| | | | | | | | | |

Ecuadorian shrimp ceviche {Ceviche de camarón}

Ecuadorian shrimp ceviche

Shrimp ceviche or ceviche de camaron is one of the most popular Ecuadorian ceviches. Ceviches, also known as cebiches (both spellings are acceptable), are very popular all around Ecuador, but especially at the beach. One of the great things about this type of Ecuadorian ceviche is that the shrimp are already cooked.

En Español

Traditional Ecuadorian shrimp ceviche made with poached shrimp, tomatoes, onions, lime juice, and cilantro in a white bowl

So if you have any health concerns or aren’t comfortable with the idea of trying to make homemade fish ceviche – which is typically raw fish “cooked” by the acidity of lime juice – then this one is perfect for you, especially if you want to try it for the first time. Of course making fish ceviche with fresh high quality sushi grade fish and keeping it refrigerated makes it safer to prepare and eat at home. Once you are comfortable with the shrimp variation I recommend that you try the fish one.

Ecuadorian shrimp ceviche made with shrimp, tomatoes, onions, lime juice and cilantro

This recipe for my classic Ecuadorian shrimp ceviche is one of the easiest and quickest ways to prepare this mouthwatering Latin dish. It is also very popular and one of the most requested dishes by my friends, in fact I make this ceviche for almost every party I host. There are other spins on this ceviche dish, some are slightly more complicated but amazingly good. I will post these other variations of shrimp ceviche later.

Ecuadorian shrimp ceviche

Ceviche is usually served with garnishes such as thick green plantain chips called patacones or tostones. Chifles or thin green plantain chips are another popular garnish for ceviche. My favorite garnish is tostado de maiz, a crunchy corn nut type snack that goes great with this dish. In some places, especially Quito, they also love to serve ceviche with a side of popcorn. Enjoy!

Ecuadorian ceviche de camaron



Traditional Ecuadorian shrimp ceviche made with poached shrimp, tomatoes, onions, lime juice, and cilantro in a white bowl

Ecuadorian shrimp ceviche {Ceviche de camarón}

Traditional Ecuadorian shrimp ceviche recipe made with poached shrimp marinated in lime and orange juice with red onions, tomato and cilantro
4.86 from 1218 votes
Print Pin Your Questions and Comments
Course: Appetizer, Brunch, Main Course
Cuisine: Ecuadorian, Latin, South American
Keyword: Cebiche, Ceviche, Ceviche de camarones, Ecuadorian ceviche, Ecuadorian shrimp ceviche, Shrimp ceviche
Prep Time: 30 minutes
Resting time: 1 hour
Total Time: 1 hour 30 minutes
Servings: 8 people, as an appetizer
Author: Layla Pujol

Ingredients

  • 2 pounds of cooked shrimp (if you buy raw shrimp, I suggest you poach them in beer or coconut milk for amazing flavor) – 2 lbs = 1 kg
  • 2 red onions sliced very thinly
  • 4 tomatoes sliced very thinly or diced
  • 1 bell pepper, red or green, finely diced – optional
  • 10-15 limes freshly squeezed
  • The juice of 1 orange
  • ½ cup of freshly blended or grated tomato for a fresher style ceviche* (or 2-3 tbs of ketchup) ½ cup = 120 ml
  • 1 bunch of cilantro chopped very finely 1 bunch = ~50 grams
  • Salt adjust to taste
  • Oil (sunflower, avocado, or light olive oil) to drizzle on top

Instructions

  • Soak the onion slices in salt water for about 10 minutes, rinse well and drain. This will help remove the bitterness from the onions.
  • Mix all the ingredients together in large bowl and let it marinate in the fridge for 1 to 2 hours.
  • When ready to serve, give it another mix and taste. Add additional salt, lime juice, orange juice or other ingredients to your taste.
  • Serve with your choice of garnishes: patacones (tostones) or chifles (thin platain chips), tostado corn nuts (or popcorn), aji hot sauce, avocado slices, etc.

