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barbecued shellfish

Beautiful smoky barbecued shellfish

Loadsa fresh herbs & chilli

barbecued shellfish

15 mins
Super easy

serves 6

About the recipe

Don't be afraid of barbecuing seafood – all you need is a nice, fresh selection and you're away!


nutrition per serving

Calories

g

Fat

g

Saturates

g

Sugars

g

Salt

g

Protein

g

Carbs

g

Fibre

of an adult’s reference intake


Ingredients

1 garlic clove, peeled and finely grated

zest and juice of 3 lemons

extra virgin olive oil

2 handfuls of fresh flat-leaf parsley, leaves picked and chopped, stalks finely chopped

optional: herb branches, such as bay, rosemary or myrtle branches

2kg shellfish (see intro), from sustainable sources, ask your fishmonger

2–4 fresh red chillies, deseeded and sliced

Top Tip

You can use all sorts of shellfish for this: razors, clams, mussels and queen scallops. Buy only tightly closed shellfish so you know they’re still alive and fresh.

Method

  1. To make your dressing, add the garlic and lemon zest and juice to a large bowl. Pour in 3 times the amount of extra virgin olive oil and add the finely chopped parsley stalks. Mix together.
  2. If you’ve got them, throw your herb branches on to the barbie so that they smoke.
  3. Drain your shellfish, then throw them onto the hottest part of the barbie. I like to put a large metal bowl or a deep roasting tray over the shellfish at this point, so they’re roasting as well as smoking.
  4. After 3 minutes use a pair of tongs to carefully lift up the side of the tray and check the shellfish have opened. Remove them to the dressing bowl, saving the lovely liquid inside as you do so. Chuck out any shellfish that haven’t opened.
  5. Sprinkle over as much chopped parsley and chilli as you like and gently mix everything together. This is wonderful finger food. I use one of the half shells to slurp up the juices. Don’t forget paper towels and maybe even a finger bowl.

  • If you’ve got bay, rosemary, thyme or, best of all, myrtle in your garden, whack branches on the embers to smoke underneath your shellfish.
  • If your bars are wide apart, sit your shellfish on a baking rack so they don’t fall through.

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