I can see that this won't make your mouth water, what with it being a bowl of hairy green pods, but it should. |
But you are here for a recipe, I know. And I have one.
Do you live nearby? If you do, and you haven’t been to The Quarters yet, you are missing out. It’s all retro pinball and arcade games
(everything 25-cents a pop), and then there’s great beer and excellent bar
food: deep-friend Brussels sprouts with spicy mayo, perfect sweet-potato fries,
mini hotdogs (veggie dogs, if you prefer) with toppings like kimchi and mac and
cheese.
I love it all, but the thing that surprised me the first time, because
there was so much deep-fried deliciousness that was inherently more exciting to
me, was the edamame. I could not stop eating it—even when there was a basket of
fries literally next to it on the table.
This is meant to be more inspiringly simple-looking than unappealingly ruined-seeming. |
Trader Joe's. |
I cannot enough recommend that you try this.
The edamame are
sensational, in the sense of crazy good and in the sense of there being a lot
of sensation: they’re too sour and too spicy in a way that everyone in my
family loves. You’ll have to see if you do too. Thank you for everything,
Quarters.
All gone. |
The Quarters’ Spicy-Sour
Edamame
For this recipe, you want the Invasion-of-the-Body-Snatchers
kind of edamame that’s still got the pods.
1 (1-pound) bag frozen edamame
1 tablespoon sriracha
Freshly squeezed juice of 1 lime
2 teaspoons kosher salt (or half as much table salt)
Lots of freshly ground black pepper
Steam the edamame until they are tender. I do this in one of
those UFO steamers, the kind that’s always weirdly missing one of its hinged
segments, over an inch of boiling water, for about 10 minutes, even though the
bag says “5.” (Then again, I don’t really like my pasta al dente either, so use
your judgment.)
Meanwhile, whisk together the remaining ingredients in a
large bowl. Add the hot edamame and toss well to coat. Eat.