Thursday, August 16, 2012

How to Make Crab Marinara

Making Crab Marinara turned out to be far more adventurous than I expected. Remember the lobster  scene in Annie Hall?





My experience was not far from that.

I asked the fishmonger for 6 crabs and a pound of lump crabmeat, figuring I'd cook the whole crabs in the sauce to infuse flavor, then add lump crabmeat before serving.  He complied, and home I went.   Imagine my shock and horror when I discovered, upon starting to cook, that the crabs were still alive.  Yup.  I opened the bag to dump them in the sizzling garlic and was greeted with snapping pincers and a flurry of legs.

I composed myself, secured a pair of long-handled tongs, and began battle.  I grabbed the first one, but as I attempted to transfer him into the pot, he fought ferociously and with such force that he separated his leg from his body.  I retained hold of the disembodied leg in the tongs, and the rest of the crab fell to the floor and scurried under the table.  I chased him, finally grasping him again, this time by the middle, and tossed him into the pot.  The remaining crabs were less feisty, and I was more prepared.  I managed the rest without incident, lost of limb (mine or the crabs') and resumed cooking.

In the end, this was a spectacular summer feast, and once I got past the fact that I had to kill my dinner, the preparation was quite simple.

Here's the recipe:

Crab Marinara

2 TBSP olive oil
2 TBSP chopped garlic
1 tsp salt
1/2 tsp red pepper flakes
6 cups marinara sauce--either make your own or purchase a high quality jarred version
6 live crabs
1 bunch fresh basil (about 10 leaves)
1 lb lump crabmeat, picked over for shells


In large pot, heat oil with garlic, salt, and pepper flakes.  Add sauce, bring to simmer, and add crabs, then basil.  Simmer, covered, over low heat 1-2 hrs until sauce takes on flavor of crabs.  Remove crabs from sauce, add lump crabmeat, heat through and serve over al dente pasta.

NOTES:  For the adventurous, you can leave the crabs in the sauce; some people enjoy eating the meat from the shells.  (I am not one of those people--far too messy and labor intensive).  I personally enjoy this with a generous sprinkle of Parmesan cheese, but many purists eschew cheese with fish.  Your call!

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Crabs & macaroni is my all time favorite food...and this recipe is a complete disaster. You should clean the crabs before building your sauce around them, you don't cook them whole, remove them and add lump crab meat! Unless maybe you are ritardato mentale

DPH said...

Anonymous,I agree with you, I also clean the crabs first. After that we part ways...there is no need for name calling, diversity is what makes the world go round. Just because the recipe isn't done YOUR way doesn't mean it's wrong, just different. We have always cooked the cleaned crabs whole in the sauce in addition to adding lump crab meat. Sitting around the table chatting, laughing and picking crabs for hours has been a family tradition for almost 50 years. Great memories!

Philly Food Lovers said...

Wow, we never thought this would generate such a firestorm. As always, we're glad to hear back from readers. Full disclosure, we sought the advice of the fishmonger about dealing with the crabs and he told us to just chuck them directly into the pot, no need to clean them first. The recipe tasted great. But we certainly respect a difference of opinion on methodology. Thanks for reading and thanks for your comments.

Anonymous said...

Italians are passionate especially when your taking gravy, spaghetti and crabs. , soooo unless you are the real deal don’t post recipes that make no sense to Italians or you’ll get the horns.