Anonymous wrote:Op again. Also, when you pan cook shrimp with the shell on, the shell turns a beautiful golden brown, but then when you peel it off, you are eating shrimp that are cooked but they’re not browned as the shells are. Intuitively, this just seems wrong to me since I am used to searing foods in oil or butter. To me this is like browning a steak, and then cutting off the browned parts that have the best flavor. I’m just not understanding why you would brown a shell in oil with herbs and then remove all of that.
Anonymous wrote:Op again. Also, when you pan cook shrimp with the shell on, the shell turns a beautiful golden brown, but then when you peel it off, you are eating shrimp that are cooked but they’re not browned as the shells are. Intuitively, this just seems wrong to me since I am used to searing foods in oil or butter. To me this is like browning a steak, and then cutting off the browned parts that have the best flavor. I’m just not understanding why you would brown a shell in oil with herbs and then remove all of that.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. I appreciate all these responses. I assume you all are still peeling the shrimp before you eat them? Aren’t you losing all of the herbs that are coated on the peel? And are you saying that the peel contains the shrimp oils? Thank you!!
Anonymous wrote:Shrimp oils. They pack a lot more flavor. You should also be leaving on the head. Asian cooking, especially Thai food for example, much prefers whole shrimp for many dishes because the shrimp oil adds flavor.
Ever eat Tom Yum with whole shrimp that have the heads? You can see the orange oil droplets in the broth. It comes from the shrimp oil. People also suck out the heads because it is a delicacy. If you buy peeled shrimp with no heads you lose a lot of flavor.