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What to do with 3 lbs of frozen baby octopuses?

post #1 of 31
Thread Starter 
So, while browsing the local Asian food store, I stumbled on a 3lb bag of frozen baby octopus and at $4/lb I figured it was worth a gamble.

I've never prepared any thing with (originally) more then 4 legs. How should I proceed?
post #2 of 31
Thaw them out, skewer them, and then pass them out to all of the trick and treaters tonight.

More seriously, that's a lot of baby octopus. I'd fry them personally, or give them a quick roasting.
post #3 of 31
oh man, best you speak to my wife.

you can create a variety of Korean dishes that i am not all that fond of. not that i hate octopus, i just dont care for it.

there are lot of goodies that you can make like korean bibim bap with octopus , or grilled octopus.
or nachi bokum, a spicy casserole with octopus that is very popular in korea.


or you can make calamari.
post #4 of 31
go greek and baste them with olive oil and some lemon and pepper and put them on the grill until they are a little charred. so good.
post #5 of 31
Baby Octopus Salad!

2 1/2 lb cleaned baby octopuses (see cooks' note, below), thawed if frozen
1 Turkish or 1/2 California bay leaf
1/3 cup extra-virgin olive oil
2 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
1 teaspoon coarse sea salt (preferably Sicilian)
1/2 teaspoon black pepper
1 tablespoon chopped fresh oregano

Rinse octopuses under cold water, then cover with water by 2 inches in a 5- to 6-quart heavy pot. Bring to a boil with bay leaf, then reduce heat and simmer, covered, until octopuses are tender (tentacles can easily be pierced with a fork), about 45 minutes.

Transfer octopuses to a colander with tongs, then discard cooking liquid and bay leaf. When cool enough to handle, cut off and discard heads and halve octopuses lengthwise. Cool to room temperature.

Whisk together oil, lemon juice, sea salt, pepper, and oregano. Toss octopuses with dressing and marinate, stirring occasionally, 20 minutes at room temperature.

Cooks' notes:
"¢ If you can't find baby octopuses, you can substitute a 2 1/2-lb regular octopus, though the texture will not be as delicate. Discard head of regular octopus, then cut body and tentacles into 2-inch pieces; follow baby- octopus cooking procedure (above), but simmer about 1 1/2 hours rather than 45 minutes.
"¢ If your sea salt is very granular and pebblelike, crush it using the flat side of a large heavy knife or the bottom of a heavy skillet.
"¢ Octopuses can be cooked and cut (but not tossed with dressing) 1 day ahead and chilled, covered. Bring to room temperature before proceeding.

Try it and let us know.
post #6 of 31
I'll make octopus three-ways: (1) calamari, (2) grilled, and (3) sauteed.
post #7 of 31
Quote:
Originally Posted by farfisa23 View Post
go greek and baste them with olive oil and some lemon and pepper and put them on the grill until they are a little charred. so good.

+1
post #8 of 31
Quote:
Originally Posted by farfisa23 View Post
go greek and baste them with olive oil and some lemon and pepper and put them on the grill until they are a little charred. so good.

Exactly!

The best and only way...or add a bit of oregano and do it Italian.
post #9 of 31
I really enjoy this thread title.
post #10 of 31
Daiquiris.
post #11 of 31
if you live where there are driveways... spread them out on a friend's driveway - all evenly.

They will go O_o when they see it
post #12 of 31
Sautee with nothing but garlic and oregano in a very very little olive oil...serve with fresh marinara. Go all "om nom nom nom" and guard jealously.
post #13 of 31
Get a blender and chocolate milk, and make octo-shakes.
post #14 of 31
Pasta in Octopus sauce Greek fishing village style.
post #15 of 31
I'll be honest: I think octopus has a tendency to be tough, much more so than squid. My favorite two octopus dishes are pulpo gallego, for which you really need fresh octopus, and arroz de polvo, which is a Portuguese rice stew. Try grilling a pound of it as others have suggested and see if it's tender. Or try the arroz--there's plenty of recipes online. It comes out almost soupy but it's dead easy and really delicious...assuming you like octopus.
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