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The golden crust on a homemade focaccia gives way to a soft, pillowy interior that’s just waiting to soak up olive oil and sprinkle of sea salt. I always let my dough rise in a warm spot, like near the oven while it’s preheating, which helps it become wonderfully airy. The scent of freshly baked bread filling the kitchen is just the bonus I look forward to.

fried calamari
Ingredients
Method
- Pat dry the cleaned calamari well with paper towels. Any extra moisture will make the coating soggy and cause splattering.
- Season the calamari with sea salt, black pepper, and smoked paprika. Toss to coat all the pieces evenly.
- In a large bowl, whisk together flour, cornstarch, baking powder, and semolina. This is your dredging mixture.
- Drop a few calamari pieces at a time into the dry mix. Shake off any excess coating — I pick them up and tap them gently in my palm before frying.
- Heat the oil in a deep pan (I use a small saucepan so I don’t need much oil) to 180°C/350°F. I check by dropping a pinch of flour—if it sizzles right away, it’s ready.
- Fry the calamari in batches. Don’t crowd the pan. Fry for about 90 seconds or until just golden. If you go much longer, they get tough.
- Remove with a slotted spoon and drain on a paper-towel-lined plate. Squeeze a lemon wedge over right after frying to wake up the flavors.
- Serve immediately, while the crust stays crisp. If you need to hold them for a minute, do it in a warm oven with the door slightly open—don’t cover or they steam and lose crunch.
Notes
Technique tips that actually matter
Patting the calamari extra dry changes everything. If you skip this, the coating gets gummy and the oil pops everywhere. I usually go through more towels than seems reasonable, but it’s worth it. The semolina in the coating is my little upgrade. It gives the crust a sandier, crunchier bite. If you can’t find semolina, use extra flour—but it won’t be as crunchy. Don’t be tempted to swap in breadcrumbs; they burn before the calamari cooks. Fry in small batches. If you dump the whole lot in at once, the oil temperature drops fast and nothing crisps. I use a small saucepan and fry maybe a quarter of the squid at a time. It goes quickly. One last thing: as soon as the calamari come out of the oil, hit them with a squeeze of lemon. It brightens up the flavor and cuts the richness.Variations and swaps
I’ve swapped half the flour for rice flour before for a lighter crunch—it works great and keeps it gluten-free. You can also ditch the paprika for dried oregano or a pinch of cayenne if you want more heat. I don’t recommend using frozen pre-cut calamari rings: they usually end up rubbery and bland, even with the best batter.Storage and leftovers
If you somehow have leftovers, lay them out flat in a paper towel-lined container (not a bag—they’ll steam). Reheat in a hot oven for a few minutes, uncovered. They won’t be quite as crisp, but still satisfying.I make fried calamari when I want something fast that still feels like a treat. The short fry time keeps the squid tender—you can get these from fridge to golden-crisp in under half an hour.
Technique tips that actually matter
Patting the calamari extra dry changes everything. If you skip this, the coating gets gummy and the oil pops everywhere. I usually go through more towels than seems reasonable, but it’s worth it.
The semolina in the coating is my little upgrade. It gives the crust a sandier, crunchier bite. If you can’t find semolina, use extra flour—but it won’t be as crunchy. Don’t be tempted to swap in breadcrumbs; they burn before the calamari cooks.
Fry in small batches. If you dump the whole lot in at once, the oil temperature drops fast and nothing crisps. I use a small saucepan and fry maybe a quarter of the squid at a time. It goes quickly.
One last thing: as soon as the calamari come out of the oil, hit them with a squeeze of lemon. It brightens up the flavor and cuts the richness.
Variations and swaps
I’ve swapped half the flour for rice flour before for a lighter crunch—it works great and keeps it gluten-free. You can also ditch the paprika for dried oregano or a pinch of cayenne if you want more heat. I don’t recommend using frozen pre-cut calamari rings: they usually end up rubbery and bland, even with the best batter.
Storage and leftovers
If you somehow have leftovers, lay them out flat in a paper towel-lined container (not a bag—they’ll steam). Reheat in a hot oven for a few minutes, uncovered. They won’t be quite as crisp, but still satisfying.