So my friend Sal Sassano from Sicily offers up his octopus salad recipe to me as an appie idea for myself and friends. What is a chef to do? Order octopus and start cooking of course! I am always on the prow for something new. In the catering business there are those that lead and those the try to follow. We lead and put ourselves out there on the edge all the time.
So first we clean the octopus, sorry I forgot to take pictures that first morning, then we boil and steam the octopus until it is cooked all the way through. I use a lot of Old Bay, salt and pepper, then let is steep in the cooking juices over night in the walk in, this allows it to rest, and also allows it to relax and tenderize a little.
Then I cut it up into big pieces:
And the pieces should look nice and white with the purplish outer skin. I wanted to skin it but Sal says no. However after eating it, I will skin it next time. Did not like the mouth feel of the skin.
Then we have to cut the seamonster up:
Then we add in the garlic, salt, pepper, oregano and parsley and fold into the octopus.
dice one red onion small, one stalk of celery and add to seamonster in the bowl. Add some olive oil and toss.
Add in a mixture of olives, a little smoked salmon and a tin of anchovies, fold together and cover, remove to cooler overnight.
Toss and serve:
It was very good, although I think if I had skinned the seamonster the mouth texture would have been better. But hey that is the thing with recipe development, you have to start somewhere and keep improving until you say, ah that is it!







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Looks really nice.
I don’t think I’ve had “skinned” Octopus before. I think I have only had Octopus in sushi and it always had skin on. The purple and white are pretty, are there tough parts that you could skin and leave some of the purple alone?
Let us know how it goes over.
I always skin it. I don’t like the feel of the little sucker bits, for added color try some red bell pepper.
Thank you for the QW
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You still haven’t convinced me Bob, the best use I’ve found for octopus is for fish bait. Have you ever caught one of these things? man, are they flexible suckers, they can get through cracks that only cockroaches can fit. Then when they grab you, well, that’s something else.
Nice looking salad-I’m going to have to try that.
I find a great way to keep the nice purple/white colour contrast without the mouthfeel problem is to use baby octopus. They’re little buggers-about the size of small softshell crabs. Try to get them fresh-the frozen can have a chalky texture.
For the baby octopus I just debeak them, cut into quarters and slowly braise them in olive oil with garlic, tomatoes, bay leaf, thyme an a nice peppercorn blend.
They come out very tender and after you strain the oil there’s lots of stuff you can do with it. Quite often I strain that oil and then puree with the tomatoes and garlic add some minced shallots and oregano and lemon juice. It makes a lovely seafood vinaigrette.
I will look for the baby octopus
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