Seared Scallops With Jammy Cherry Tomatoes
Updated Feb. 6, 2024

- Total Time
- 25 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 3tablespoons unsalted butter
- ½cup thinly sliced shallots (about 2 shallots)
- 2garlic cloves, minced
- ¼cup dry white wine, such as muscadet or sauvignon blanc
- 1pound cherry tomatoes, cut in half through the stem (about 3 cups tomatoes)
- Kosher salt and black pepper
- 16large sea scallops (about 1 pound), tough muscle removed
- 2tablespoons grapeseed oil, plus more as needed
- 1lemon, halved
- Julienned fresh basil and mint, for serving
- Coarse sea salt, for serving
Preparation
- Step 1
Heat a large (12-inch) skillet over medium-low and add the butter to melt. Add the shallots and cook, stirring occasionally, for 3 to 5 minutes, until tender but not browned. Add the garlic and cook for 30 seconds to 1 minute, until fragrant.
- Step 2
Add the wine and cook until about half the liquid has evaporated.
- Step 3
Add the tomatoes, ½ teaspoon kosher salt and ¼ teaspoon pepper and cook over medium-heat, stirring occasionally, for 10 to 12 minutes, until the tomatoes have released their juices and almost completely collapsed. Transfer the tomato mixture to a small dish (use a rubber spatula to get every last bit of the sauce!), then carefully wipe out the pan with a damp paper towel.
- Step 4
Pat the scallops dry. Add the grapeseed oil to the skillet and turn the heat to medium-high. When the oil is very hot, add half the scallops, spacing them evenly in the pan, and season with kosher salt. Cook without moving for 2 to 3 minutes, until golden brown on the bottom. Flip and cook for 1 more minute. Don’t overcook! Transfer the scallops to a plate and repeat with the remaining scallops, adding more oil if necessary.
- Step 5
Drain any remaining oil and take the skillet off the heat. Return the tomatoes and their juices to the skillet and squeeze in 1 tablespoon lemon juice. Return the scallops to the skillet, nestling them into the tomatoes. Top with the zest of both lemon halves, julienned basil and mint, and a generous sprinkle of coarse sea salt, and serve immediately.
Private Notes
Comments
Why not do this in reverse order, searing the scallops first? That way, the cooking tomatoes can deglaze the pan and the scallops can be added last, all without draining or wiping the skillet.
This was so flavorful! One comment asked why not do the scallops first and then deglaze with the tomatoes; that sounded like a more logical approach, but I realized in doing so your scallops have to sit out and wait for the tomatoes to simmer... and there is no good way to reheat a scallop. So, I made it in the recipe’s original order of operations. I had a lot of the broth leftover, and thought it would taste great with steamed mussels and clams. So round 2 was equally awesome!
Used this as a base for pasta sauce. Diced & cooked scallops, reserved on the side covered with foil. Cooked mostly as directed with less butter, more garlic, added crushed red pepper. Added scallops back to the pan with squirt of fresh lemon juice & basil, bit of the pasta water. . Served over wheat, thin spaghetti. Deelish
Spectacular! Dinner party worthy. I roasted Juane Flame tomatoes, shallots, garlic, olive oil salt and pepper at 450 for 15 mins. Transferred to a pan it was very saucy. Added 1/4 cup white wine, more s and p. Cooked down. Had to put the tomatoes in a strainer to remove the skins. No big deal. Worth it! In separate pan with LOTS of butter I cooked the Maine scallops. Added to the tomatoes along with basil mint and juice from 1 lemon. Added zest. More pepper. Added some Blue Hill grown, steamed mussels that were left over. WOW! A winner.
Surprised at the rave reviews! Perhaps it's the variety of our cherry tomatoes, but my mixture was more watery than jammy. Slicing the tiny tomatoes was so tedious, I'm not sure I'll prepare this again. Still, it was flavorful and my husband loved this entree.
Would not give it more than three stars, and this generously. It takes at least twice as long as listed. Then the combination of tomatoes, white dry wine, lemon, and lemon zest made it taste quite sour despite me adding some sugar to it. Would not cook it again.