I’ve always wanted to eat “shrimp and grits” which is a real Southern Lowlands dish. After searching on Google I quickly found out that it’s a technique not a hard and fast recipe. Well it may be to some, but there’s some 1.8 million results on Google with no recipe being the same. ;D
I used what was available in the kitchen. Serves two.
For the shrimp:
12 extra large shrimp thawed, peeled and cleaned
2 slices bacon chopped
1/2 medium white onion, sliced
1/3 red bell pepper large dice
1 tbs garlic
1/4 tsp red pepper flakes
1/4 tsp red pepper powder
2 tsp dried parsley
2 tsp “Cajun seasoning”
1/2 cup Bota-box Pinot Grigio
The grits:
1/2 cup instant Quaker grits
2 cups water
2 thickish slices of smoked Gruyere, diced
1/4 tsp salt
First make the grits- as they boil add the cheese and stir stir stir. When almost incorporated and the grits still easy to stir cover and remove from the heat and set aside. For this dish I wanted them to flow like Risotto on the plate.
Render the bacon over medium low heat. Remove from skillet leaving fat. Add onion and saute. As they approach translucency add the bell pepper, garlic and spices then saute for a minute or so and cover. When the onions are clear deglaze with the wine and add the shrimp.
When they start to turn pinkish cover and remove from the heat.
Stir the bacon into the cheesy grits and spoon onto hot plates- then divide the shrimp and sauce over the spreading grits. Serve immediately. This is best served hot.
I do absolutely love shrimp and grits, and it’s such an unlikely combo. There’s a oyster bar in Mobile that serves an excellent one-it even has a little pile of crawfish in the middle of the bowl.
Try it with a little new Mexico green chile, it’s really a great variation.
I use chicken stock and cream in place of some of the grits water and substitute poblano peppers for the green pepper. It’s nice to add some yellow bell pepper for color, too.
Why INSTANT grits?
Love me some shrimp and grits. Good bacon is the key.
When I was living in Mobile, it was so easy to get great fresh shrimp. Here in Denver, it’s frozen shrimp now. I whole frozen shrimp and remove the shells, head and tail and use that to make a quick shrimp stock.
Also, I like to make a good creamy sauce, after rendering down the bacon, add about 4-5 teaspoons of flour to make a quick roux and cook about 10 minutes to get a good light tan color. Mix in some of the shrimp stock (which you can use for the grits too) and cream. Add some worchestershire sauce, Crystal’s hot sauce and some Tony Chaachere’s. I love taso ham (which I get from a friend in Baton Rouge, but will try to make my own this summer), and I add this in as well. Great thing about Shrimp n Grits, you can make it 100 different ways and it will taste good everytime!
We had our annual Mardi gras party Saturday, my wife made gumbos and I did shrimp and grits. I couldn’t get people to actually put the shrimp mixture on the grits so next year I’ll probably mix everything together. Of course this is in the desert southwest where few people eat grits, in fact the only grits at the store were the instant ones. One person did use grits in his gumbo instead of rice, I need to try that sometime.
This dish has fallen off of the family radar for a couple of years now. I don’t know why. It’s going back into the rotation this evening. Thanks for the bump euge! (I’ll forgive you the instant grits faux pas - this time ;) )
My local grocer has 5 types of 5 minute grits (instant) but no regular so I bought quaker brand yesterday. Not even some fancy Hodgson Mill grits to be had… Usually I’ll just use corn meal to make grits or polenta but wanted “white” grits.
Made this today for dinner. Can’t get the picture to upload. I sauteed onions and garlic and then added 1/2 chicken stock and 1/2 half-and-half to make the grits. Threw in gruyere and smoked gouda along with some butter at the end.
For the shrimp I sauteed the onion, garlic, and half a red bell pepper in the bacon fat then added some red chili paste, cajun seasoning, Worcestershire, lemon juice, salt, pepper, and white wine.
It was very good and I cleaned my plate. This was the first time I ate shrimp and grits and it was an interesting plate. It was really nice for a change but I can’t see myself making this on a regular basis. Maybe more of a once a year change of pace dish.
Made this again for lunch last week. Subbed in one of my frozen roasted hatch chiles. Woowee! Such a much deeper richer flavor than a bell pepper. More like a bell pepper on steroids! And no white wine but used seafood stock instead. And sharp cheddar instead of the Gruyère. No cajun spice. And a nice handful of chopped cilantro form the neighbors garden.
Despite the variation on the ingredients there little change in the main flavor. Spicy. I actually prefer the second attempt.
I can see it over rice but I just love the texture of the grits vs the unctuous sauce and bite of the shrimp.
We have a restaurant down the street that serves shrimp and grits. It’s my go to menu item. They top it off with a lemon, cut in half, and caramelized in Shiner. Makes me hungry just thinking about it.
I was digging through our small freezer looking for some salmon for dinner and I found a last bag of Mobile shrimp and a big bag of frozen green chile. So of course we had green chile shrimp and grits tonight. I do love this stuff, but I may have eaten too much(again).