Jump to content
  • Welcome to Celiac.com!

    You have found your celiac tribe! Join us and ask questions in our forum, share your story, and connect with others.




  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A1):



    Celiac.com Sponsor (A1-M):


  • Get Celiac.com Updates:
    Support Our Content
    eNewsletter
    Donate

What To Do With Frozen Pre-Cooked Shrimp


zoogirl

Recommended Posts

zoogirl Rookie

I've never cooked shrimp before but have a bag of pre-cooked in my freezer. What's something simple that can I make with it tonight? I also have brown rice which I've never made either!


Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):
Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



Jestgar Rising Star

Cook the brown rice with chicken stock. Saute some eggs, veggies, the shrimp with some soy sauce or sumpin'. Serve on the rice.

Darn210 Enthusiast

I saute some mushrooms in olive oil or butter with onion and garlic (and whatever spice looks good), throw in some shrimp and leftover pasta and heat through. One of my favorite meals and I only cook it when I'm on my own . . . I'm the only one in the family that will eat shrimp or mushrooms.

tarnalberry Community Regular

Toss the rice in a pot of (ample) water with a bag of frozen veggies (or any chopped veggies of your choice). When the rice is done, add the shrimp and cook until hot. Add some boullion and spices, and voila, the lazy (wo)man's soup. :)

sa1937 Community Regular

Using a skillet, lightly saute some minced garlic in butter (or butter/olive oil combo). Toss in the thawed shimp for a few minutes, add a bit of lemon juice and minced parsley. Season to taste. Tada! Scampi

Serve over rice.

burdee Enthusiast

Make Spanish Rice with shrimp. (I didn't indicate amounts, because I don't know how much rice you have or what proportion of rice to shrimp to vegies you prefer.) Here's how I make that:

Cook the rice. While that's cooking slice and saute in large pan 1 large chopped onion, some chopped celery, some chopped pepper and minced garlic. When those are done add a can of chopped tomatoes and/or a jar of spaghetti sauce. Add 1 can mushrooms and herbs like basil and oregano. Season to taste with garlic or onion salt. Add frozen shrimp and stir to thaw. Add cooked rice and stir well to blend.

Serve with a white zinfandel wine (Ariel and/or Sutter Home make nonalcoholic varieties) and parmesan cheese (dairy free versions with soy ingredients are available) or grated mozarrella cheese (for those who are dairy/soy free Daiya makes the best grated mozarrella cheese)

Enjoy!

zoogirl Rookie

Wow! You guys rock! Those all sound good and like I could actually make them. Thanks! :D


Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):
Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



luvs2eat Collaborator

Using a skillet, lightly saute some minced garlic in butter (or butter/olive oil combo). Toss in the thawed shimp for a few minutes, add a bit of lemon juice and minced parsley. Season to taste. Tada! Scampi

Serve over rice.

This is exactly what we do... because we find the precooked shrimp to be just a little underdone for our tastes. We don't like shrimp cooked like all the TV chefs say it should be cooked. We like it cooked a little longer, so the extra saute w/ butter and garlic does it up just right. We love it on pasta too!

sa1937 Community Regular

Damn, now I'm hungry for shrimp, which I always have in my freezer. I find the precooked shrimp to be somewhat underdone for my taste, too.

Another thing I like is shrimp curry, which I haven't made since going gluten-free.

Nor-TX Enthusiast

I use this type of shrimp often. I love the taste and convenience. I do notice that the shrimp tastes differently depending on where you buy it. Walmart brand is yucky. I have a Tom Thumb and Albertsons and watch for the sales - very good product.

I use this shrimp in lots of ways. Sometimes DH will pick up Orange Chicken and rice at Panda Express and bring me a container of rice. In that case I warm up the rice with the shrimp and make my own drizzling sauce from soy sauce, water, powdered ginger, sesame oil and seasoned rice vinegar. Yummo.

I also chop the shrimp and mix with any type of rice and maybe some mushrooms if I feel well enough, and roll in softened rice wrappers. Dip into the sauce I described above. I can even crisp them up in a pan sprayed with butter Crisco spray. It changes the consistency of the wrappers and they become crispy.

These shrimp are mild flavored and so adaptable. Try cooking some of the new gluten-free Heartland rice pasta carried at Walmart and toss with warmed shrimp and some dairy free margarine and spices.. Very good and totally normal food.

So many ideas and choices.. one absolutely versatile food which is a staple in my home.

BethJ Rookie

Shrimp cocktails! Mmmmmmm. I keep frozen cooked shrimp on hand all the time.

I use them in anything where raw shrimp are used but don't cook them again. Put them in at the last minute just so they heat through or cook a moment more to your liking.

Be sure to read where the shrimp come from. Those farm-raised in China, Vietnam and Asia can be full of pollutants from the filthy water. They also are loaded with antibiotics as are the tilapia they raise. Just be careful when you buy them.

zoogirl Rookie

Ooh - thanks for the tips about the WalMart brand and where they're farmead! :blink: I did get this bac at WalMart, although I don't think its their store brand (not sure) so if I don't like them I'll try them from somewhere else.