Notes

*You can add some of the broth from cooking the shrimp to the ceviche marinade for extra shrimp flavor. You can also blend the shrimp peels/heads with a fresh tomato and some broth – strain it and use this mix instead of the ketchup.
Shrimp ceviche

Step by step preparation photos for Ecuadorian shrimp ceviche:

How to make Ecuadorian shrimp ceviche
Ecuadorian shrimp ceviche

Other ceviches recipes to try:

Ecuadorian fish ceviche {Ceviche de pescado ecuatoriano}
Recipe for Ecuadorian fish ceviche {ceviche de pescado ecuatoriano} made by marinating or cooking raw fish in lime juice and mixing it with onions, tomatoes, peppers, and cilantro.
Check out this recipe
How to make Ecuadorian fish ceviche - easy recipe
Peruvian fish cebiche or ceviche
Peruvian fish cebiche recipe prepared with fresh fish, limes, onions, spicy peppers, and cilantro. Served with boiled corn, sweet potato, plantain chips, and/or cancha or Andean corn nuts
Check out this recipe
Peruvian fish cebiche or ceviche
Oyster ceviche
Mouthwatering oyster ceviche recipe made with fresh oysters, lime juice, onions, tomato, bell pepper, cilantro and oil.
Check out this recipe
How to make raw oyster ceviche
Shrimp and mango ceviche with avocado
Easy recipe for mouthwatering shrimp and mango ceviche with avocado. This seafood ceviche is made with shrimp, mango, avocado, red onions, lime juice, orange juice, hot peppers, cilantro and salt.
Check out this recipe
Shrimp and mango ceviche recipe
Octopus ceviche {Ceviche de pulpo}
Recipe for octopus ceviche made with cooked octopus, onions, hot peppers, lime juice, and cilantro.
Check out this recipe
Ceviche de pulpo recipe
Ramon’s fish ceviche {Ceviche de pescado}
My brother Ramon’s fish ceviche recipe (ceviche de pescado), made with fish “cooked” in lime juice with hot peppers and garlic, and then mixed with red onions (or shallots), tomatoes, bell peppers, and cilantro.
Check out this recipe
Ecuadorian fish ceviche
Langostino ceviche
Easy recipe for langostino ceviche made with langostinos or shrimp, lime juice, red onions, cilantro, hot peppers, garlic, and olive oil.
Check out this recipe
Lobster or langostino ceviche recipe
Salmon and tuna poke inspired ceviche
Recipe for salmon and tuna poke inspired ceviche marinated with soy sauce, ginger, chili pepper, avocado oil, sesame oil, and chives. Drizzled with lime juice, pickled onions, cilantro, and served on green plantain chips.
Check out this recipe
Salmon and tuna poke inspired ceviche
Vegetarian ceviche de chochos
Ceviche de chochos is a vegetarian ceviche made with chocho beans (lupini beans), onions, tomatoes, cilantro, limes, oranges and tomato sauce. It is served with maiz tostado, chifles or plantain chips, avocados and hot sauce.
Check out this recipe
Vegetarian ceviche recipe
Mango ceviche
Mango ceviche recipe prepared with fresh mango, onions, lime juice, orange juice, habanero and/or fresno red chili peppers, cilantro, salt.
Check out this recipe
Vegetarian mango ceviche recipe
Hearts of palm ceviche {Ceviche de palmito}
Recipe for ceviche de palmito or hearts of palm ceviche. This refreshing vegan ceviche is made with hearts of palm, red onions, tomato, lime juice, orange juice, cilantro and salt. You can also add avocado and spicy peppers.
Check out this recipe
Palmito and avocado ceviche recipe
Tuna fish ceviche {Ceviche volquetero}
Recipe for tuna fish ceviche, also known as ceviche volquetero, an Ecuadorian ceviche made with canned tuna fish, onions, tomato, lime juice, cilantro, and served on a platter with chifles or green plantain chips, chochos (lupini beans), toasted corn nuts, and hot sauce.
Check out this recipe
Tuna fish ceviche
Bloody Maria or Bloody Mary Shrimp Ceviche
Bloody Mary shrimp ceviche recipe made with fresh tomato juice, orange juice, lime juice, Tabasco hot sauce, shrimp, red onions, tomatoes, cilantro, and vodka to taste. Use tequila for a Bloody Maria, or leave out the alcohol for a refreshing savory cocktail with ceviche flavor.
Check out this recipe
Latin style Bloody Mary ceviche
How to prepare shrimp ceviche
Ecuadorian shrimp ceviche
Easy shrimp ceviche recipe
Shrimp cebiche with tostado corn
Shrimp ceviche or ceviche de camaron
Shrimp ceviche
Shrimp ceviche
Ecuadorian shrimp ceviche

Similar Posts

54 Comments

  1. How much salt & oil should I put

    About 3-4 tbs oil, and salt just based on your preference, add some and taste until it is salty enough for you.

