Showing posts with label arborio rice. Show all posts
Showing posts with label arborio rice. Show all posts

Sunday, May 16, 2010

Risotto with Pancetta and Peas

Last night I had such a craving for a nice risotto, but I wanted something different from my two standbys, Wild Mushroom Risotto with Pancetta and Thyme and Spinach Risotto with Toasted Pine Nuts. Now, while perusing the Chow discussion boards, I came across what I call the Holy Grail of risottos, a Toasted Pistachio Gorgonzola Dolce risotto so rich and sumptuous that I can only imagine allowing myself to make it as a very special occasion. Of course it might well be the case that the special occasion is making that risotto.

Nevertheless, in order to do justice to the exacting recipe (I still have not found a truly excellent olive oil), I decided to wait. Setting that decadent recipe aside *deep sigh of longing* I continued to search out something new. I found a Sweet Carrot Risotto which looks absolutely divine. The only problem was that I had only one measly carrot in my vegetable drawer. I didn't feel like going out to the store for 2 bags of organic carrots, so I kept looking.

I stumbled across a delicious-looking Pumpkin Risotto at La Cucina Italiana. Perfect, I thought. I have several packages of pumpkin puree in the freezer from last fall. I could thaw one out and be all set with a creamy, luscious dish of savory pumpkin goodness. The recipe as it stood was not exactly what I craved, but I thought I could experiment a bit and tweak it. The problem? Once I had the pumpkin half-thawed in the microwave, it had a funky smell to it. Argh. So aggravating!

By that time I already had the pancetta diced and the shallots minced. What to do? I took another foray into my freezer and spied a bag of frozen peas. Ok. Pancetta and Pea Risotto. Simple, but still sublime.



Risotto with Pancetta and Peas




Ingredients:
  • 1/8 oz. pancetta
  • olive oil
  • butter
  • shallots, finely minced
  • garlic, minced
  • 1/2 cup Arborio rice
  • 1/4 cup white wine
  • chicken broth, heated
  • 1/2 cup peas
  • 1/2 cup grated pecorino romano

Directions:
  1. Heat the chicken broth in a saucepan.

  2. In a wide skillet, saute the diced pancetta in a bit of olive oil over medium high heat until browned. remove the pancetta and set aside.

  3. To the mixture of hot oil and rendered fat, add a tablespoon of unsalted butter and let melt and foam. Add the shallots and saute for one minute, then add the garlic. Stir well for another minute and do not let burn.

  4. Add the rice and stir until well coated.

  5. Add the white wine and stir until all the liquid is absorbed.

  6. Add the hot stock one ladleful at a time, until it is all absorbed into the rice. Stir very well.

  7. After about 15 minutes after you added the first ladle of stock, the liquid should start to look creamy from the starch released by the rice. Taste the rice for doneness. It should be firm, but not chalky in the center.

  8. Add one more ladle of stock and stir in the cheese. Fold in the peas and the pancetta and stir until heated through. You may add a bit more butter if you like.

  9. Plate in a shallow bowl and garnish with more grated pecorino. Serve immediately.


Notes:
  1. For some reason, every single time I cook with pancetta, I smoke up the entire house. I never have this problem with regular old bacon or smoked sausages, but the pancetta sends smoke up billowing. I have to run the downstairs ceiling fans, open all the windows and the front door to clear the place out.

    I have tried frying it in a dry pan, in an oiled pan, in a buttered pan, but the result is always the same. Next time I may try a lower flame and see if that makes a difference.

  2. For some reason, when I make risotto, I prefer pecorino romano to parmigianno reggiano.

  3. For this recipe, I found that extra salt and pepper are unnecessary. The pancetta is plenty peppery on its own, and cooking the rice in the rendered fat infuses the risotto with all that flavor. The chicken broth adds the necessary salt.

Thursday, November 5, 2009

Spinach Risotto

A carb-addict, I tend to go for the starchy foods. In my pantry - which, in my galley kitchen really just amounts to my cabinets and countertops - I have a variety of different rices:
  • Regular old long-grain white rice which I buy in 10-lb bags and use in mixed-grain pilafs;
  • Long-grain brown rice;
  • White basmati rice, when I want Indian food;
  • Organic brown basmati rice, when I want to be virtuously healthy about craving Indian food;
  • Jasmine rice, its delicate fragrance essential for when I crave Thai food or want to make my butternut squash soup with chouriço and corn;
  • Sticky rice, or Glutinous rice from my local Korean grocer, which I use only when I make kimchi-fried rice. You may wonder, how often can a person actually make and eat kimchi-fried rice? Well, you'd be surprised. Living in Korea for a year has left me with a permanent craving for Korean foods which will strike at odd times.
  • Wild rice, not a real rice, but a reedy grass, native to North America. Still, when mixed with an assortment of mushrooms, it makes a wonderful stuffing for a leg of lamb.

  • and finally:

  • Arborio rice, for my rice porridge and risotto fixes.

I had my first bite of risotto at a friend's house. Until then, I'd had no idea what I was missing. I was fortunate in that I was present when she was making this, so I have since done my best to deconstruct the recipe and have made it many times, with great success.

In fact, this is the only way I have gotten my kids to eat cooked spinach when it's all out there in the open as a major ingredient; all the other times I've had to skulk around the kitchen furtively and hide the spinach in lasagna, stuffed shells or that one time when I made homemade ravioli.

Poor spinach! Such a maligned food, yet so good for us! This filling and warming recipe is a good bet to get some of your pickier eaters gobbling down the green stuff.




Spinach Risotto with Toasted Pine Nuts

Ingredients:
  • 6 cups broth (chicken, vegetable), heated
  • 2 T olive oil
  • 2 T butter
  • 2 shallots, finely minced
  • 1 medium onion, chopped
  • ½ cup dry white wine
  • 2 cloves garlic, minced
  • 1 10-pkg frozen, chopped spinach, thawed
  • 2 cups Arborio rice
  • ½ cup freshly grated parmesan cheese
  • ¼ cup pine nuts, toasted*


Directions:
  1. Bring the broth to a boil and the reduce heat to low.

  2. In a deep saucepan, melt the butter and olive oil over med-high heat. Saute the shallots, onion and garlic until soft and translucent, not browned.

  3. Add the rice and stir, coating all the grains.

  4. Add the spinach and stir well, breaking up any clumps. Let any excess liquid from the spinach absorb fully.

  5. Reduce heat to medium, stir in the wine; once it is absorbed, add the hot broth, one ladleful at a time, waiting until the liquid is absorbed before adding more.

  6. After 15 minutes, taste some of the rice. It should be firm, not mushy, but it should not be bright white in the center and chalky. You will probably have some broth left over.

  7. Take off the heat and stir in the parmesan and top with toasted pine nuts.

  8. Serve, garnished with additional grated cheese if you like.



* To toast the pine nuts, I like to do it in an un-greased skillet over high heat, stirring constantly, because once they start to burn, they go really fast! At the first sight of light browning, take them off the heat and put them into a bowl.

You can also toast them in the oven on an un-greased cookie sheet at a low setting, but you'll have to check them frequently.
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