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Recipe of Quick Shiso-Scented Oysters Marinated in Oil

 ·  ☕ 6 min read  ·  ✍️ Richard Armstrong
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Shiso-Scented Oysters Marinated in Oil

Hey everyone, it’s me again, Dan, welcome to our recipe site. Today, I’m gonna show you how to make a distinctive dish, shiso-scented oysters marinated in oil. It is one of my favorites food recipes. This time, I am going to make it a little bit unique. This will be really delicious.

Shiso-Scented Oysters Marinated in Oil is one of the most favored of recent trending foods on earth. It is easy, it is quick, it tastes yummy. It’s enjoyed by millions daily. Shiso-Scented Oysters Marinated in Oil is something that I’ve loved my whole life. They are nice and they look fantastic.

Check Out our Selection & Order Now. Free UK Delivery on Eligible Orders! Here is how you cook it. Before you jump to Shiso-Scented Oysters Marinated in Oil recipe, you may want to read this short interesting healthy tips about Ways To Live Green Plus Conserve Money In The Kitchen.

To begin with this recipe, we must prepare a few ingredients. You can cook shiso-scented oysters marinated in oil using 9 ingredients and 23 steps. Here is how you cook it.

The ingredients needed to make Shiso-Scented Oysters Marinated in Oil:
  1. Make ready 450 to 500 grams Shucked oysters
  2. Get 2 tbsp White wine (or sake)
  3. Make ready 1 tbsp Oyster sauce
  4. Prepare 2 tsp Soy sauce
  5. Make ready 2 clove Garlic
  6. Prepare 1 or more (to taste) Red chili pepper
  7. Make ready 1 Extra virgin olive oil (or grapeseed or vegetable oil)
  8. Take 1 few peppercorns and * 1 leaf ★ Black peppercorns, * bay leaf
  9. Take 1 Salt, katakuriko to pre-treat the oysters

One of my favorites food recipes. For mine, I will make it a little bit tasty. This is gonna smell and look delicious. Shiso-Scented Oysters Marinated in Oil is one of the most favored of.

Steps to make Shiso-Scented Oysters Marinated in Oil:
  1. Put the raw shucked oysters in a bowl, and add salt or katakuriko. Gently rub them with the salt or katakuriko to wash their surfaces, taking care not to smush them. Rinse under running water.
  2. You can wash the oysters with grated daikon radish instead. Use whichever method you usually use.
  3. Drain off the water, sprinkle with some sake (not listed in the ingredients) and then drain into a sieve with a bowl underneath. You can do everything up to this point in advance, and put the bowl and sieve in the refrigerator…
  4. …which lets the excess moisture drain off the oysters into the bowl so they aren't watery. If you're in a hurry, you can just wash them and proceed. Slice the garlic.
  5. Put the oil in a frying pan and heat with half the garlic to bring out their fragrance. If you want to make it spicy, add a de-seeded red chili pepper.
  6. Add the oysters and heat through.
  7. The moisture in the oysters will bubble up right away. Add the white wine and cook off the alcohol.
  8. When the oysters are cooked through, take them out so that don't shrink. (Make sure to put a bowl under the sieve.) If there is any scum, skim it off completely.
  9. Return the liquid that drained off the oysters into the bowl back to the frying pan. It has lots of umami so don't forget to add it back!
  10. Add the oyster sauce to the pan. Simmer to reduce.
  11. When the liquid in the pan has reduced a bit, put the oysters back in. Shake the frying pan to coat the oysters with the sauce. Be careful not to let them burn.
  12. Just before all the moisture in the pan has cooked off, add the soy sauce. Roll the oysters around, then take the pan off the heat. It will have a wonderful smell from the soy sauce. (Use ki-joyu (raw unpasteurized soy sauce) if possible.)
  13. Put the oysters in a container, add the remaining uncooked half of the garlic, and pour extra virgin olive oil over all. Add the bay leaves and black peppercorns too for extra flavor.
  14. I also add a red chili pepper. For this amount, it's not worth packing into jars since it's all gone the next day. If you make a large batch and and to preserve it, see the next step.
  15. Put the oysters in a clean jar, and add enough extra virgin olive oil to cover them, together with the ★ ingredients. The oysters will keep for 2 to 3 weeks in the refrigerator if they are completely immersed in oil.
  16. Make sure to refrigerator them. I've never had any left over for longer than 2-3 weeks so I don't know how much longer they'd keep, but I recommend finishing them within 2 weeks.
  17. The oil will solidify in the refrigerator, but will return to its liquid state if you leave it out for a little while at room temperature.
  18. The oysters are not simmered for very long so they don't shrink much. They stay filled with their umami and plump. Since they're tossed with the sauce just at the very end, they taste very light and elegant.
  19. They taste great eaten the same day, but are even better the next day when the oil and oysters have melded. The remaining oil can be used in various recipes, so please use it all up.
  20. After being marinated for a few days, the oysters become very mild in flavor (because the flavor gets transferred to the oil). If they seem too bland to you, add a little rock salt to them.
  21. I always use extra virgin olive oil for this, but if you don't like olive oil you can try grapeseed oil or vegetable oil.
  22. Raw oysters go bad very fast, so if you use large frozen shucked oysters, you can enjoy their texture. I used frozen oysters in the photos for this recipe.
  23. If you are using frozen oysters for this recipe, it's best to defrost them and clean them as described, rather than sautéing them while they're still frozen.

This is gonna smell and look delicious. Shiso-Scented Oysters Marinated in Oil is one of the most favored of. I've been making this every year for more than a decade. I've experimented with various methods in the past, but this is the one I use now. The seasoning ingredients are very simple, so the taste is dependent on their quality.

So that is going to wrap this up for this special food shiso-scented oysters marinated in oil recipe. Thanks so much for reading. I’m confident that you can make this at home. There’s gonna be interesting food in home recipes coming up. Don’t forget to save this page on your browser, and share it to your loved ones, friends and colleague. Thanks again for reading. Go on get cooking!

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