Categories:Viewed: 27 - Published at: 2 months ago

Ingredients

  • Helpful tips before cooking
  • The main procedure
  • 1 kg of snails
  • 1/2 cup virgin olive oil
  • 1/2 cup white vinegar
  • 1 cup coarse salt
  • 1 handful rosemary

Method

  • If you have "winter" snails, put them in a -covered, so not to leave- basket and feed them with raw broken spaghetti (and flour, but avoid it because it gets muddy when mixed with their secretions and stuff and cleaning them is... + with herbs, avoid oregano - it embitters them). In about a week they will be ready, with a clean intestine to go on. The best, however, are the "summer" sleeping ones, which are fed, clean from their poop and with a membrane at the edge of the shell.
  • With a damp cloth clean the snails' shells from dried saliva and potential poop.
  • To avoid boiling them, but to ensure that they are all alive -duh-, scratch with your nail, the membrane that is formed outside of the shell. If it moves, well the snail is more than alive. You can also identify by smell any dead one. It's rather an acute smell.
  • In the end of frying, never ever add wine. Only vinegar.
  • Having your snails' shells clear, there you go. Cover the pan's bottom with fine salt and array your living snails face down. As snails sit like this and because they don't like salt they will flip in their shells and they will take in a pinch of salt too. And right here resides the whole recipe's taste and success. Boiling doesn't give you that, see? Put the pan on the hot cook and leave them for 3-4 minutes only with the salt.
  • Add olive oil and cover halfway all snails. When the oil starts sizzling, decrease the stove's temperature and cook for approximately 10 minutes. Try a snail. Their meat will be ready when tight and crisp.
  • Turn up the heat; add 1/2 of wineglass vinegar (not wine) and a pinch of dried rosemary.
  • Mix them while the vinegar sizzles, allow one more minute and when the vinegar evaporates, the snails are ready.
  • Serve along with the oil and the ingredients of the pan (a.k.a. where the whole flavor is hidden).
  • P.S. The shrilling sounds that you hear during frying, are not the snails' screamings, 'cause simply snails don't make sounds from their mouths. So don't freak up. It's hot air, which tries to get out of the shell. Stay, cool!
  • ( This recipe was firstly published in the "In Whirl of Inspiration' site. Link in profile.)