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Recently I had some shrimp scampi from a restaurant and the shrimp were unnaturally white, a very bright white, and the skin of the shrimp was a bright red, not the usual dull orange. The meat of the shrimp was quite tough, more like a lobster than a shrimp.

Is this some special species of shrimp, or was the shrimp treated by some chemical process to make it that way?

Drisheen Colcannon
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  • You say shrimp scampi, which country is this in? I take it this is breaded and deep fried, or is it the sauteed version? Did the menu say Scampi or Shrimp Scampi specifically? – GdD May 18 '18 at 08:09
  • @GdD The United States.The scampi was just linguini with shrimp on it and a butter sauce. The question is not about the dish, it is about shrimp. – Drisheen Colcannon May 18 '18 at 11:46
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    It's relevant @DrisheenColcannon, how it's prepared may change its appearance, where you are varies what kinds of seafood may be used. For instance in the UK scampi is langoustine, not shrimp. – GdD May 18 '18 at 11:52
  • Approximately how large were these shrimp? Is it possible they were actually rock shrimp? – Mike G May 18 '18 at 19:42
  • @MikeTheLiar They were the size of large normal shrimp, comparable to "jumbo". In general, shrimp of all species come in a lot of different sizes. – Drisheen Colcannon May 18 '18 at 20:32
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    @DrisheenColcannon the difference between shrimp and rock shrimp is notable. If you were getting 21-24 (aka "jumbo") rock shrimp _you would know_ – Mike G May 18 '18 at 20:53

1 Answers1

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Shrimp skin color depends on the presence of several pigments, the main ones are blue and pink carotenoids. That make shrimps to have a wide variety of shades depending on the subspecies, feeding, location, etc.

When cooked, blue carotenoids dissapear, leaving just the pink pigments wich transform to orange shades.

The final color of the cooked shrimps depend on the original pigments.

roetnig
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