New Crab Louis

New Crab Louis
Davide Luciano for The New York Times. Food stylist: Claudia Ficca. Prop stylist: Gozde Eker.
Total Time
45 minutes
Rating
4(159)
Notes
Read community notes

Crab Louis is a rather perfect meal for a summer night, particularly in this slimmed down, very homemade, ketchup-less version. With nothing processed or sweetened, an updated Crab Louis is simply good American crab, Little Gem- or Boston Bibb-lettuce, and pickle- and caper-studded mayonnaise whisked from olive oil and the best, richest-yolked eggs you can find. The effect is as straightforward as the original's, but the details are resolutely contemporary.

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Ingredients

Yield:4 servings
  • 3-4 heads Little Gems lettuce (or 2 heads Boston lettuce or 1 head iceberg)
  • 1(12-ounce) English cucumber, halved lengthwise and seeded
  • ¾teaspoon kosher salt, divided, plus more to taste
  • 3tablespoons sherry or white distilled vinegar
  • 5eggs at room temperature
  • ¼teaspoon smooth Dijon mustard
  • 1tablespoon fresh lemon juice, plus more to taste
  • 1cup not sharp, good-tasting extra-virgin olive oil like Frantoia or California Olive Ranch
  • A few drops room-temperature water
  • 1tablespoon finely chopped shallot (about ½ shallot)
  • 1stalk green garlic, light and whitest green parts only, or ½ clove regular garlic, peeled and chopped
  • tablespoons finely chopped very dilly dill pickles
  • ½tablespoon chopped drained capers
  • 1pound picked-through jumbo lump crab meat (canned is fine), chilled
  • Homemade vinegar-based hot sauce or Tabasco
  • Chives or chive blossoms
  • Optional: Finishing salt, like Maldon
  • Optional: An avocado; other vegetables, like boiled asparagus or potatoes, or wedged tomato
Ingredient Substitution Guide
Nutritional analysis per serving (4 servings)

271 calories; 10 grams fat; 2 grams saturated fat; 0 grams trans fat; 5 grams monounsaturated fat; 2 grams polyunsaturated fat; 13 grams carbohydrates; 3 grams dietary fiber; 4 grams sugars; 30 grams protein; 1078 milligrams sodium

Note: The information shown is Edamam’s estimate based on available ingredients and preparation. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.

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Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Wash the lettuce, and dry in a salad spinner and on dish towels. Chill.

  2. Step 2

    Peel the cucumber skin in stripes, then halve lengthwise, and seed with a spoon. Cut into bite-size pieces. Drizzle with ¼ teaspoon salt and the sherry or vinegar, and leave to marinate.

  3. Step 3

    Bring 4 eggs to a boil, covered, in cold water. Once the water boils, turn off the heat, and leave the eggs sitting covered, 5 to 6 minutes, depending on egg size, for them to just set with the tiniest softness in the middle. Drain immediately, and leave in very cold water for a few minutes. Peel.

  4. Step 4

    Make a damp dish towel into a ring on the kitchen table. Set a medium, round bottomed mixing bowl in it. Separate the final egg yolk. (Reserve the egg white to add to an omelet.) Whisk together the yolk, mustard, ¼ teaspoon salt and lemon juice well. After about 5 seconds of whisking, begin to add the oil, drop by drop. Once the mayonnaise begins to thicken, start adding oil more quickly. Whisk in all of the oil, adding drops of water, if needed, to get it to a consistency just looser than store-bought mayonnaise.

  5. Step 5

    In a small bowl, drizzle chopped shallot with a little lemon juice and a pinch of salt. Using a mortar and pestle or the side of a large chef’s knife, pound garlic to a paste with the last ¼ teaspoon salt. Add to mayonnaise. Add chopped pickles and capers. Add the reserved shallots. Mix well, and taste for salt. Refrigerate, covered, if not using immediately.

  6. Step 6

    Lay leaves of lettuce in a lightly piled layer on dinner plates. Drain the cucumbers, and divide between plates. Halve or quarter eggs, and divide among plates, salting each lightly. Divide crab among salads. Shake hot sauce directly over the crab on each plate, as liberally as you like. Dollop each salad with dressing, mostly on crab, but allowed to cascade. Finish with a little crunchy salt, if using, and chopped chives or chive blossoms. Add any additional vegetables before the crab. Serve any remaining dressing on the side. Eat cold.

Ratings

4 out of 5
159 user ratings
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Private Notes

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Cooking Notes

What's a "very dilly dill pickle"?

