Seafood Paella

Protein-Lovers' Paella: Seafood or Chicken, Still a Winner
Written by Marcus Smith
Holly Smith
Aug 2, 2023
Seafood Paella

The first time I ever went to Spain I was so excited to have authentic Paella. I hate to say it, but I was kind of disappointed. It seemed to me to be a big ol’ panful of rice with not a lot of much else. I needed a search party to help me find the seafood! This was my experience on several occasions, so upon my return home, I set to work to make up my own protein-lovers version of the dish. It became a favourite in our house for many years.

As my cooking and eating habits have progressed to a mainly Paleo regime, I have had to reinvent this dish once again to suit my taste buds, but I’m happy to report it’s still a winner!

Don’t eat seafood?? No problem. Change it to chicken. De Nada!!

  • 2 tablespoons coconut oil (for frying)
  • 16 medium prawns (peeled and cleaned)
  • 200 grams calamari
  • 500 grams mussels (cleaned)
  • 150 grams chorizo, sliced
  • 1 brown onion, diced
  • 1 whole cauliflower
  • 5 Roma tomatoes, deseeded and diced
  • 1 red capsicum, diced
  • 1 green capsicum, diced
  • Clove of garlic
  • 2 cups chicken stock
  • 1/2 cup white wine
  • 1 teaspoon chili powder
  • 1 teaspoon onion powder
  • 2 teaspoons smoked paprika
  • 1 teaspoon turmeric
  • 1 teaspoon sea salt
  • Handful of chopped parsley
  • Juice of half a lemon
  • Black pepper to taste

Cut your cauliflower into florets and whizz in your trusty food processor to break it down into rice-like pieces. This only takes a matter of seconds ( you may want to do it in a few batches so as not to overcrowd your processor bowl). Set aside.

Prepare your seafood and set aside.

Prepare all your vegetables and chorizo.

Heat a tablespoon of the oil in a large pan and fry off your chorizo slices. Remove with a slotted spoon and set aside.

Fry off the prawns and calamari in the lovely chorizo oil left in the pan until just cooked. Remove and set aside.

Add another table spoon of oil to the same pan, lower heat,  and add your onion and garlic, and cook, stirring until onion is soft.

Add the capsicum and tomatoes and cook for a few minutes until the tomato becomes “pulpy”.

Add all the spices and stir through.

Pour in the wine and stock and bring it to a simmer.

Add in your cauliflower “rice” and tomato paste, and simmer on low for about 15 minutes.

Throw in your mussels and cover, simmering for 5 minutes until they have opened and are cooked.

At this point, the liquid should have reduced quite a lot.

Throw your chorizo and the rest of the seafood back into the pot until everything is heated through.

Discard any unopened mussels.

Stir through the parsley and lemon juice and season with lots of freshly ground black pepper.

TIP: to save yourself a bit of time and perhaps money, there are some very good quality vacuum-packed, pre-cooked mussels on the market, available at your local supermarket. You will just have to rinse them off and pop them in the mixture along with the other seafood and heat them through. They usually come in a 1kg pack, so I usually remove most from the shells, mix them through the paella, leaving just several in their shell for presentation.

Introduction

Mi tincidunt elit, id quisque ligula ac diam, amet. Vel etiam suspendisse morbi eleifend faucibus eget vestibulum felis. Dictum quis montes, sit sit. Tellus aliquam enim urna, etiam. Mauris posuere vulputate arcu amet, vitae nisi, tellus tincidunt. At feugiat sapien varius id.

Eget quis mi enim, leo lacinia pharetra, semper. Eget in volutpat mollis at volutpat lectus velit, sed auctor. Porttitor fames arcu quis fusce augue enim. Quis at habitant diam at. Suscipit tristique risus, at donec. In turpis vel et quam imperdiet. Ipsum molestie aliquet sodales id est ac volutpat.

Image caption goes here

Dolor enim eu tortor urna sed duis nulla

Elit nisi in eleifend sed nisi. Pulvinar at orci, proin imperdiet commodo consectetur convallis risus. Sed condimentum enim dignissim adipiscing faucibus consequat, urna. Viverra purus et erat auctor aliquam. Risus, volutpat vulputate posuere purus sit congue convallis aliquet. Arcu id augue ut feugiat donec porttitor neque. Mauris, neque ultricies eu vestibulum, bibendum quam lorem id. Dolor lacus, eget nunc lectus in tellus, pharetra, porttitor.

If you want to swim faster on race day, it’s no secret you’ve got to swim fast in training.

Tristique odio senectus nam posuere ornare leo metus, ultricies. Blandit duis ultricies vulputate morbi feugiat cras placerat elit. Aliquam tellus lorem sed ac. Montes, sed mattis pellentesque suscipit accumsan. Cursus viverra aenean magna risus elementum faucibus molestie pellentesque. Arcu ultricies sed mauris vestibulum.

Conclusion

Morbi sed imperdiet in ipsum, adipiscing elit dui lectus. Tellus id scelerisque est ultricies ultricies. Duis est sit sed leo nisl, blandit elit sagittis. Quisque tristique consequat quam sed. Nisl at scelerisque amet nulla purus habitasse.

  • Test 1
  • Test 2
  • Test 3

  1. Hello
  2. Hello
  3. Hello

Nunc sed faucibus bibendum feugiat sed interdum. Ipsum egestas condimentum mi massa. In tincidunt pharetra consectetur sed duis facilisis metus. Etiam egestas in nec sed et. Quis lobortis at sit dictum eget nibh tortor commodo cursus.

Odio felis sagittis, morbi feugiat tortor vitae feugiat fusce aliquet. Nam elementum urna nisi aliquet erat dolor enim. Ornare id morbi eget ipsum. Aliquam senectus neque ut id eget consectetur dictum. Donec posuere pharetra odio consequat scelerisque et, nunc tortor.
Nulla adipiscing erat a erat. Condimentum lorem posuere gravida enim posuere cursus diam.

Triathlon
Swimming
Race Prep

Subscribe to new recipes

Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.