Gransnet forums

Food

Scampi

(28 Posts)
M0nica Fri 24-May-24 09:11:35

We went out for a meal last week and for the first time, probably in decades, I decided to order scampi.

As I have always understood it 'scampi' were langoustine tails, including the shelly tail and a large piece of langoustine meat attached, egged, breadcrumbed and deep fried. I can remember in the past, holding the tail to eat the langoustine flesh.

What I reeceived looked like chicken nuggets, a cylinder with rounded ends, with a filling with a texture that suggested that it was made of minced seafood of some sort.

I commented on this to DH who does quite often have scampi, and he said what I had was what was normally served and DD confirmed it later.

I remained unconvinced and started googling and came across this article www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2357200/Ever-wondered-whats-REALLY-scampi-Youll-wish-hadnt-asked-.html

which confirmed everything I had known and now suspected, that real scampi has a shelly tail with meat attached and that scampi, as served nowadays, is indeed the fishy equivalent of a chicken nugget. It is langoustine bits bulked out with everything from cat fish to pea flour and will often have very little scampi in it.

I will not be ordering scampi and chips again. I will stick to fish and chips.

MissInterpreted Fri 24-May-24 09:18:11

I've noticed that if you look in the freezer section, some packets do state 'whole scampi', whereas others say it is 'reconstituted'. It's not something I frequently eat, to be honest though.

Mollygo Fri 24-May-24 09:20:29

I read catfood for catfish in your description and nearly hurled!!
I don’t order scampi because they look just as you describe.
Some brands of chicken nuggets and chicken-free chicken nuggets have equally dubious contents.

petra Fri 24-May-24 09:21:52

I thought it was a given that everyone knew what scampi is made with.

NotSpaghetti Fri 24-May-24 09:24:09

"Modern" scampi is not the same asbit used to be petra

GrannyGravy13 Fri 24-May-24 09:39:55

Scampi (Scampo) is Italian for Langoustine.

If modern day Scampi was to be made from whole Scampi the price for Scampi & Chips would be north of £25.00.

Cheaper end Scampi is mixed crustaceans, the more expensive is likely to be king prawns, very expensive will be langoustine.

(In the USA it is called shrimp scampi )

Desdemona Fri 24-May-24 09:44:57

MissInterpreted

I've noticed that if you look in the freezer section, some packets do state 'whole scampi', whereas others say it is 'reconstituted'. It's not something I frequently eat, to be honest though.

This.

Look for the bags that say wholetail. They are more expensive but far nicer than the cheap "scampi" that is filled with fishy sludge.

M0nica Fri 24-May-24 09:56:24

petra

I thought it was a given that everyone knew what scampi is made with.

Well, yes, Petra that is the point, I thought I knew what scampi is, but what I (and you) think it is, is not what is served if you order 'scampi' in the average pub.

Having eaten what is served in the average pub and described as scampi, I would sooner not eat it. The 'scampi' I was served had, to me, an unpleasant taste and an unpleasant texture.

As I said, in future, I will stick to fish and chips.

henetha Fri 24-May-24 10:01:56

I've got a pack of Scampi in the freezer so just went and read what it says. It states that it is whole langoustines tails, which I presume is good.
I've eaten some and it's very nice. No problems with the taste.
It's by a particular company, am I allowed to say which?

henetha Fri 24-May-24 10:03:04

And not expensive... about £3/4 I think.

Freya5 Fri 24-May-24 10:09:33

In our sea food town, a local supplier of quality foods £7.50 for 300g bag of whole tail Scampi. Expensive, but worth it for a treat. Off shopping!!

25Avalon Fri 24-May-24 10:13:45

Even wholetail scampi can have 2-3 small tails in it. The biggest langoustine tails go to top restaurants and Europe.

Joseann Fri 24-May-24 10:51:47

It has to have the word "wholetail" for me, the other stuff is broken up squashed pieces.
I eat scampi regularly in Cornwall. A new version creeping in is Monkfish scampi, but I didn't enjoy that. Very chewy.

Chocolatelovinggran Fri 24-May-24 11:05:41

"Reconstituted " : never a word to inspire, is it?

M0nica Fri 24-May-24 11:26:57

The menu said 'Scampi and chips' - and that is what I expected - whole tail scampi.

I was completely unaware that anything other than whole tail scampi would be described as scampi or that these low-grade alternatives hiding under the name 'scampi' existed.

Mollygo Fri 24-May-24 11:32:17

henetha

I've got a pack of Scampi in the freezer so just went and read what it says. It states that it is whole langoustines tails, which I presume is good.
I've eaten some and it's very nice. No problems with the taste.
It's by a particular company, am I allowed to say which?

Please do Henetha, just to save me having to google it.

Spinnaker Fri 24-May-24 12:22:00

Young's Wholetail Scampi is very good - the Gastro range I think ?

M0nica Fri 24-May-24 18:10:21

Just looked on line. Lots of frozen whole tail scampi with none of them including the tail!, Just indertminant lumps of something breadcrumbed

henetha Fri 24-May-24 18:28:09

Ok Mollygo It's Whitby. 😀

NotSpaghetti Fri 24-May-24 18:29:20

Just found these M0nica
tomthefish.co.uk/products/whole-breaded-scampi-tails

notaclue252 Fri 24-May-24 18:48:29

Just looked at the tomthefish website. The price of 1.5kg of breaded scampi tails £59.95!!!!!

M0nica Fri 24-May-24 19:16:58

Here is a list of the ingredients in Youngs wholetail scampi
Scampi (41%) (Crustacean), Wheat Flour [Wheat Flour, Calcium Carbonate, Iron, Niacin (B3), Thiamin (B1)], Water, Rapeseed Oil, Rice Flour, Potato Starch, Wheat Starch, Wheat Gluten,

In fact more or less what I was served in the pub!.

I googled the contents of most of the brands of products describing themselves as 'wholetail scampi' and all of them were this mishmash of ingredients with scampi forming less than 50% of the whole

NotSpaghetti Sat 25-May-24 01:03:23

But if you sign up to emails notaclue you can get 10% off your first order!
grin
And it looks as though this is at least real.

Joseann Sat 25-May-24 06:23:31

Maybe it's a case of we get what we pay for, and British people in general aren't good at questioning the makeup and provenance of their food. It's only in good posh restaurants that we get a full description of the choices on the menu, although to be fair I have noticed more information recently about catch of the day on menu boards in coastal areas.
Has scampi just become another victim of cheap fast food for undiscerning diners?

NotSpaghetti Sat 25-May-24 06:51:50

Yes, I think so, Joseann.