Mushroom Risotto with Crispy Beef Strips
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Saturday night I was in the mood for some risotto. I haven’t made any risotto is a quite a while, and it is usually something I whip up fairly frequently. It’s a great dish to make because once you have the basic method down you have endless possibilities. Also for all you guys out there, this is a sure fire win on a date night. Nice bottle of wine, good risotto, candlelight dinner and that romantic comedy that just came out on DVD/Blueray that the wife/girlfriend/SO has been bugging you to watch. Who doesn’t like someone cooking them a fancy dinnner?
Ok so here is the basic risotto that I use:
1 cup of Arborio rice
3 cups of liquid, any combination of wine, water, stock
finely diced shallots or onion
1-3 flavouring agents such as mushrooms, sausage, bacon, peppers sweet or hot, seafood scallops shrimp etc, chicken, sun dried tomatoes, roasted red peppers, artichoke hearts.
freshly grated parmesean or grana padano cheese, please do not use the dried stuff that comes in the little plastic container.
a couple of tablespoons of butter and canola or olive oil.
Kosher salt and Fresh ground black pepper
Here is how it all comes together. Melt the butter with the oil of your choice in a large saute pan. Add the finely minced shallots and or onions. Time to start the seasoning as well, a pinch of Kosher salt and few grinds of pepper, I often will add some ground thyme though you can certainly use fresh here as well. Stir these around until the bits soften and start to turn translucent.
Next add your flavouring agents. If you are using something like sausage or bacon you will want to have the pieces be uniform size and fairly small, you want them cooked before moving on. if you are using scallops. shrimp or other delicate seafood you might consider cooking them till they are almost done and then removing from the pan until later in the risotto process. Keep layering in the seasoning as well, you should add another pinch of salt and pepper.
Once the flavours have all had a chance to meld together you add your rice. This step is instrumental in the risotto building procedure. You want to get all the rice grains coated in the flavours that are in your pan. You want to heat the rice and keep stirring until the edges of the grains actually start to turn translucent just like the onions before.
Now the liquid, I will add about half a cup or so of the wine I plan on serving with dinner. This is a Food and Wine pairing trick, it makes for an instant match when the wine you are drinking is in the food you are eating. Add the wine and stir around you are “deglazing” the pan and picking up all the stick on bits in the bottom of the pan.
Ok so here is the part that makes risotto the labour intensive scary dish. The liquid needs to be added in small doses over a 20-25 minute period. I use a ladle to add maybe 1/3 of a cup of stock or water at a time to the rice dish. As you add each addition of liquid you stir the rice and wait for the liquid to be almost totally absorbed by the rice, then you add some more and repeat the process.
Now depending on your rice, the humidity in your kitchen, the other ingredients you have added you may need more or less liquid than 3 cups. Once you are about 2 cups into this process try the risotto. See how it tastes, do you need to add any seasoning. The will most likely still be crunchy at this point but you want to gage it and see what it is like. The finished product should be creamy but the rice grains should still have some firmness to them, think el dente pasta.
Once you get to the point that the rice is done and the consistancy is thick and creamy you add the grated cheese. Add this to taste but remember the cheese will help to bind up the risotto and if you add too much you are going to get a stodgy mess. If you go a little over board on the cheese just add a little more stock and stir until the risotto thins back out a little bit. It shouldn’t hold it’s shape when you put it in a dish but you are not making soup either.
Ok so my Mushroom Risotto with Crispy Beef Strips:
2 cups of arborio rice (I was cooking for 5 adults)
6 cups of beef stock
2 cups of sliced cremini mushrooms
half of a med-large white onion finely chopped
1 cup of grated grana pandano
1 cup of red wine
Kosher Salt and black pepper
ground thyme
allspice
1.5 tablespoons of butter
1.5 tablespoons of canola oil
Fairly thinly sliced left over steak from the night before
I followed my method above for the rice. I pan fried the steak strips making them caramelized and crispy. When the rice was done I served it in a bowl with a few crispy steak strips on top. I served it all with a 2006 Cab Sauv, the same wine I added to the rice.
