Clam

Smoky Seafood Fideos

October 20, 2010
4.5
2 Ratings
Photo by James Ransom
  • Serves 4
Author Notes

I had the good fortune to travel to southern Spain last year where I was introduced to an alternative to rice paella, fideos, or broken pasta. The fideos have a personality of their own taking on a nutty flavor, providing a full bodied backdrop for the seafood and tomatoes. —Summer of Eggplant

Test Kitchen Notes

WHO: Summer of Eggplant is a lighting designer who lives in Atlanta.
WHAT: A dish to transport you straight to southern Spain.
HOW: Toast your fideos; take them out of the pan. Make a stew with your alliums, spices, and tomatoes; add your fideos back in, then the seafood; let it all cook together. Garnish with lemon juice and parsley.
WHY WE LOVE IT: Fideos were always something that we loved eating at Spanish restaurants -- and Summer of Eggplant has given us a great excuse to make them at home. We love the seafood-to-fideo ratio in this recipe; by the time you reach the bottom of the pot, you're not staring at a sad heap of broken pasta. We can't wait to make this the star of our next dinner party. —The Editors

What You'll Need
Ingredients
  • 7 ounces bag of fideos, or broken angel hair pasta
  • 1 medium Spanish onion, chopped
  • 3 cloves garlic, smashed
  • 1 teaspoon smoked paprika
  • 1 teaspoon dried oregano
  • 1 pinch cayenne
  • one 14-ounce can diced fire-roasted tomatoes
  • 1 nutmeg seed, passed over a micro plane 5 times
  • 2 1/2 cups seafood stock
  • 1 cup dry white wine
  • 1/2 cup water or vegetable broth
  • 1 bay leaf
  • 12 shrimp
  • 3 squid tubes, cut in to rings
  • 12 clams
  • 12 mussels
  • 1/16 teaspoon ground saffron or a medium sized pinch of threads
  • 3/4 cup frozen peas
  • 1 lemon
  • 3 tablespoons parsley, chopped
Directions
  1. Coat a heavy pan in olive oil. Over medium/low heat, add fideos and sauté until they become a warm brown color, about 6 to 7 minutes. Using a slotted spoon, remove them from the pan and set aside.
  2. Reduce the heat add more olive oil to the pan, if needed. Add onion and sauté for 5 minutes, until almost translucent. Add garlic and sauté for another 3 minutes.
  3. Add in the smoked paprika, oregano, and cayenne, and sauté for another minute.
  4. Increase the heat to medium and add tomatoes, shave in nutmeg, and bring to a simmer for 3 minutes.
  5. Return the fideos to the pan and simmer for 5 minutes.
  6. Meanwhile, bring stock, wine, water and bay leaf to a boil in another pot, reduce to simmering, adding the seafood one species at a time and removing from the pan and reserving. Cook shrimp 2 to 3 minutes until just pink; squid 1 to 2 minutes until just prior to opaque; clams a maximum of 6 minutes, discarding unopened ones; mussels up to 4 minutes; discard unopened ones. Allow broth to return to a slow boil in between batches. Remove seafood and set aside.
  7. Add the saffron to broth and let ‘bloom’ for 2 minutes. Turn the heat off of the broth.
  8. Slowly add stock into the pot with the fideos, in 3 to 4 batches (like risotto). Let simmer with broth for about 20 minutes. When the pasta has reached desired consistency, add in the peas and seafood. Let steam for 2 minutes, covered.
  9. Prior to serving squeeze the lemon over the top, and sprinkle with parsley.
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4 Reviews

Summer O. June 4, 2014
Wow! I'm honored. Thanks! I think this was the very first thing I submitted to Food52.
 
aargersi June 4, 2014
Looky there - Nutcakes had a premonition 3 years ago! Congratulations! Looks wonderful
 
nutcakes February 12, 2011
You should have entered this into the Seafood Pasta contest last week. Maybe you can be a wildcard winner? I am itching to make/eat this.
 
nutcakes February 12, 2011
This sounds fantastic. I hope I can find a good source for seafood. I will report back if I make it, this looks like a hidden gem. I was introduced to toasted pasta from a Diane Forley recipe and find it very interesting. She did say the technique is from Spain and often used in combination with seafood. However she oven toasts it. Here it is, in case you are curious.
http://www.food.com/recipe/toasted-angel-hair-pasta-in-shiitake-broth-188889