May 08, 2013 in spring eats, soft shell crabs. Read the original on: Restaurant Girl
Most people think vegetables when they consider all of the culinary delights associated with the Spring. Â But thereâs a seasonal crustacean thatâs equally delicious, with a season every bit as fleeting as morel mushrooms, ramps and fiddlehead ferns â Soft Shell Crabs!
Though Soft Shell Crab season is traditionally marked by the first full moon in May (which is May 25th), theyâve already started surfacing at some of our favorite spots around time (Grand Central Oyster Bar, Aquagrill, Randazzoâs & more). Itâs right around this time that the blue crab begins molting its shell to accommodate summer growth.  The actual shedding process can take anywhere from one to three hours, after which the shell must be removed or the hardening process will continue.  And as anyone thatâs ever eaten a hard-shelled blue crab can tell you, thereâs an awful lot of work involved in order to extract just a tiny bit of meat.  Thatâs what makes soft shell crabs such an enjoyable spring delicacy, as the sweet and tender crustaceans can be eaten in their entirety â no mallets, crackers, or plastic bibs required!
While itâs always ideal to purchase live soft-shell crabs due to extreme perishability, theyâre not always easy to find.  So itâs perfectly acceptable to buy fresh (recently deceased)  crabs, although you should still use your nose to determine whether or not theyâre good enough to eat!  Fresh crabs should smell clean and astringent, like a gentle sea mist.  But if they have a strong, ammonia-like odor, they should be immediately discarded.  Once purchased, store your soft-shell crabs in cool, moist packaging, like wet newspaper or straw.  Fresh crabs can be held in standard coolers at approximately 36-degrees.  And if you were lucky enough to get your hands on live crabs, the temperature of your cooler should not dip too far below 50-degrees, since the chill will ultimately kill your crabs.  Many fish markets will gladly clean soft-shell crabs for you, but itâs a simple enough process to undertake at home.  Holding the crab in one hand, use a pair of kitchen shears to cut off the front of the crab, about 1/2 inch behind the eyes and mouth.  Squeeze out the contents of the sack located directly behind the cut you just made.  Lift one pointed end of the crabâs outer shell, and remove and discard the gills.  Repeat on the other side.  Turn the crab over and snip off the small flap known as the apron.  Rinse the entire crab well and pat dry.  Once cleaned, crabs should be cooked or immediately returned to storage.
Since soft-shell crabs are entirely edible, the most common way to serve them is either sautéed or deep-fried (never boil them as you would a regular crab, or theyâll fall apart).  As a rule of thumb, soft shells should be cooked for about 4 minutes per side or 8 minutes total.  For a quick and tasty sauté, drop your crabs into hot butter and olive oil, then deglaze the pan with white wine, lemon juice, capers, chopped parsley, salt and cracked pepper to taste.  For a classic soft-shell sandwich, bread your crabs with a mixture of seasoned flour and cornmeal, then deep-fry.  Place them on a soft bun with vine-ripe tomatoes, a squeeze of lemon, and maybe a smear of tartar sauce, but donât go overboard â you donât want to add anything that will overwhelm that delicate, soft-shell sweetness.
Randazzoâs Soft-Shell Crab Sandwich
As expected, New Yorkâs chefs are first in line to purchase soft-shell crabs, the second the season starts.  Which means you can expect to find them dotting restaurant menus from now until summerâs end.  In fact, M ay marks the return of the unimpeachable Soft-Shell Crab Sandwich at the 75-year-old Randazzoâs in Sheepshead Bay.  Grand Central Oyster Bar pan-fries their Florida Baby Soft-Shell Crabs with Garlic and Herb Butter, our seafood go-to, Aquagrill incorporates them into a unique, Crispy Crab Salad with Roasted Corn, Tomato Salsa and Young Greens, and Rose Water in Park Slope batters their crabs in beer and tops them with Spring Coleslaw and Ramp Dressing. Ooh, and then thereâs SriPraPhai, the revered Thai restaurant in Woodside, Queens, which devotes an entire section of their menu to the seasonal shellfish.  Look for Fried Soft Shell Crab served four different ways⦠topped with shredded green mango sauce, served with pineapple, pumpkin, long beans and green curry, tossed with egg, curry powder and scallion, or sauced with a spicy slurry of chili, garlic, and Thai basil!
Grand Central Oyster Bar
89 E. 42nd Street, btwn. Vanderbilt and Lexington Aves.
(212) 490-6650
www.oysterbarny.com
Aquagrill
210 Spring Street, btwn. Sullivan St & Avenue of The Americas
(212) 274-0505
www.aquagrill.com
Rose Water
787 Union Street, btwn. 5th & 6th Aves.
(718) 783-3800
www.rosewaterrestaurant.com
Randazzoâs
2017 Emmons Avenue, at E. 21st St.
(718) 615-0010
www.randazzosclambar.com
SriPraPhai
6413 39th Avenue at Roosevelt Ave.
(718) 899-9599
www.sripraphairestaurant.com
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Read the original on: Restaurant Girl
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