Mushroom Risotto
Serves 4
Risotto and I have always had a love-hate relationship. I have struggled for years to get the balance right - too much wine, too strong a stock, too many ingredients, too much hope. The list goes on. So in the end I stopped trying. No more stirring continuously, no more adding more stock and no more believing that this time I've got it right. No. I decided that risotto and I weren't made for each other and I sent the Arborio rice to the back of the cupboard and decided the next time I was going to indulge in a stunning risotto was when I was at another's table enjoying someone else's risotto talent.
That moment arrived and I found myself at the home of a beautiful friend of mine who has just arrived in Australia from Italy with her husband. They came in search of an adventure and a life-changing experience. Interestingly enough, I got one instead.
Paola ushered me into her kitchen and there she gave me a master class in the art of cooking the lightest and creamiest mushroom risotto I've ever tasted. And you know what? It’s a lesson in simplicity…
INGREDIENTS
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1 knob butter
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2tbs olive oil
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1 clove garlic
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1 small handful dried porcini mushrooms
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200gm fresh mushrooms
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350gm Arborio rice
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2 glasses white wine - one for the recipe and one to drink while your stirring
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handful fresh grated parmesan cheese
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1.2lt hot chicken stock
METHOD
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Wipe the mushrooms and then thinly slice them. Finely chop the garlic.
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Place the stock at the back of the stove and on a high enough heat to keep hot but just under simmering
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Place porcini into a bowl and pour hot stock over to cover them and re-hydrate them. Fish them out and chop them roughly. Keep the liquid.
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Sauté the garlic in the olive oil and then add the mushrooms.
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Add the wine - only one glass - and pour yourself the other because you're about to start stirring.
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Allow the alcohol in the pan to evaporate and then add the rice and stir through.
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Add the porcini. Strain the porcini liquid add to the pot. Keep stirring.
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Now start adding the stock a ladle at a time and stir. You want to massage the starch out the rice so you need to keep it moving.
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Allow the stock to be absorbed before you add another ladle full. Keep doing this - it should take up to 30 minutes.
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The rice should be creamy and soft with a slight bite. It's important that the rice is soft,creamy and wet - you don't want it to be stodgy - so make sure you add enough stock to allow this to happen.
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Take the risotto off the heat, adjust the seasoning and add the knob of butter and parmesan. Stir through, put the lid on and then leave to rest for a few minutes.
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Serve up and delight in simplicity at its best.