The terms "shrimp" and "prawns" can be confusing. Even scientists often
use these words inconsistently. Larger shrimp often come from freshwater, are referred
to as "prawns," while smaller shrimp often come from saltwater habitats, are
called "shrimp." The size, "large" typically means that you get
about 40 or less per cooked pound, in comparison to about 50 for
"medium" and 60 for "small". But from a science perspective, both
shrimp and prawns can come from saltwater or freshwater, and there is no
absolute standard for measuring small, medium, or large.
Often people are confuse about the way shrimp sizes,small, medium, large, jumbo
are determined. There is no method. Count per pound is the most common method used. Count
per pound refers to the number of shrimp that you get when you purchase
or consume one pound. Small cooked shrimp, that number is usually
around 60. With medium cooked shrimp, it falls to about 50. For large shrimp, the
count per pound is about 40. For jumbo shrimp the count per pound is
about 30.
Warm water shrimp come from tropical waters in southern parts of the world, cold water shrimp come from northern climates. Many warm water shrimp belong to one specific family called Penaeidae. Tiger prawns, tiger shrimp, and Indian prawns are members of this family. Many cold water shrimp belong to a second family called Pandalidae. Spot shrimp, striped shrimp, dock shrimp, humpback shrimp, Northern shrimp, and Northern prawns are members of this second family. You'll find white shrimp, pink shrimp, and brown shrimp that come from both water warm and cold water regions.
Warm water shrimp come from tropical waters in southern parts of the world, cold water shrimp come from northern climates. Many warm water shrimp belong to one specific family called Penaeidae. Tiger prawns, tiger shrimp, and Indian prawns are members of this family. Many cold water shrimp belong to a second family called Pandalidae. Spot shrimp, striped shrimp, dock shrimp, humpback shrimp, Northern shrimp, and Northern prawns are members of this second family. You'll find white shrimp, pink shrimp, and brown shrimp that come from both water warm and cold water regions.
Research Source: WH Foods
If you love to dip your shrimp in sauce, give this easy and tasty recipe a try.
Roasted Shrimp with Dipping Sauce
Recipe by Christine Lamb (Christine's Pantry), 2015
Ingredients:
For the Shrimp:
For the Sauce:
1/2 cup ketchup
Directions:
Preheat oven to 400 degrees.
Place
shrimp on sheet pan with olive oil, salt and pepper. Spread shrimp in a
even layer. Roast shrimp for 8 to 10 minutes, just until pink and firm
and cooked through.
For the sauce, combine all ingredients. Serve as a dip with shrimp. Enjoy!
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