PS: no need to add wine cork to water.
PPS: even if the octopus size is very large, the cooking time remains the same (forcefully bleed, check with a skewer). Most importantly, make sure the water level in your pressure cooker is below the acceptable level.
“This creature clung to you with many vile mouths: the hydra merges with the man, the man merges with the hydra. You are one with her, you are a prisoner of this embodied nightmare. A tiger can devour you, an octopus - it's scary to think! - sucks you out. He pulls you towards him, takes you in, and you, bound, glued together by this living slime, helpless, feel yourself slowly pouring into a terrible bag - into this monster. It is terrible to be eaten alive, but there is something even more indescribable - to be drunk alive. " This is how Victor Hugo imagined the danger to which a person captured by an octopus is exposed. Time and science have almost completely debunked these "sea monsters".
The Soviet biologist I. I. Akimushkin did a lot to shake the traditional point of view of octopuses as the most ferocious inhabitants of the deep sea. Glorious "frogmen" ("people-frogs", as the English called divers in fins) Cousteau and Dumas humorously ask: what exactly is his air hose catching - a giant octopus or a rotten board? "
And they add with a smile: “If none of them (“ sea monsters ”. Approx. G.K.) have still devoured us, then, obviously, only because they have never read the appropriate instructions, which abound in marine terminology ".
Thus, octopuses do not devour or "drink" people. However, you should not trust the octopus: when attacking, it does not bite, however, but it has a beak. He can prick them and release poisonous saliva, which is not so safe.
During the day, octopuses hide between stones, in pits, crevices, and at night they stay awake and hunt. Octopuses run pretty fast on the seabed. On the head of the octopus there are eight tentacles with suction cups in the form of a crown; in front, between the tentacles, there is a mouth opening with jaws and a sharp beak.
At the very head, the tentacles are interconnected by an elastic fleshy membrane. Between the body and the head from the ventral side, you can see a funnel and the edge of the mantle, in the lower part of which there is a fleshy septum.
Only one of the octopuses, the Argonaut, has a small shell. Over the centuries, he, like his brothers and sisters, the shell will completely disappear. A female Argonaut that secretes a shell uses it as a cradle for her eggs.
A live octopus has an inconspicuous color, which it changes depending on its condition. Aldridge writes: “Octopuses are surprisingly quick and harmoniously colored to match the color of their surroundings, and when you shoot one of them, kill or stun him, he will not immediately lose the ability to change color. I observed this myself, putting the captured octopus on a newspaper sheet for cutting.
The killed octopus instantly changed color, becoming striped, in white and black stripes. "
Several representatives of octopuses live in the Far Eastern waters. An ordinary representative of cephalopods, half a meter long, weighs about a kilogram, a meter-long one - five kilograms, one and a half meter - about nine, and a two-meter one weighs about eighteen kilograms. There are also those whose weight reaches thirty to forty kilograms.
In the Soviet Union, the octopus fishery is still poorly developed. They accidentally fall into nets, trawls and seines. They are obtained by divers who hunt for scallops and trepangs. But even the most approximate calculations say: there are so many octopuses that it makes sense to organize their fishery.
And in 1965, the collectives of the fish processing plants of the Soviet Primorye for the first time carried out industrial octopus fishing in the Sea of Japan. The fishing was carried out mainly by the fishing teams of the new management of the fishing industry of the Far East - "Dalmoreproduct".
What do they eat octopuses with? What side dish is good for octopus?
Don't be surprised by such questions. People from China, Korea, Japan and many other coastal countries can easily answer them.
Moreover, some of them believe that the sweetish meat of cephalopods does not even need seasoning.
Dried and pickled seafood is prepared from the tissues and limbs of these mollusks and the meat of large octopuses. Fresh octopus meat is used to prepare delicious dishes, for which its limbs are boiled in saline, cooled, skinned, and the resulting meat is fried or marinated. It takes about ten to fifteen days of sunny weather to prepare dried octopus products, and even a large octopus will be dried.
Pickled octopuses are highly prized in some countries of the East. After cutting, the octopuses are boiled in a saline solution and placed still warm in barrels, where an acetic-salt solution with spices and sugar is poured. In this case, small octopuses are laid entirely, and large ones are cut into pieces. After ripening and storage in a cool place, a product is obtained with a peculiar taste.
Octopus is rich in protein, it is a protein product; found in it and vitamins: thiamine, riboflavin and others, - as well as trace elements. The meat of large octopuses can contain, despite its "wateriness" (it has the appearance of an elastic jelly before cooking), up to nine to ten percent fat. There are many extractive substances in the muscles, which give a peculiar taste to the dish.
Dried octopus meat is a real protein concentrate. If fat, for example, in the meat of the extremities contains 2.4-3.6 percent, water 16.7-17.4, then protein 72-76.4 percent. This is what an octopus is - the former "storm of the seas" - one of the delicious dishes that decorates the dinner table.Jain and Barney Kryle - connoisseurs of seafood - say that, first of all, for the food to be tasty, you need to raise the killed octopus above your head and shake it, like Perseus, the head of Medusa, which instead of hair grew snakes, and then beat it on the floor like this, so that the tentacles flattened out and hit the stone floor with a juicy slap. Then the octopus must be thrown into boiling water. In an instant, its tentacles coiled. The octopus turns red like a crayfish and the water takes on an excellent mahogany color. After twenty minutes, the octopus is cleaned of soft skin and suction cups. After that, it is stewed in butter, squeezed into a hot lemon and finally poured with hot sauce. The octopus prepared in this way has a delicate lobster flavor and a soft scallop texture.
Charles Darwin, having tasted the octopus, found it very tasty, and the English traveler M. Morris believed that a well-cooked octopus was the best delicacy on the Japanese menu.
“When you taste the octopus cooked according to all the rules of the art of cooking, it will taste like lobster, and after that you will argue that many of the gourmet dishes in the best hotels, supposedly cooked from lobsters, are actually octopuses,” writes James Aldridge.
Taste sensations are, of course, different. For example, V.K.Arseniev, while traveling around the Far Eastern Territory, tried an octopus once cooked by the Chinese. He found that the octopus tasted like mushrooms.
“I don’t want to start a dispute here,” writes James Aldridge in his book about spearfishing, “... but I repeat only what any spearfisher will tell you: all the scary stories about octopuses being a danger to a swimmer and a diver, in many ways, highly exaggerated ...
Most of the octopuses that you will come across underwater (they can be up to five feet long, counting from one end of the tentacles to the other) are usually shy, obsequious creatures who are always ready to get out of your way, take refuge in any crevice to cling to the rock with such an air, as if by all their behavior they wish to convince you and themselves: “I am not here! I'm just not here! Don't pay any attention to me! "