Mom's Best Recipes
Recipe

Fresh Fried Shrimp

Crisp, golden shrimp with a lightly sweet, salty crunch and a quick honey lemon dip. Fast enough for a weeknight, good enough to make you hover by the stove.

Author By Matt Campbell
4.8

Fried shrimp is one of those foods that makes people wander into the kitchen like, what smells so good? This version keeps things fresh and uncomplicated: juicy shrimp, a crisp coating that actually sticks, and a sweet and simple dip that hits that honey, lemon, and salty-sweet spot.

Here’s the vibe. We are not building a deep fryer situation. We are doing a shallow fry in a skillet, which means less oil, less drama, and the kind of crunchy edges that make you snag “just one more” straight from the rack. If you can peel shrimp and heat a pan, you’ve got this.

Why It Works

  • Crisp coating that stays put: A quick flour and cornstarch dredge plus an egg dip helps the crust cling and fry up light, not heavy.
  • Sweet and simple flavor: A tiny bit of sugar in the breading and a quick honey lemon dip gives you that restaurant-style “why is this so addictive” balance.
  • Fast cook time: Shrimp cooks in minutes. You get crunch and juiciness before the coating can get oily.
  • Works with fresh or thawed frozen shrimp: As long as you dry them well, you’re in business.

Pairs Well With

  • Classic Creamy Coleslaw

  • Oven Sweet Potato Fries

  • Simple Scallion Rice

  • Buttery Grilled Corn

Storage Tips

Fried shrimp is at its absolute best right after cooking, but leftovers can still be worth it if you store them like you mean it.

Fridge

  • Cool completely, then store in an airtight container lined with a paper towel.
  • Refrigerate up to 2 days.

Reheat for crunch

  • Oven: 400°F for 6 to 10 minutes on a wire rack set over a sheet pan, until hot. For extra certainty, heat until the thickest shrimp hits 165°F.
  • Air fryer: 375°F for 4 to 6 minutes, shaking halfway, until hot. Again, you can check for 165°F if you like numbers.
  • Avoid the microwave if you want crisp edges. It will soften the coating fast.

Can I freeze it?

You can, but the coating loses some of that just-fried magic. If you do freeze, cool completely, freeze in a single layer, then transfer to a freezer bag for up to 1 month. Reheat from frozen on a rack in a 400°F oven until hot and crisp, usually about 10 to 14 minutes depending on shrimp size, and ideally until 165°F.

Oil disposal and reuse

  • Let oil cool completely.
  • Strain through a fine mesh sieve (or coffee filter) and store in a jar if you want to reuse it once for more frying.
  • Do not pour oil down the drain. If you are tossing it, pour cooled oil into a sealed container and discard.

Quick fry safety

  • Keep the oil level well below the top of the pan (no more than halfway).
  • Add shrimp gently and step back from splatters.
  • Keep kids and pets out of the splash zone.

Common Questions

Can I use frozen shrimp?

Yes. Thaw completely, then pat very dry. Moisture is the number one enemy of crispy frying and the number one cause of coating that slides off.

What size shrimp works best?

I like 16/20 or 21/25 (that is shrimp per pound). Big enough to stay juicy, small enough to cook fast.

How do I know when the oil is ready?

If you have a thermometer, aim for 350°F.

No thermometer? Try one of these: drop in a panko crumb and it should sizzle immediately, or dip the end of a wooden chopstick or spoon handle into the oil. You want steady bubbles around the wood right away. If it barely bubbles, it is not ready. If it is aggressively smoking, it is too hot.

Why did my breading fall off?

Usually one of these: shrimp was wet, oil was not hot enough, or the shrimp sat too long after breading. Dry the shrimp well, heat the oil properly, and fry within 5 to 10 minutes of breading. Also, keep breaded shrimp in a single layer so the coating does not get damp.

Can I make it gluten-free?

Yes, with a couple notes. Swap the all-purpose flour for a 1:1 gluten-free flour blend (results vary by brand, so choose one with a binder like xanthan gum), or use a simple mix of rice flour plus cornstarch. Use gluten-free panko or crushed rice cereal. Keep the cornstarch.

Is this spicy?

Not as written. Add cayenne or hot sauce to the dip if you want a little kick with your sweet.

Can I use cooked shrimp?

I would not. This recipe is meant for raw shrimp. Cooked shrimp will overcook fast and turn chewy by the time the coating browns.

The first time I tried to “just fry some shrimp,” I treated it like a casual task. No drying, no rack, oil kind of warm-ish. You can guess how that went. The coating went rogue, the shrimp steamed instead of crisped, and I ate it anyway because I am not above a messy lesson.

Now I do it the simple, slightly more intentional way. Dry the shrimp. Hot oil. Wire rack. And a dip that makes the whole thing taste like you planned it. It’s the kind of dinner that feels like a win even if your kitchen looks like a flour dusting happened.