Why call it "crab Louis" if it doesn't have Louis dressing, which does NOT have catsup in it? It's just crab with mayo, spiked with shallots & pickled things - which are, BTW, "processed," as opposed to the author's assertion that there is "...nothing processed." The mustard is processed, too, as is the oil.

This recipe from Gourmet is much better, and more authentic:

http://www.epicurious.com/recipes/food/views/crab-louis-106264

How much mayo does this translate to?

Harriett, In NY, pickles called "half dill" are served almost always with a deli sandwich. For a "dilly dill" pickle you would ask for a "full dill", which has been brined longer.

Tasted great. I used less evoo than recipe called for.

Wonderful with fresh Dungeness straight out of Bodega bay. Had with tomatoes and avocado. Winner winner!!!

I made this last night and it was a huge hit. To limit rushing out to the store for one ingredient I substituted blanched green beans for the cucumber. It was delicious. I’ve never had a tradition crab Louie so I can’t comment on the authenticity, but it was great. I used Butter lettuce because that is also what I had on hand and it was quite tasty. I had leftover crab so I made it again tonight, but added cocktail sauce since that is my preferred way to eat crab. Loved it!

Looks delicious and original. Will make it this week with the container of crab in the fridge. I don’t get the extra critical notes on this one. If you don’t like the recipe just move on.

I have a kilo of frozen crab. Would this recipe work or should frozen crab be used in a cooked recipe?

Judy - how did you get a KILO of crab?! Do you live in Alaska?

A recent crabbing expedition just outside the Golden Gate Bridge left us with a herd of Dungeness crabs-- cleaned, steamed and picked-- perfect for this recipe. Served it with hot-house tomatoes and steamed asparagus. New Crab Louis is a winner...

This Louis was a very good dinner to serve on a 90 plus degree evening. The $22 a pound lump crab was perfect so glad I didn't splurge on the $42 a pound jumbo lump crab. We still have crabmeat leftover so either we'll repeat Louis again this evening or have crab soufflé a la Juila Child.

"Peel the cucumber skin into stripes" was the halting moment.

This is a deeply foolish recipe. The joy of a great Crab Louie is its horseradish/catsup "cocktail sauce" base with really good fresh crab.

Let's now make a Martini without any of those creaky gin or vodka notes, and substitute rose water, or perhaps fluffed turmeric foam for those tired old school spirits.

Harriett, In NY, pickles called "half dill" are served almost always with a deli sandwich. For a "dilly dill" pickle you would ask for a "full dill", which has been brined longer.

Not having access to a NY deli, would cornichons do (albeit processed) as a "dilly dill?

Why call it "crab Louis" if it doesn't have Louis dressing, which does NOT have catsup in it? It's just crab with mayo, spiked with shallots & pickled things - which are, BTW, "processed," as opposed to the author's assertion that there is "...nothing processed." The mustard is processed, too, as is the oil.

This recipe from Gourmet is much better, and more authentic:

http://www.epicurious.com/recipes/food/views/crab-louis-106264

Did ;you notice the name of the recipe? "NEW Crab Louis"...

Your recipe link is exactly delicious, sundevilpeg. I agree that the use of "(un)processed" is often careless, as in this case.

I enjoy riffing on the classics. While this fancy alternative is tasty, I'm sure, it's not better, nor "slimmed down." Mayo, including homemade, is a calorie-bomb.

The tangy, ketchup-based chili sauce in traditional Louie dressing adds, rather than subtracts. It's easy to make ketchup if it makes you feel better about the condiment.

I have to disagree with you here. I am a California girl,born and raised, and my mother made her crab Louis just like the epicurious recipe. I made this new version for a dinner party and let me tell you it was light years better! The sauce is not heavy mayo but a delicate,herb infused aioli. The pickled radish was amazing! I added the boiled potatoes and steamed asparagus ,as well as putting it on Bibb(not iceberg)lettuce. Catsup would have made it sweet/cloying. This salad got rave reviews

How much mayo does this translate to?

Yes, please! This recipe seems like it could be simplified greatly without losing much. Using prepared mayo would help.

What's a "very dilly dill pickle"?

A dill pickle that taste strongly of dill, I'm guessing. Versus one that has "dill" on the outside of the jar but no real signs of dill inside the jar. Worth looking for...

Indeed. A pickle that tastes strongly of dill. I didn't want to mention any one brand, because there are countless dill pickles, many of them good.

I believe the writer was making a charming observation that not all dill pickles are alike. With Tamar's emphasis on the recipe being "contemporary" and "homemade", perhaps readers are meant to take this phrase as an encouragement to buy the best, crunchiest, tastiest, and thus dilliest pickle available to us. That's how I read it, anyway.

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