition. A different color bell pepper could be used — maybe orange or red (personally orange is my least favorite, but for the color it would be great). I think red onion would be a good addition as well.

  9. Melissa
    Posted March 31, 2010 at 9:55 am | Permalink

    Wow! This is so good! I made this last night for lunch today and I thought I had died and gone to heaven. The textures and flavors worked great together. Thanks for another fantastic recipe Drew.

  10. Posted March 31, 2010 at 10:19 am | Permalink

    Always happy to help. :-)

  11. Posted April 3, 2010 at 12:58 pm | Permalink

    How do you store the leftovers? Does the dressing break the shrimp down in the refrigerator? I’m looking forward to making this but I’m just one person and it looks like it makes A LOT.

  12. Posted April 3, 2010 at 4:40 pm | Permalink

    Sara, I only had leftovers for one night, and the shrimp was still fine. For you, I’d suggest you make the full dressing recipe but cut everything else way down. Then just use as much dressing as you need and keep the rest for salad. The dressing should keep for a couple of weeks in the fridge.

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  1. By Veggie Report 1 | The Soggy Froggy on December 3, 2011 at 10:58 pm

    [...] chicken salad over green salad for dinner Monday: shrimp and asparagus salad, recipe from How To Cook Like Your Grandmother (I’ll add pasta to it as well, I think.) [...]

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