Do they re-heat well for leftovers? Or is it better to just make what yo're going to eat at that meal?

zoogirl

love2travel Mentor

My personal preference is to buy raw unpeeled shrimp (the larger the better - you can tell this by the number on the bottom of the package. The lower the number the larger they are. The number means how the number of shrimp per pound.) The texture is better plus you can grill them shell on! I love them barely cooked through so they remain succulent and plump. Sort of like steak that is medium rare - so much better than well done! :P

However, pre-cooked are definitely not a waste! Lightly poaching in coconut milk, lemongrass and lime is nice. You can roast them in the oven with butter and herbs. Or en papillote which means steaming inside paper (cool presentation, too) with herbs, a touch of white wine and butter). Or as suggested shrimp cocktail which is the best preparation for pre-cooked. You can serve cold with homemade aioli, pesto or dips. Some like to add shrimp to risotto. They can be chopped and used as a filling or stuffing in other things such as gluten-free pasta. They can also be used in a bisque.

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      131,705
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    Doreen Brace
    Newest Member
    Doreen Brace
    Joined

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):


  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      121.4k
    • Total Posts
      1m

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):





  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):



  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • Gigi2025
      Hi Christiana, Many thanks for your response.  Interestingly, I too cannot eat wheat in France without feeling effects (much less than in the US, but won't indulge nonetheless).  I also understand children are screened for celiac in Italy prior to starting their education. Wise idea as it seems my grandson has the beginning symptoms (several celiacs in his dad's family), but parents continue to think he's just being difficult.  Argh.  There's a test I took that diagnosed gluten sensitivity in 2014 via Entero Labs, and am planning on having done again.  Truth be told, I'm hoping it's the bromine/additives/preservatives as I miss breads and pastas terribly when home here in the states!  Be well and here's to our guts healing ❤️
    • Wends
      Lol that’s so true! Hope you get clarity, it’s tough when there’s doubt. There’s so much known about celiac disease with all the scientific research that’s been done so far yet practically and clinically there’s also so much unknown, still. Out of curiosity what’s her dairy consumption like? Even compared to early years to now? Has that changed? Calcium is dependent in the mechanism of antigen presenting cells in the gut. High calcium foods with gluten grains can initiate inflammation greater.  This is why breakfast cereals and milk combo long term can be a ticking time bomb for genetically susceptible celiacs (not a scientific statement by any means but my current personal opinion based on reasoning at present). Milk and wheat are the top culprits for food sensitivity. Especially in childhood. There are also patient cases of antibodies normalising in celiac children who had milk protein intolerance/ delayed type allergy. Some asymptomatic. There were a couple of cases of suspected celiacs that turned out to have milk protein intolerance that normalised antibodies on a gluten containing diet. Then there were others that only normalised antibodies once gluten and milk was eliminated. Milk kept the antibodies positive. Celiac disease is complicated to say the least.
    • deanna1ynne
      And thank you for your encouragement. I am glad that her body is doing a good job fighting it. I also just want clarity for her moving forwards. She was only 6 for the last round of testing and she's 10 now, so I'm also hoping that makes a difference. It was weird during her last round of testing though, because right before her biopsy, we'd upped her gluten intake by giving her biscuits made from straight up vital wheat gluten, and her labs actually normalized slightly (lower ttg and her ema went negative). Bodies just do weird things sometimes! lol
    • deanna1ynne
      The first negative biopsy in 2021 just said "no pathological change" for all the samples, and the second one in 2022 said "Duodenal mucosa with mild reactive change (focal foveolar metaplasia) and preserved villous architecture." So I think Marsh score 0 in both cases, though it's not actually written in the pathology reports. I'm really hoping to get a clear positive result this time, just for her sake.  
    • Wends
      Hopefully the biopsy gives a conclusive and correct diagnosis for your daughter. Im in the UK and have been in the situation a few years ago of trying to rule celiac in or out after inconclusive results. Many symptoms pointing to it including the classic symptoms and weight loss and folate and iron deficiency. You have to play a waiting game. I also had the label of IBS and likely food allergy. Genetic test showed low risk for celiac but not no risk. It sounds like the Gastroenterologist is on it and hopefully will diagnose what it is correctly. Food hypersensitivity (allergy) can also cause similar symptoms and inflammation as well as mimicking IBS. Milk / dairy and wheat (cereal grains) being the biggest culprits. The “oesophagitis” and “gastritis” you mentioned can be caused by another gastrointestinal disorder called “eosinophilic gastrointestinal disorders”. These are named depending on which part of the gastrointestinal tract is affected. For example eosinophilic oesophagitis, eosinophilic gastritis, eosinophilic gastroenteritis, and more rare eosinophilic colitis. They are antigen (allergen) driven. When the blood test measuring anti-ttg antibodies is positive in absence of a positive ema test - which is more specific to celiac, this can also suggest food hypersensitivity (allergy). Usually delayed type allergy similar to celiac but not autoimmune if that makes sense. In this case the ttg antibodies are transient. Which happens. I’ve first hand experience. For info, evidence of villous atrophy too can be caused by food hypersensitivity. Not just by celiac disease. In Egid disorders the six food elimination diet, under a dietitian and gastroenterologist care, is the dietary protocol to figure out the culprit or culprits. Sometimes only two food elimination diet is used at first. The number one culprit is milk protein / dairy. Followed by wheat, eggs, soy, fish and seafood, and nuts. Most are only reactive to one food group or two. Most are only reactive to milk. Hope this is a helpful reply.
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

NOTICE: This site places This site places cookies on your device (Cookie settings). on your device. Continued use is acceptance of our Terms of Use, and Privacy Policy.