Seafood dinners — the one-pot edition
Our complete collection of Seafood one-pot dinners. Whether you live in this category every Wednesday or you're stopping by for a single weeknight detour, these are the recipes that earn their place on a busy stove. Built around real seafood cooking, every dish is sized for a household, scaled to one pan, and timed for the night you actually have.
What Seafood cooking looks like in one pan
The Seafood half of the Spice & Simmer library runs to 70 one-pot dinners, with average total times around 46 minutes — the fastest landing in 32 minutes, the longest stretching to 83 when something braises. About 14 of them qualify as weeknight wins at thirty-five minutes or less, which is roughly the moment dinner needs to be on the table when bath time is at seven.
If you're staring at a fridge that says "seafood" and not much else, start with Gambas al ajillo, Garlicky prawns with sherry, Honey Teriyaki Salmon. They're the three quickest in this section and they cover the usual decision tree: a fast skillet, something braised, and a pan that mostly runs itself while you set the table.
Where Seafood dinners come from in this library
Across our Seafood collection, the cuisine that shows up most often is Spanish, which makes sense — most of the world's grandmothers solved the seafood problem decades ago, and most of those solutions involve a heavy pan and a slow start. The dominant cooking method here is the Soup Pot, with sheet-pan and Dutch-oven variations close behind. That mix means you can browse this category by gear: pull whatever pan is clean, then narrow from there.
A few we'd happily cook tonight
- Prawns with Romesco sauce — spanish-leaning, ready in 46 minutes, serves 6. Soup Pot, with 11 everyday ingredients.
- Spanish seafood rice — spanish-leaning, ready in 38 minutes, serves 6. Skillet, with 11 everyday ingredients.
- Thai fried rice with prawns & peas — thai-leaning, ready in 39 minutes, serves 6. Soup Pot, with 12 everyday ingredients.
How to cook from this category on a real Tuesday
The trick with seafood on a weeknight isn't speed for its own sake — it's making sure the cooking starts before you stop to think about it. Get the pan hot, get the aromatics in, then read the recipe properly while they soften. By the time you've worked out where the spices are, the base of the dish is already happening, and the rest is mostly stirring and waiting.
If you're feeding more than the recipe says, double the liquid and one starchy ingredient and the pan will stretch without going sideways. If you're cooking ahead, almost everything in the Seafood category reheats well the next day with a splash of water and gentle heat — the fond on the bottom of the pan does most of the heavy lifting overnight.