  2. Hi Laylita,
    I think you forgot to mention a secret part of the recipe. In the coast of Ecuador where cebiche originates, we marinate the onion before adding to the cebiche. The way you marinate the onion is as follows: cut the onion in thin slices, let marinate in plenty amount of salt for no less than 1/2 hour or until tender, in this way the bitterness of the onion is released, wash the salted onion thoroughly and discard the water, add lime juice (about 1 small lime/onion). Let marinate in lime juice for about 15 min. Then taste it. It should be slightly salty and sour. Now you can mix the onion(without the lime juices) with the tomato and the cilantro. Doing this in this order will enhance the flavors. Once you add the marinated onion, tomato and cilantro and the other ingredients to the cebiche, the saltiness and sourness will be diluted so do not add salt to the cebiche. Let marinate the cebiche at least a couple of hours in the fridge and then adjust for salt if needed.
    You can use this “salsa” made of marinated onion, tomato and cilantro to accompany the so called “mexican tostadas” and shrimp tacos as well.
    Also, in Ecuador we call the lime “limon” which is different than the lemon in US. Our limon is small and brigh green. In US most limes are big. It is important not to add lemon instead of lime because lemon is slighly sweet and alter the final flavor of the cebiche.
    Saludos,

    Rafaela

  3. I love your recipes Laylita!!!! everything is so delicious i just had one question for you, you mention adding half beer and half water to the shrimp so it can cook. How would it work if I was to use coconut milk? Do I use half water half coconut milk also??? what do I do with the liquid when the shrimp is done cooking??? Thank you so much again i love this website!!!

    Hi Douglas – You can also use half water / half coconut milk, you can save the broth and use it for a soup, or someone also mentioned that they mix some of the broth with the ketchup and add it to the ceviche – personally I haven’t tried this yet so I don’t know how it will turn out but it sounded interesting.

  4. Don’t know why my last comment didn’t show up but I made this last night for Christmas eve dinner and it was delicious! I made it with beer. Thank you for a lovely recipe! I am going to make your mote recipe today.

  5. Hi Sara, any beer that isn’t too dark (avoid Guiness) or too light should be fine, I particularly like to use either a Pilsner type beer or a white beer. I also mix it with water, about half water/half beer. I lived in Guayaquil for about a year, I had some amazing ceviches there!

  6. Hi Layla,

    You mention the shrimp can be cooked in beer. Is there a particular beer you recommend we use? Also, is the shrimp cooked only in beer or do we add water as well. (Hopefully this isn’t a dumb question…I’m not much of a cook!)

    Thanks for the help!
    Sara

    Ps. My dad is from Guayaquil. I lived there for about three years and parents are still there.

  7. HI, THANK FOR THE RECIPE. I’M IN BUENO AIRES AND I WANT TO TRY TO MAKE MY FIRST CEVICHE DE CAMARON. THE BAD THING IS THAT MY SHIRIMP IS PRE COOK THE NEX TIME I’M GOING TO TRY COOK IT IN BEER

  8. Thanks for the recipe. I use a similar recipe, but I didn’t know about cooking shrimp in beer or coconut milk. I’ll have to give it a try. In Ecuador I have in some locations been served corn-nuts with the ceviche. They go pretty well together, but patacones are still better.

  9. Thank you so much for posting all of these delicious recipes! I love all the pictures too! They make my tummy hungry! My husband is from Guyaquil, and he has introduced me into Ecuadorian food and I not only love to eat it, but I also like to try to make new things for both of us. Finding this website has been a huge thing for me, and I’m so excited because my husband has been craving ceviche de camaron. I would be very interested in your more complicated but amazingly good recipe for ceviche. Thank you so much again. I love your recipes and wish I could come and eat your cooking.

Leave a Reply