Pan-seared prawns curled into a C shape, bright pink and opaque, shrimp cooking times
Cooking Guides

Shrimp Cooking Times

In Britain we call them prawns and in the US shrimp, but they are the same thing and cook in the same time, about 2 minutes a side. I take my timings straight from Gordon Ramsay’s own recipes, not guesswork.

In his Prawn Tostada in Ultimate Home Cooking he fries king prawns “for about 2 minutes on each side, until just cooked through.” His Spiced Prawns in Bread Street Kitchen get the same 2 minutes a side on the barbecue, so the number holds across his books.

They are done when bright pink, opaque and firm, which is his own wording. The shape backs it up: a just-cooked prawn curls into a loose C, while an overcooked one tightens into an O and goes rubbery. The real mistake is a cool, crowded pan, so get it hot and pat them dry first.

Pan-seared prawns curled into a C shape, bright pink and opaque, shrimp cooking times

The quick answer

Shrimp, or prawns, take about 2 minutes per side in a hot pan or on a griddle, 3 to 4 minutes total. They are done when bright pink, opaque and firm, curled into a loose C. Bigger prawns need a touch longer, and frozen ones want thawing first.

Shrimp cooking times by size

Gordon’s standard is 2 minutes a side for large or king prawns. Smaller cook faster, bigger need longer.

SizeTimeNote
Small / medium1-1½ min a sidethey cook fast, watch closely
Large2 min a sidehis standard, pan or griddle
King / jumbo2-3 min a sideshell-on holds the moisture
Tiger / colossal3 min a sidethickest, check the centre is opaque

Shrimp cooking times by method

MethodTimeHis recipe it comes from
Pan / sauté2 min each sidehis Prawn Tostada, Ultimate Home Cooking → prawn tostada
Griddle / BBQ2 min each sidehis Spiced Prawns, Bread Street Kitchen → grilled shrimp
Boil / poach2-3 min, gentlehis Prawn Cocktail, Great British Pub Food → prawn cocktail
Deep-fry1-2 min each sidehis Coconut Prawns
In a sauce or curry3-4 min until pinkhis prawn curries
Air fryer6-8 min at 200°C/400°Fmodern method, flagged
Oven, baked8-10 min at 200°C/400°Fmodern method, flagged

Where these times come from

I have not made these up. Gordon fries king prawns two minutes a side in his Prawn Tostada in Ultimate Home Cooking, gives his Spiced Prawns the same two minutes a side on the barbecue in Bread Street Kitchen, poaches them gently for 2 to 3 minutes for the Prawn Cocktail in Great British Pub Food, and deep-fries his Coconut Prawns for 1 to 2 minutes each side. Shrimp and prawns are the same animal, just the US and UK names, so the times are identical. Air fryer and oven are modern methods his books predate, so those are flagged as standard, not his.

FAQs

How long do you cook shrimp?

About 2 minutes per side in a hot pan or griddle, 3 to 4 minutes total, which is the timing Gordon uses for the king prawns in his Prawn Tostada. Small or medium cook in a minute to a minute and a half a side, while king and tiger prawns need closer to 3 minutes. Pull them the moment they turn pink and firm.

How do you know when shrimp is done?

They turn from grey and translucent to bright pink and opaque, and they firm up, which is the cue Gordon gives in his recipes. The shape is a useful backup: a perfectly cooked prawn curls into a loose C, and a tight curled O means it has gone too far. His garlic prawns work on the same tell, seared just until they turn.

How long do you boil shrimp?

Two to three minutes in gently simmering water, which is how Gordon poaches the prawns for his Prawn Cocktail in Great British Pub Food. Keep it a gentle simmer, not a rolling boil, or the outside toughens before the centre is done. They are ready as soon as they float and turn pink.

How long do you cook frozen shrimp?

Thaw them first if you can, in the fridge overnight or under cold running water for ten minutes, so they cook evenly. From frozen they release water and steam rather than sear, so they are better boiled or dropped into a sauce than pan-fried, where Gordon’s 2-minute sear depends on a dry prawn.

Can you eat shrimp that is already pink in the bag?

Pre-cooked shrimp is sold already pink, so it only needs warming through for about a minute, not cooking again. Raw shrimp is grey and translucent and needs the full 2 minutes a side, like the seared prawns in his shrimp scampi. Reheating pre-cooked shrimp too long is what makes it rubbery.

Sophie Lane

AboutSophie Lane

I’m Sophie, a British home cook and fan of Gordon Ramsay. I test his recipes in my kitchen and share simple, step-by-step versions anyone can make at home.