Sizzling garlic prawns in lemon–garlic butter with crusty sourdough and a glass of white wine — a classic favourite in australian recipes.
There’s a special kind of hush that falls over the table when a hot pan of prawns hits the surface, still snapping and sighing in garlic butter. Someone leans in with a wedge of lemon. Someone else tears a piece of bread. And then the chatter starts again happy, bright, a little greedy. If you’re looking for a garlic prawns recipe that delivers that exact moment every time, you’ve found it.
This is my all-occasion, zero-stress way to cook juicy prawns that are sweet, bouncy and glossed in a proper garlic–lemon butter. It works on the stove, the barbecue or under the grill, and it scales from date night to backyard crowd with almost no extra effort. I’ll walk you through the small, specific steps that matter, how to pat prawns dry, why a pinch of bicarb can keep them snappy, what heat level caramelises without overcooking, and how to finish the pan sauce so it clings without splitting.
Whether you searched for Australian garlic prawns recipe, garlic prawns recipe easy, Easy australian recipe for garlic prawns, or simply need fresh australian dinner ideas tonight, this guide is for you.
Most importantly, this garlic prawns recipe is memorisable. Make it once with me and you’ll be able to make it by heart next time.
Use raw prawns fresh or thawed with shells removed and tails on or off to your preference. I love Australian tiger, king or banana prawns (size 16–20 per 500 g). Smaller school prawns cook faster and are great for appetisers. Avoid pre-cooked prawns for this recipe; they overcook easily.
Frozen prawns are brilliant if handled well. Thaw overnight in the fridge (best), or submerge sealed bags in cold water for 20–30 minutes. Drain thoroughly and pat very dry before cooking.
Run a small knife down the back to remove the vein. Rinse briefly, then dry—really dry—between paper towels. Surface moisture is the enemy of browning and the friend of rubbery texture.
For bouncy, juicy prawns, toss 1 kg peeled prawns with 1 teaspoon fine salt and ½ teaspoon bicarb (baking soda). Rest 15 minutes, then pat dry again. This seasons the prawns and helps them stay snappy. Don’t overdo the bicarb (more than ½ tsp can taste soapy).
This simple rhythm turns a good garlic prawns recipe into a great one, because it respects time and temperature.
When I was 22, I worked the pass in a tiny coastal café in New South Wales. Friday nights, the chef would push a pan of prawns into my hands and say, “Two minutes, Ella. Not a second more.” The first time I hesitated, they went from glistening to tough, and I learned a lesson you can only learn by wrecking a pan of expensive seafood: prawns need decisiveness. Hot pan, quick sear, out. These days I still hear his voice when I cook this garlic prawns recipe. It’s the same two minutes, the same citrus finish, only now I get to add the parsley with a flourish and walk the plate to my own table.
For australian dinner ideas that feel special but take minutes, this is always on my list.
4
servings15
minutes8
minutes420
kcal23
minutesA fast, fragrant garlic prawns recipe for bouncy, juicy prawns tossed in garlic–lemon butter with a hint of chilli. Cooked on the stove or barbecue in minutes, with a silky pan sauce made for bread, rice or pasta.
1 kg raw prawns, peeled and deveined (tails on or off)
1 tsp fine salt
½ tsp bicarb (baking soda) — optional for texture
2 tbsp olive oil
60 g unsalted butter, divided (20 g for searing, 40 g for sauce)
5–6 cloves garlic, finely chopped (about 2 tbsp)
½ tsp chilli flakes or 1 small red chilli, finely diced (optional)
80 ml dry white wine or seafood stock (⅓ cup)
Zest of 1 lemon + 2 tbsp lemon juice
2 tbsp chopped flat-leaf parsley (plus extra to serve)
Black pepper, to taste
To serve: lemon wedges, toasted sourdough or cooked rice
Together these turn a quick garlic prawns recipe into a complete Australian dinner idea without fuss.
Prawns leaked liquid and stewed.
Pan was too small or not hot enough, or prawns weren’t dry. Use a bigger pan, cook in batches and pat them dry thoroughly next time.
Garlic tasted bitter.
It browned too much. Lower the heat before adding garlic, stir constantly and add liquid as soon as it smells fragrant.
Sauce too thin or oily.
Reduce a little longer after deglazing, and whisk in a small knob of cold butter off the heat to emulsify.
Prawns tough.
They were overcooked. Pull them earlier; they continue cooking when returned to the sauce.
Too salty.
Skip added salt and use unsalted butter if your stock is salty. Balance with lemon juice.
Cook prawns to opaque and firm. Leftovers keep 1–2 days refrigerated in a shallow container. Reheat gently over low heat just until warmed through; high heat will toughen them. For packed lunches, I prefer to eat leftovers cold on salad with extra lemon.
Yes. Use seafood stock or even water. The prawns themselves enrich the sauce; finish with extra lemon for brightness.
A heavy skillet (cast iron or stainless) that holds high heat. Non-stick works but won’t brown as deeply.
Yes. Transfer to a warm dish, cover loosely with foil and keep in a low oven (80–90°C) for up to 15 minutes. Don’t hold longer or they’ll overcook.
Double the butter, deglaze as directed, add ½ cup pasta water and toss with 300 g cooked linguine. Add parsley, zest and extra lemon to finish.
Prawns are a lean protein with B-vitamins and minerals. The butter sauce is rich; balance your plate with greens and whole grains if you like.
The best seafood dinners feel a little bit fancy, a lot bit fast. With this garlic prawns recipe, you get both: bouncy, juicy prawns that taste of the sea, glossed in a lemon-garlic butter you’ll want to mop up with bread. It’s the kind of Australian garlic prawns recipe that turns a Tuesday into a celebration and a Saturday into something people remember. Keep prawns in the freezer, lemons in the bowl, and garlic on the bench—dinner is never more than minutes away.
Thanks for cooking with me. If you make it, tag me and tell me how you served yours—over pasta, with rice, or with a pile of toasted sourdough by the beach.
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