How to cook an octopus

I was bitten by an octopus.  - Ted Cruz

After my last article about Greek wine and pre-cooked octopus, I thought I would follow up with a very simple method to cook your own sea beast. There is a lot of unwarranted fear surrounding octopus. Granted they are weird looking sea creatures with beaks and tentacles and a notorious reputation for being frustratingly tough. I have seen both professional and home cooks avoid preparing it like the plague. Done right it is sublimely tender and takes to a variety of preparations from simple salads to tandoori spiced appetizers to stewed in tomato sauce. Done wrong and it becomes a rubbery sea flavored chewing gum.There are many myths about the best way to tenderize octopus. They range from dropping corks in the poaching liquid, rubbing them with salt, cooking only in copper, using your clothes dryer to tumble them into tender submission, beating them on rocks to dumping enough vinegar in the cooking liquid to make you pucker for a week straight. The simplest and best method is to steam in their own juices.Try this and you will never go back to whatever method you used to subscribe to.I present my pictorial recipe entitled 'taming the sea beast'.octopus cooking 08[gallery columns="2" size="large" ids="5074,5066"][gallery columns="2" size="large" ids="5075,5067"][gallery columns="2" size="large" ids="5069,5070"] 20160410_150958 20160410_160534Even your five-year-old will eat an octopus! Post pictures with the hashtag #PistouAndPastis

Greek Vinaigrette

A super easy, super tasty vinaigrette to drown your octopus in. This goes great on grilled chicken, lamb, sardines or anything needing a burst of sunshine and flavor.

  • ½ cup extra virgin olive oil
  • 2 tablespoons freshly squeezed lemon juice
  • 1 shallot (chopped finely)
  • 1 tablespoon capers
  • 1 clove garlic
  • 1 teaspoon fresh thyme
  • 1 teaspoon fresh oregano
  • 1 teaspoon parsley
  • 1 pinch Herbs de Provence
  • sea salt (to taste)
  • black pepper (to taste)
  1. Hard to imagine I actually wrote this as a recipe. Simply mix everything together and let macerate for an hour or so. Sometimes I get lazy and pulse in my blender.

This is loosely based on the Kokkari Dressing found in my absolutely favorite Greek cookbook by Erik Cosselmon and Janet Fletcher simply entitled Kokkari, Contemporary Greek Flavors.

 

Previous
Previous

Ramp it Up! Eating on the Wild Side

Next
Next

It's all Greek to me