Read The Amazing World of Rice Online
Authors: Marie Simmons
I moved to California from New York kicking and screaming, but I became a California convert on a sunny Saturday morning while standing before a pileâyes, a pileâof fresh figs. I picked one up and held it in my hand. It was warm and heavy. When I turned it over, there was a teardrop of sugary fig syrup dripping from its blossom end. I almost wept with joy. I had never seen so many figs in one place. People were filling bags and buying them by the pound. I had come a very long way indeed from New York City, where figs by the piece cost what I paid that morning for an entire pound. Talk about fig heaven. The practical cook in me quickly snapped out of my reverie as I began to plan my menu for the evening. This fig risotto was the result.
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Makes 4 one-cup servings
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½ cup walnut pieces (halves or quarters)
3 tablespoons unsalted butter
1 teaspoon chopped rosemary
6 to 8 cups reduced-sodium chicken broth (or half broth and half water)
¼ cup minced shallots
1½ cups Carnaroli, Vialone Nano, or Arborio rice
½ cup dry white wine
1 pound ripe green figs (Calimyrna, Kadota, or Adriatic) rinsed, stems trimmed, and cut into ½-inch cubes
½ cup coarsely slivered Parmigiano-Reggiano
Kosher salt
Almost any winter squash can be used in this risotto, but for a rich flavor I prefer the round Japanese squash called Kabocha.
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Makes 4 one-cup servings
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One 1½-pound Kabocha or other winter squash, peeled and cut into ¼-inch dice (about 2 cups)
6 to 8 cups reduced-sodium chicken broth (or half broth and half water)
3 tablespoons unsalted butter
½ cup finely chopped onion
½ cup dry white wine
1½ cups Carnaroli, Vialone Nano, or Arborio rice
¼ cup freshly grated Parmigiano-Reggiano, plus more for serving
Freshly grated nutmeg
Kosher salt
1 tablespoon torn sage leaves
It wasn't until I was an adult that I discovered the sweet mellow taste of cooked fennel. As a child growing up in an Italian family, the only fennel I knew (and adored) was raw. With its distinctive licorice taste, we were a family divided into fennel lovers and fennel haters. Today slowly cooked fennel is one of my favorite vegetables. Here it is paired with leeks in a delicate creamy risotto.
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Makes 4 one-cup servings
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1 fennel bulb (about 12 ounces), stalks trimmed and feathery tops reserved, bulb trimmed, any blemishes removed, and cut into quarters
6 to 8 cups reduced-sodium chicken broth (or half broth and half water)
3 tablespoons unsalted butter
1 medium leek, trimmed, washed, and finely chopped (about 1 cup)
1½ cups Carnaroli, Vialone Nano, or Arborio rice
½ cup dry white wine
1 teaspoon grated orange zest, plus three strips 2 à ½-inch orange zest, cut into thin lengthwise slivers
¼ cup freshly grated Parmigiano-Reggiano, plus additional for serving
Kosher salt
1 tablespoon extra virgin olive oil
Leftover Risotto
Risotto Pancakes
Use leftover risotto to make little pancakes. Combine cold risotto with a little beaten egg, shape it into small pancakes, and brown in melted butter or hot olive oil in a skillet over medium heat. See the recipe for Risotto al Salto.
Risotto Baked in Roasted Portobello Mushrooms
Use leftover Basic Risotto or Green Risotto with Dried Tomatoes and Pecorino Romano or prepare risotto to use as the filling if there are no leftovers. This makes an excellent first course or side dish with beef or chicken.
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Makes 2 or 4 servings
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2 or 4 medium (about 4 inches in diameter) portobello mushrooms, stems removed
4 teaspoons extra virgin olive oil
Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper
1 to 2 cups leftover cooked risotto
Freshly grated Parmigiano-Reggiano
Risotto Baked in Roasted Acorn Squash Halves
Use leftover Winter Squash Risotto or Basic Risotto. Serve as a first course or as a side dish with pork, lamb, or chicken.
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Makes 2 to 4 servings
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1 or 2 small acorn squash (about 1 pound each)
Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper
1 to 2 cups leftover cooked risotto
Freshly grated Parmigiano-Reggiano or Gruyère
P
ilaf, risotto, and paella
are similar yet a world apart. Each uses a different rice and a different technique, and each is native to a specific geographic area. Of the three dishes, pilaf is, indisputably, the simplest and most easily adaptable.
Pilaf is made with long-grain rice that cooks into dry, separate grains. Traditionally, the rice is rinsed and soaked, then it is sautéed in butter or oil. Sometimes onions, garlic, and other vegetables, or bits of meat, are added. Then the entire mixture is cooked in simmering broth.
Each time I uncover a pot of cooked pilaf, I am thrilled at the sight. The rice has exploded into hundreds of long, long grains, and although they have obviously cooked side by side, they appear not to be touching, as if they are suspended by invisible threads. How can this be?
Basmati rice is traditionally used to make pilaf, since it contains more amylose (the drier starch) than amylopectin (the stickier starch). As the grains cook, they expand in length rather than girth. The result is cooked grains of rice that are tender yet dry, separate, and fluffy.
To make things interesting, there are always exceptions. On a trip to Istanbul, I was introduced to a pilaf made with shorter, plumper grains of rice similar to Arborio. This type of rice, higher in amylopectin, results in a creamy pilaf, with a consistency similar to risotto.
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Pilaf
Preferred rice for a dry pilaf
Preferred rice for a moist pilaf
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For a perfect pilaf, use a pan with a concave lid that will not collect condensation. When the pilaf is done, there will be tiny indentations on the surface of the rice, indicating that all the liquid has been absorbed. Traditionally pilaf is cooked with a dry cloth placed between the lid and the pot to collect the condensation from the lid and prevent it from dripping into the pilaf. If not using a cloth, quickly invert the lid when you remove it to catch the condensation.
The recipes in this chapter begin with the most basic pilaf, perfect as a side dish to any weeknight meal, and move all the way up to very elaborate pilafs appropriate for grander occasions. Like so many other classic rice dishes, pilaf needs only the whim of the cook, or the necessity of what is at hand, to become a totally new dish.
To substitute brown rice for white rice in any of the following recipes, increase the liquid by ¾ cup and the cooking time to about 45 minutes.
Pilaf Techniques
In India and throughout the Middle East, the rice for pilaf is always rinsed and soaked. Rinsing cleans it of debris and soaking removes excess starch. The technique is to rinse the rice in two or three changes of cold water; soak it in clean water for 30 minutes or longer; and drain well. American grown basmati-type rice is very clean and does not need to be rinsed. But it also doesn't elongate quite as much as imported basmati rice when it is cooked.
As an experiment I cooked two pilafs side by side. For both pilafs I used imported basmati rice. For one pilaf I rinsed and soaked the rice in the traditional way and in the other I didn't rinse or soak it. In both pilafs the cooked rice was beautifully elongated, each grain dry and separate. But the rinsed and soaked rice had a lighter, less starchy texture and taste than the rice that had not been soaked.