I fell in love with Vietnamese food during a two-week holiday to the country about ten years ago. I remember eating delicately-spiced dishes in a jasmine-scented garden in Ho Chi Minh city, tucking into freshly-caught lime-drenched seafood on a beach in Nha Trang and a multiple-course family-style meal at a homestay on a deserted beach as a storm raged outside. I returned home with a Vietnamese cookbook and for months afterwards offered wonky summer rolls to anyone who visited my house (sorry about that).
There are lots of great Vietnamese restaurants close to where I live in East London (Viet Grill on Kingsland Road and Green Papaya on Mare Street are two of my favourites). Whatever else I have, I’ll always order a portion of salt and pepper squid (and usually wish I’d order two). Catherine from Borrowed Light, who shot these mouthwatering photographs is a fan too. “I can’t tell you how much I love this dish [from Cook In Boots by Ravinder Bhogal],” she says. “It’s easy and delicious, the only problem is it disappears far too quickly!”
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{The Ingredients}
- 1kg baby squid, cleaned and prepared
- 2 tsp black peppercorns
- 2 tsp Sichuan peppercorns
- 2 tsp sea salt
- 60g cornflour
- Groundnut oil for deep frying
- 2 red chillies (deseeded if you don’t want it too spicy), sliced
- 6 spring onions, sliced
- 4 garlic cloves, chopped
- Juice of ½ lime
- 4 heaped tbsp chopped fresh coriander
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Method
Cut the squid into 2cm rings and pat dry with kitchen paper (drying helps the squid to be extra crispy.
Heat a dry frying pan and then toast the peppercorns until aromatic. Place them in a pestle and mortar along with the salt and crush to a coarse powder. Empty into a bowl and mix with the cornflour.
Heat the oil in a deep-fat fryer (we used a normal frying pan) over a high heat until shimmering.
Mix the squid into the bowl with salt, pepper and cornflour. Shake off the excess flour and then fry in the oil for 1-2 minutes. Any longer and the squid will go rubbery. Remove and drain well on kitchen paper.
Once all the squid is done, remove most of the oil from the pan saving a few tablespoons and flash fry the chillies, onions and garlic for 1 minute. Drain and mix well with the squid.
Squeeze the lime juice, sprinkle with coriander and serve immediately.
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we went to Viet Grill for the first time just a few weeks ago! We had to order another round of the squid 😉
It’s so good, isn’t it?!
I love sea food like prawns, scallops, lobster but am yet to try squid that doesnt feel like I have rubber band in my mouth is this bad squid cooking or is it time to resign myself to the fact squid is not for me?? xx
It’s really easy to get squid wrong… Overcook it or just end up with white rubber bands 😉
Probably the best advice I can give is to try squid in a really good seafood restaurant… Somewhere tried and tested where you know the chef does a good job. Then if you’re still not enamoured then squid probably isn’t for you! Now… Can you take that risk!!!!
yum, yum, YUM!!
Im definitely going to be trying this… Ive never cooked squid before so it’ll be a new culinary experience for me 🙂
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