- Source: Drunken shrimp
Drunken shrimp (simplified Chinese: 醉虾; traditional Chinese: 醉蝦; pinyin: zuìxiā), also known as drunken prawns, is a popular dish in parts of China based on freshwater shrimp that are sometimes eaten cooked or raw. The shrimp are immersed in liquor to make consumption easier, thus the name "drunken". Different parts of China have different recipes for the dish. For example, the shrimp are sometimes soaked in alcohol and then cooked in boiling water rather than served live, and in other recipes cooked shrimp are marinated in alcohol after they are boiled. Another version is based on shrimp that are submerged in a bowl of rice wine. The rice wine forces the shrimp to expel their wastes; the shrimp are then eaten, generally after their movement has ceased.
Consuming uncooked freshwater shrimps may be a serious health hazard due to the risk of paragonimiasis.
See also
Odori ebi, the Japanese equivalent
Notes
Sources
Chinese Home-Style Cooking, Foreign Languages Press, Beijing, 7th Printing, 2005, pp. 127. (ISBN 7-119-00407-7)
External links
Video of live Chinese drunken shrimp
Deep End Dining's Live Shrimp Dinner
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Udang mabuk
- Daftar pangram
- Drunken shrimp
- Shrimp and prawn as food
- List of shrimp dishes
- Odori ebi
- Eating live animals
- Eating live seafood
- Drunken noodles
- Odorigui
- San-nakji
- Lim Kim