Seafood deep fried in batter is delicious and has been around for a long time. The famous tempura is in fact something the Japanese picked up from Portuguese explorers. Although deep-fried squid is known in the USA by the Italian “calamari”, to me this is foremost a Spanish dish as it was Spain where I first encountered it as a child.
As with many types of food, there is a vast difference between freshly made calamari and the deep frozen pre-battered stuff. That can easily give calamari a bad name, as there is usually too much batter and the calamari will taste like a rubber band in a greasy crust. Good calamari should have light crispy batter outside and tender squid inside.
I’ve used a few tricks to improve the traditional recipe. First of all, I use vodka instead of water in the batter to make the calamari more crispy. The alcohol in the vodka will evaporate more quickly than water, so there are more bubbles and thus more crispiness. The other trick is to use a mixture of rice flour and regular flour to have a batter with less gluten and thus less tough. I used Italian “Farina migliorata per friggere” (flour improved for frying), which is a mixture of wheat flour and rice flour, but you could also make your own mixture. It also contains baking soda for more bubbles.
An alternative simpler preparation is to dust the calamari only with flour and then fry them rather than using a batter. With the batter they will be more crispy.
Although fresh squid is best, it is acceptable to use frozen squid as long as you dip them in homemade batter. Like octopus, the texture of octopus even improves from freezing.
Deep-fried calamari can be served as a snack with afternoon drinks (i.e. as tapas) or as an appetizer.
Ingredients
fresh or frozen squid, cleaned (this makes enough batter for about 1 kg (2.2 lbs) of squid)
4 1/2 Tbsp farina migliorata per friggere, or 3 Tbsp flour, 1 1/2 Tbsp rice flour and 1 tsp baking powder, mixed together
250 ml (1 cup) vodka (cheap vodka is fine)
flour for dusting
vegetable oil for deep frying
salt
lemon wedges and/or homemade aioli to serve
Preparation
Heat up the frying oil to 180ºC/350ºF.
Cut the squid into rings of about 1 cm (1/3 to 1/2 inch).
Put the farina migliorata per friggere (or a mixture of flour, rice flour, and baking powder) in a bowl. Add a bit of salt and a bit of the vodka.
Whisk to incorporate the vodka. Keep adding more vodka and keep whisking until you have obtain a batter that is about as thick as buttermilk. Adding the vodka slowly will help to avoid lumps. Use the batter straight away for best results.
Dust each ring of squid with flour.
Then dip the ring in the batter…
Carefully lower the battered squid into the hot oil. Make sure the oil is at the right temperature (180ºC/350ºF) before you add the squid, and wait until the oil has heated back up before you add more. By using the correct oil temperature, the calamari will absorb less oil.
Don’t crowd the oil; fry the calamari in batches. Fry them for a few minutes until golden.
As soon as a ring is golden, take it out of the oil with a skimmer.
Allow to drain on paper towels.
Serve at once with aoili and/or lemon wedges. If needed you can keep them warm in the oven while you fry to serve all at once, but they will become less crispy.
Flashback
Although Italian cuisine still is and probably will always stay my favorite, I’ve become more and more fond of oriental food. This turbot cooked sous-vide with ginger, chili, green onion and soy sauce is something I prepared two years ago after having had a steamed version at a Chinese restaurant.
I first had calamari in New York about 30 years ago. it’s a favorite lunch dish still but I’ve never heard of using vodka … beer, certainly, but not hard liquor!
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There will be no alcohol left in the finished dish.
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This looks absolutely delicious!!!
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Thanks, Mimi 🙂
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Altho’ deep frying is against personal religion am most interested in trying both the ‘vodka trick’ and part using rice flour 🙂 ! Yes, I have used beer in Japanese dishes also . . .
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Those tricks will also work for any other type of ‘tempura’.
If you don’t eat too much of it, there is nothing wrong with deep frying 🙂
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Absolutely love fried calamari, Stefan. It was a real eye-opener the first time I prepared it at home. I’ve not bought any at a restaurant since.
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Even in the US there ought to be restaurants that do it properly 😉
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I fry calamari quite often at home, we love it. I prefer the simple version with only flour. Sometimes I add a little oregano and salt. Fry at 180 degrees and they come out crisp and without all that fatty batter. Much better if you ask me 😀
It works perfectly well with gluten free flour as well.
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li adoro.
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I love calimara… it reminds me of tapas in Spain. Looks perfect. Stefan.
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We have lots of calamari here in Sicily and this is in fact the way we make them too. My husband is Japanese so he loves tempura!
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wonderful, one of my favorite appetizers to eat and so many restaurants get it wrong. They should all come here and check your post for some tips! 🙂
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The vodka is genious!! I use it in my salmon tartare and it is a great way to enhance flavors… You make me want to cook this right now. Calamari is a favorite of mine. I like them with chilled marinara… I did not have dinner. Now I’m salivating… You are so evil!!
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