23 Comments

  1. Regarding the above recipe, I’d like to get it straight:
    –Sear and cook a batch of scallops then set aside that batch on a plate.
    –Next step is preparing the wine/butter sauce that is put into a container.
    –Cook the rest of the scallops.
    –Finally, combine all batches of the prepared scallops and drizzle with the sauce.

    Just wondering why all scallops aren’t cooked at once.
    Thanks so much.

    1. That would be fine, too, but you need to wipe out the pan between batches, otherwise you’ll get burnt scallop dregs.

    2. You can cook them all at once ..depends on the size of your pan…you don’t want to crowed them otherwise your like steaming them.

  2. Too high of a heat! Whenever you see blue smoke the butter/oil is over heated and bitterness occurs. Oh god you never make a sauce with liquid in a steel or cast iron pan…bad flavors of steel will be in the sauce. Too many food channel bad methods are learned by cooks these days!

  3. There is a mistake in either the article or the ingredients list for the “Pan Seared Scallops” . The article says “olive or canola oil will begin to break down at those temperatures.” But then the ingredients list says “2 Tbsp clarified butter, canola oil, rice bran oil, or other high smoke point oil”

    So one says don’t use canola oil, the other says use it. I don’t which is correct.

  4. Recipe omits number of servings. I went back to SimplyRecipes.com and the recipe there states “3-4 servings”. Useful information to have.

  5. Thoughts or alterations to this recipe using Frozen Scallops when no fresh are available?

    Thank you, very informative!

    1. Dwayne,
      I actually used frozen scallops! Thaw them gently under cold running water in a sealed bag so that they don’t absorb extra liquid. They’ll work great!

    1. Angela,

      A black-steel pan. You can find them at many quality cooking stores. They are made of carbon steel and are excellent heatsinks. Treat them like cast iron when it comes to cleaning and storage.

      1. Great technical points for perfect scallops. I’ve always wondered about pan temperature and scallop internal temps. Luckily I just got the IR GUN to go with my Pen. I am surprised that you “dared” to deglaze your carbon steel with wine. Mine are likely not seasoned enough for that yet.






        1. I know deglazing in the black-steel pan is controversial, but that’s where the flavor is! I don’t mind re-seasoning. It’s a tool, not a venerated object, so it better pull its (considerable) weight! Thanks for reading, I hope your scallops turn out great!

  6. There used to be a theory that wet scallops were difficult if not impossible to brown (mallards reaction) without assistance such as Wonder flour. Is that still a prevailing thought?

  7. Thank you for the excellent article.
    Would avocado oil be a good alternative oil to use as it has a higher smoke point?
    My own personal comment is to never use Canola oil for anything!! Canola oil is the most processed oil available; it was originally made for use on machinery. There are an increasing number of individuals who have a sensitivity/intolerance/allergy to Canola oil. I suspect these people are the “canaries” who sending out the alarm about this food product. There are so many better and healthier oils to use and they are worth the bit more expense.
    Again, I learned a lot from this article and thank the author.






    1. Thank you for the compliment, and yes, avocado oil should work fine. We often reach for grape seed oil here, but that’s just a personal preference.

    1. If it’s an induction cooktop, you can even put a silicone trivet under the pan and still cook! For a glass top electric coil stove, you can do it without scratching if you are careful, just like with any pot.

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