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Frying Frozen Scampi
4 Answers
Yesterday I enjoyed a meal of scampi in a pub. Unquestionably, the scampi had been cooked from frozen in their breadcrumb/batter coating and looked as if they had been deep fried.
Today, I cooked frozen scampi at home by baking them in the oven for around 10 minutes on one side and 10 minutes on the other. The pack actually said to cook them for about 8 minutes each side. The pack had been bought in a supermarket and offered no other method of cooking other than baking them.
My scampi tasted nothing like the ones I had yesterday and if anything, were not so hot. They were also firmly stuck to the Tefal coated baking tray and looked none too appetising on removal via a fish slice.
I'd like to know if I can deep-fry scampi at home in a deep fat frier and how long I should cook them for if its OK to do this.
Thank you.
Today, I cooked frozen scampi at home by baking them in the oven for around 10 minutes on one side and 10 minutes on the other. The pack actually said to cook them for about 8 minutes each side. The pack had been bought in a supermarket and offered no other method of cooking other than baking them.
My scampi tasted nothing like the ones I had yesterday and if anything, were not so hot. They were also firmly stuck to the Tefal coated baking tray and looked none too appetising on removal via a fish slice.
I'd like to know if I can deep-fry scampi at home in a deep fat frier and how long I should cook them for if its OK to do this.
Thank you.
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Young's are possibly the best known supplier of fish products to supermarkets. Their own instructions for cooking scampi (reproduced here on the Sainsbury's website) state that baking is best but they offer the alternative of three minutes deep-frying:
http:// www.sai nsburys .co.uk/ webapp/ wcs/sto res/ser vlet/gb /grocer ies/you ngs-sca mpi-220 g
I suspect that discouraging people from putting frozen products into hot fat is really a health-&-safety thing. If they find that it works with scampi, they might try it with turkey ;-)
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I suspect that discouraging people from putting frozen products into hot fat is really a health-&-safety thing. If they find that it works with scampi, they might try it with turkey ;-)
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