Fearless Risotto...a new alliance

                                                        Mushroom Risotto
Risotto.....it’s kind of like spiders (small ones) people seem to have an irrational fear of risotto….granted it needs some attention but no more than most culinary ventures….and the result is a warm bowl of comforting, moist, starchy goodness and when you’ve cooked it once and you’ve lost the fear…you can adapt the recipe, using almost anything that takes your fancy. In fact there is a running competition in my family to find the best, most unusual additions.
The first time I had risotto was with an Italian couple …adapting to what was on offer in Ireland, it was comprised of nettles, from Glendalough of all places…..some of you may shudder, but my lord it tasted like manna from heaven…..there are a few different types of risotto rice, but my reliable Italian sources have advised the use of Carnaroli...and well, they know best!! Tonight luckily for me my mum had a batch of fresh chicken stock and a packet of lovely wild mushrooms...which I left in large-ish chunks for a really meaty texture :-)

Allora…..let’s begin
  • finely chop a small onion and 2 cloves of garlic fry on a low heat in a good glug of olive oil and knob of butter for 3/4 mins
  • add 330g risotto rice  carnaroli or arborio (to serve 4) coat the rice in the oil and stir for 2/3 mins
  • in another pot on a low heat you should have your stock -veg or chicken around 1 litre
  • start adding a few ladle fulls of stock into the rice & stir, the rice will absorb the stock
  • add a glass of white wine
  • keep adding the stock as required, you shouldn't have to stir continuously just cover the rice each time you add it & give a good stir...keep an eye so that its doesn't dry out and stick
  • add chunkily chopped wild mushrooms- oyster, shitake...whatever you fancy & herbs fresh or dried thyme, rosemary...
  • the rice should be slightly al dente at the finish & have a porridge like consistency
  • grate a load of Parmesan cheese, adding most at the end and keeping some to garnish
  • take a half lemon squeeze into the risotto, season with salt & pepper  
  • garnish with toasted pine nuts & chopped parsley
Now pour yourself a nice glass of vino and I bet you'll be going back to the pot for seconds!

It doesn't photograph well...but don't judge a book by its cover!!!


Some other good combinations are:
  • pea, prawn & lemon
  • nettle & crispy pancetta
  • beetroot topped with grilled white fish
  • Gorgonzola, apple & walnut
......don't be afraid to try adding the things you most enjoy...buon appetito!

                                      FOR THE LOVE OF VALENTINES DAY....!!



For the day that was in it I decided upon a pink/red/rouge/rossa colour theme and so an obvious choice for the main course was a  beetroot risotto...a quick jaunt to my local Fruit & Veg shop and I was in posession of a lovely bunch of fresh beetroot. To cook, I simply chopped the leaves off the washed beetroots, being careful not to go too close to the beet and then placed them into a saucepan of boiling water...they simmered away merrily for about 30 mins. The main point to note when cooking fresh beetroots is not to pierce the skin...if you do most of the deep red/purple colour will escape! When they are cooked allow to cool and peel off the skin...use a knife and fork if you dont want pink fingers! I then made a risotto as above and used the beetroot water to which I'd added stock to cook the rice.....As we were drinking 'coghlinis' (a cocktail of presecco with raspberry coulis) I put a glass of presecco into the risotto...this is fine as prosecco is just wine with bubbles! I then chopped the beetroot up and added towards the end of the cooking process. As with most things cooked from fresh, the beetroot was far superior in flavour to pre-packed beets, but if you can't lay your hands on fresh you could I suppose use the pre-packed...BUT there is no way you could use the jar variety as they are pickled in vinegar.

It's raining coffee and cookies...

I love visiting my parents because the larder is stocked and the kitchen full of all the gadgets I desire but don't possess...plus my lovely family (of which none are food-fussy) are always willing to taste the results...JOY! Today the rain was pouring down and the misty grey clouds seemed to be stuck overhead ....I find the best emotional juxtaposition to that kind of weather is procured by baking! The oven warms the house and the smell of anything al forno never fails to put a smile on my face. For biscuits I usually turn to a recipe I adapted from Nigel Slater.... if you are without a food processor you can use icing sugar instead of granulated, as the creaming of butter & sugar by hand is something which probably only happens in labour camps....



  • Cream 170g butter w. 100g golden caster sugar/ icing sugar
  • Add 180g plain flour sieved & 60g ground almonds
That's the basic dough recipe, today mine were the first two options below, but you can add any of the following or whatever your imagination dreams up...In terms of quantities you can taste the dough as you add because there's no raw egg....

  • Dark chocolate chunks & orange zest
  • Dark chocolate chunks & ginger (crystallised & powdered)
  • Dark chocolate chunks & toasted hazelnuts
  • Dried lavender & orange zest
Brush with egg yolk & bake on greaseproof paper @160C/gas 3 for 20/25 mins ...enjoy warm or when cooled with fresh coffee or a nice cuppa builders tea, while watching the link below......!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C-PkQRh3QXA     THE LEGEND THAT IS THE COOKIE MONSTER.........in Cookie Monster auditions for Saturday Night Live

Close Your Eyes and Think of Summer Chicken

Tonight I'm eating a leftovers sambo.....roast chicken has to one of the best leftover sambo fillers especially when it was cooked Greek style...
Simples to do;
  • Put one chicken surrounded by root veg. of your choosing into the oven with and obscene amount of lemon juice and good quality olive oil
  • The key is to keep an eye on the bird and put some water into the roasting dish...never letting the dish dry out

The result is a delectable, moist birdy, with lip smackingly zingy lemonyness...yes, get your lips around that....It's a little bit of summer on a grey January day.....

I'd recommend the sambo to be on some ciabatta or olive oil sourdough for best effect or failing that a nice fresh slice pan with a good slathering of mayo and a sprinkle of green leaves.....napkins required!

Muchos gracias Sarah Y.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zw9gaaGm-M8&feature=related .....a little song by the late, great Ivor Cutler  'Bicarbonate of Chicken'