Recipe Mussels with courgettes, garlic & white wine

Morning Glory

Obsessive cook
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Ribbons of courgette with mussels create a pretty presentation and are very easy to do. Use a ‘Y’ shaped vegetable peeler along the length of the courgettes (or you can use a mandolin) to create the ribbons. I’ve seen these ribbons being called ‘paparadelle’ in some recipes but frankly, they are not going to fool anyone into thinking they are pasta. This is a light, low calorie dish intended to be served as a starter or light lunch. Provide some crusty bread to mop up the juice.

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Ingredients (serves 2)
20g butter
1 tbsp vegetable oil
1 banana shallot or half a medium onion, finely chopped
4 cloves of garlic, finely chopped
150ml white wine
2 very large or 4 smaller courgettes, cut into ribbons
500g mussels, cleaned
1 large mild red chilli, finely chopped and some chopped dill leaves, to garnish

Method
  1. Heat the oven to 180C.
  2. Heat the oil and butter in a pan and add the shallot and garlic. Cook gently for five minutes on the hob until the onion is softened.
  3. Add the wine and bring to a simmer for a few minutes.
  4. Meanwhile, arrange the courgette ribbons (prettily) in one large or two individual oven proof dishes.
  5. Pour the garlic and wine sauce over the courgettes and cook in the oven for 10 minutes.
  6. Arrange the mussels in and around the courgettes and cook in the oven for a further 5 or until all the mussels open.
  7. Scatter the chopped chilli and dill over, before serving.
fullsizeoutput_8afb.jpeg
 
Thank you. Whenever I create a recipe, I always think of colour and shape combinations (as well as flavour combinations, of course) and how they will work together. In fact I very often make sketches of the plating. Its that art school training...
 
Last edited:
Ribbons of courgette with mussels create a pretty presentation and are very easy to do. Use a ‘Y’ shaped vegetable peeler along the length of the courgettes (or you can use a mandolin) to create the ribbons. I’ve seen these ribbons being called ‘paparadelle’ in some recipes but frankly, they are not going to fool anyone into thinking they are pasta. This is a light, low calorie dish intended to be served as a starter or light lunch. Provide some crusty bread to mop up the juice.

View attachment 131610

Ingredients (serves 2)
20g butter
1 tbsp vegetable oil
1 banana shallot or half a medium onion, finely chopped
4 cloves of garlic, finely chopped
150ml white wine
2 very large or 4 smaller courgettes, cut into ribbons
500g mussels, cleaned
1 large mild red chilli, finely chopped and some chopped dill leaves, to garnish

Method
  1. Heat the oven to 180C.
  2. Heat the oil and butter in a pan and add the shallot and garlic. Cook gently for five minutes on the hob until the onion is softened.
  3. Add the wine and bring to a simmer for a few minutes.
  4. Meanwhile, arrange the courgette ribbons (prettily) in one large or two individual oven proof dishes.
  5. Pour the garlic and wine sauce over the courgettes and cook in the oven for 10 minutes.
  6. Arrange the mussels in and around the courgettes and cook in the oven for a further 5 or until all the mussels open.
  7. Scatter the chopped chilli and dill over, before serving.
View attachment 131611
Okay, you got me! It's gorgous. But is that zucchini really cooked?
 
Doesn't really matter, IMHO. I'll eat it raw in a courgette carpaccio! :D
I'd get a belly ache for certain, so it does matter. Starchy foods that aren't cooked hurt my stomach and often leave a filmy coating on my teeth. Not pleasant. But it's a beautiful dish.
 
Okay, you got me! It's gorgous. But is that zucchini really cooked?
15 minutes in the oven with the garlic and wine around them and they are cut very thin. So yes. But perhaps they were a little al dentè. Courgettes aren't starchy though. I am pretty sure they contain negligible starch.

I think this dish could be made by pre cooking the courgette ribbons in simmering water if preferred and cutting the time in the oven. Its just that it might be more difficult to arrange them if they are floppy!
 
15 minutes in the oven with the garlic and wine around them and they are cut very thin. So yes. But perhaps they were a little al dentè. Courgettes aren't starchy though. I am pretty sure they contain negligible starch.

I think this dish could be made by pre cooking the courgette ribbons in simmering water if preferred and cutting the time in the oven. Its just that it might be more difficult to arrange them if they are floppy!
I think very young zukes are less starchy, but still starchy. Maybe the ones grown in the US are different from the ones in the UK? IDK.
 
I think very young zukes are less starchy, but still starchy. Maybe the ones grown in the US are different from the ones in the UK? IDK.
They are really no different in the US so far as I know. They are a watery vegetable and the starch content is negligible apparently - rather like cucumbers in that respect.
 
They are really no different in the US so far as I know. They are a watery vegetable and the starch content is negligible apparently - rather like cucumbers in that respect.
How odd, if not cooked down they always live a sappy, starchy film on my teeth and make my stomach hurt. Cucumbers don't have the same texture.
 
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