There's a very specific kind of summer survival mode I fall into every festival season. No proper kitchen, no fridge worth trusting — just a cooler bag and whatever can handle a few hours in the heat. Most years that means cold sandwiches from the nearest stand and a suspiciously pale tabbouleh made with cold water and canned vegetables, eaten out of a plastic cup while someone's guitar solo runs three minutes too long.
This year, in the middle of another heatwave, that memory came back to me — but I wanted better. No stove, no boiling water even, just the lazy soak-in-cold-water couscous trick I picked up from years of festival survival, upgraded with actual flavour. Curry, a chili-garlic-ginger paste, plenty of lemon, and proper shrimp instead of whatever was left in the tin. It's the no-cook classic, given some manners and a plane ticket east.
Couscous itself is one of North Africa's great culinary exports — tiny steamed semolina grains, rooted in Morocco, Algeria, and Tunisia, where it's traditionally simmered for hours over a rich broth. This version skips all that patience. It leans on the modern trick of simply rehydrating couscous in cold water, which works beautifully for a fine or medium grain and turns a normally slow, steamed dish into something you can put together in the time it takes to chop a tomato.
The seasoning wanders further east from there : curry powder and a chili-garlic-ginger paste (or harissa, if that's what's in your fridge) bring warmth and a little heat that plays beautifully off the sweet shrimp and bright lemon. It's not a traditional couscous by any stretch, but it borrows the format — grain, vegetables, protein, sauce — and dresses it up with flavours that felt right for a scorching day and an empty stove.
No stove, no stress — just a properly delicious bowl for the next heatwave. Enjoy !
A no-cook couscous salad with shrimp, tomatoes, and cucumber, dressed in a curry-harissa lemon vinaigrette and finished with feta. Ready in minutes, no stove required.
Rehydrate the couscous with the cold water. After a few minutes, fluff with a fork to separate the grains.
Whisk together the olive oil, lemon juice, salt, curry powder, and chili-garlic-ginger paste in a separate bowl.
Add the tomatoes, red onion, shrimp, and chives to the couscous, then pour the dressing over and toss well.
Mix well and let rest for at least 30 minutes at room temperature, or ideally 2 hours in the fridge, so the couscous can soak up the dressing.
To serve, scatter each plate with feta and finish with a drizzle of olive oil.
Thank you for trying out this recipe ! Do not hesitate to leave some feedback. I hope it brightened your day.