Your email address is required to begin the subscription process. We will use it for customer service and other communications from Milk Street. You can unsubscribe from receiving our emails at any time.

Kuwaiti Spiced Shrimp and Basmati Rice
The Kuwaiti dish called murabyan is a shrimp and rice pilaf fragrant with spices, herbs and alliums. Our simplified version gets richness from a good measure of butter and a savory-sweet flavor foundation from onions that are sautéed until golden. To keep the shrimp plump and tender, we briefly sauté them, then set them aside until the rice is done. We then scatter the shrimp over the rice and allow them to gently finish cooking with the rice’s residual heat. Dried limes called loomi are used to impart a sour, concentrated citrusy flavor to murabyan, but since loomi are difficult to source in the U.S., we finish the dish with fresh lime juice and zest.
4-6
Servings
Don’t stir the rice with a spoon after removing the pot from the heat. The long, delicate grains of basmati break easily. Instead, lightly and gently fluff the rice with a fork before adding the shrimp.
1 hour 10 minutes
40 minutes active
Ingredients
-
1
teaspoon ground cumin
-
½
teaspoon ground ginger
Directions
-
01In a medium bowl, stir together the cumin, ginger, coriander, cardamom and ½ teaspoon each salt and pepper. Measure 1 tablespoon of the mixture into a small bowl; set aside. Add the shrimp to the remaining mixture in the medium bowl and toss to coat.
Pardon the interruption
You need to be a Milk Street Digital Member to see the full recipe
JOIN MILK STREET DIGITAL & PRINT
12 WEEKS FOR JUST $1
and get access to all of our recipes and articles online, as well as in print.
GET DIGITAL & PRINTExcellent! Definitely use larger shrimp and more of them. You can enrich the water by a sauté of the shrimp shells (even better if your shrimp still have beads on) then adding the water and after letting them sit in it for few minutes adding this shrimp water to the recipe minus the shrimp of course.
Definitely, this dish is a keeper.
Even with four T of butter, the dish is light and the shrimp flavor is not drowned out. I started with 1.3 lbs of shell-on shrimp, and by the time they were cleaned, the dish could have used more shrimp for four servings. Next time I’ll start with 2 lbs shell-on. I did make a stock with the shells to cook the rice, as suggested.
Thank you for your comment! Your comment is currently under moderation and will appear shortly.