Risotto

Risotto is an Italian rice dish cooked with stock to a creamy consistency. The stock to use depends on the risotto you cook - it can be meat-, fish- or vegetable-based. In every risotto you will need butter, onions and wine. Then you add different ingredients. For a risotto al porcini, you add porcini mushrooms and for a risotto al tartuffo you add truffle (at the end). The classic risotto alla Milanese contains saffron.

A risotto in Italy is a primo piatto (first course) followed by a main course, therefor calculate just 70 - max. 90 gram rice per person if you plan to serve more food. Please note, that you will need to buy a special kind of risotto rice (like "Carnaroli").


photos via pinterest


risotto (ricetta di base)


Ingredients for 4 persons:

300 gr     rice (riso) Arborio, Carnaroli or Vialone Nano
1 l           vegetable stock (brodo)
200 ml    white wine (vino bianco secco)
50 gr       butter (burro)
1 small   onion (cipolla)
50 gr       Parmesan cheese, grated (parmigiano)
               salt (sale)
               olive oil (olio d'olivo extra vergine)

               optional:
               garlic, celery (aglio, sedano), and other ingredients for risotto varieties*



phase 1

Heat the stock until boiling.
In a separate pan, heat some olive oil and half of the butter at low temperature, add the onions, (garlic and celery), and glaze slowly for a couple of minutes without colouring. When onions have softened, add the rice (turn up the heat a little bit).

phase 2

The rice will now begin to lightly fry, so keep stirring - with a wooden spoon - for about one minute only, when the pan seems dry and the rice look slightly translucent, add the wine and keep stirring until the wine is absorbed. The alcohol evaporates and leaves the rice with a tasty essence.

phase 3

Add your first ladle of hot stock and a good pinch of salt.
Lower the heat to simmer, so the rice doesn't cook too quickly on the outside. Keep adding stock, stirring and almost massaging the creamy starch out of the rice, allowing each ladle of stock to be absorbed before adding the next. - (It is about here to add special ingredients e.g. porcini mushrooms for other varieties of risotto*!) - The whole cooking procedure will take around 15-18 minutes. Taste the rice - is it cooked? Carry on adding stock until the rice is soft but "al dente"with a slight bite. Don't forget to check the seasoning carefully. If you run out of stock before the rice is cooked, use boiling water.

phase 4

Remove from the heat and add the rest of the butter and Parmesan. Stir well.
Place a lid on the pan and allow to sit for 2 minutes. This is the most important part of making the perfect risotto, as this is when it becomes more creamy - just like it should be.

Eat it as soon as possible, while the risotto retains its beautiful texture. Offer at the table more grated Parmesan and black ground pepper.



Sounds easy?  More tips for you to make it a success :

Although risotto is categorised as "soup" in Italy, the consistency should be not too liquid, but creamy. If you shake the pot/pan or plate, the risotto should make a "onda", wave.

The "Arborio" rice is very commonly used, but be careful, it can overcook easily. The "Carnaroli" seems is more robust, and its price is a bit higher. In risotto that has only fine ingredents, like "alla Milanese" or in risotto typical from the Veneto the "Vialone Nano" rice is preferred.

For making risotto you need stock, not broth. See the difference here on Wikipedia.

Make sure the stock is salted enough to add taste to the risotto.

The stock you add should be boiling as otherwise it would stop the cooking process.

If you run out of stock before the rice is cooked, use boiling water.

Vegetable stock is great for all sorts of risotto. Instead of making your own stock, you can use an instant "dado", cube from the supermarket.

In general, dry white wine is used for risotto. Red wine is used in Piedmont or for risotto with radicchio di Treviso.

Add wine up to your taste. The alcohol evaporates anyway, so no problem for kids or water drinkers.

If you add a lot and/or heavy ingredients to the risotto, like prawns or peas, then a smaller quantity of rice per person might apply, especially when you serve it as a starter. Calculate roughly 70gr rice per person when risotto is a starter, and 100 gr per (hungry) person for a main course only.

In case you have some risotto left, there are more recipes, like frittate di riso, for the next day.

Only start cooking when all guest have arrived... if your risotto is pronto but the guest late, the rice will not be al dente or warm enough. Stopping the cooking process in between is also not ideal.



Approximate proportion of rice and liquid (depending on the rice quality) :

RICE           WINE                                         STOCK              PERSONS
100 gr           1/4 - 1/2 (50-100ml)                    300 ml                1 p. (hungry, main course)
180 gr           1/2 glass (100 ml)                        550 ml                2 p.   90 gr/pers
250 gr           1/2  glass                                      750 ml                3 p.   83 gr/pers
300 gr           1/2 - 1 glass (100-200ml)           900 ml /1.0 l       4 p.   75 gr/pers
350 gr           1/2 - 1 glass of wine                    1.0 liter               4 p.   88 gr/pers
400 gr           1 glass (200 ml)                           1.2 liter                5 p.   80 gr/pers
600 gr           1 1/2 - 2 (300-400 ml)                 2.0 liter                6 1/2 p. 90 gr (and next day)
                                                                                                    


* Varieties of Risotto:
Add mushrooms, dried or fresh (funghi, porcini), asparagus (asparagi), peas (piselli), broccoli, prawns (gamberi), saffron (zafferano, 30 gr for 300 gr rice), radicchio salad, or your own creation - but all after adding the wine (and having it evaporated) and about five minutes after adding stock - or even later, depending of the consistency of the ingredients. Truffle, Parmesan, parsley, for example, are added at the very end.


Vegetable Stock homemade :
  • heat olive oil, add veggies, cook for 5-10 minutes
  • add salt and water (a bit more than the quantity of stock you need), lower heat and simmer for 30 minutes
  • discard vegetables
  • veggies and herbs to use: onion, celery, carrots, potatoes, garlic, parsley, thyme, sage (salvia);

If you want to read more about risotto and Italian language is okay for you, then check out this website: www.risotto.it


    Buon Apetito !

    What Italians and Thai have in common - Food

    Do Italians and Thai have anything in common? Well, you will be surprised how much!

    When we first came to the land of smile in 1998, we realized, that Thai people love food as much as Italians do. And then, with time, we found more and more common ground.

    We always say, when Singapore is considered to be the Switzerland of Asia, then Thailand is the Italy of Asia.

    pad thai, spaghetti al pomodoro, kao soi soup


    Let's start with Food:

    Eating well, choosing good and healthy food, and having regular meals at a set time, is important to both, Italians and Thai. Both nations always have a variety of dishes to chose from for each meal.  Eating alone is not fun. Especially Thai would go in a group to enjoy together the pleasure of eating. Eating with friends, and with the whole family on weekends, is very common for both nations. Thai people eat even more than three times a day. Sometimes it seems they are always eating. But it is probably five times a day, and mainly small portions, which is very healthy. Also they tent to eat early, lunch around noon and dinner around 7pm.

    Talking about food at any time of the day, is what Italians do, and, well, Thai too. Asking what you ate (when not having eaten together) is a popular topic. Sometimes it is almost like a greeting: "Did you ate yet?". And "Buon Appetito" is what you might hear around lunch time in the streets of an Italian village. However, talking about recipes, knowing where to buy the best ingredients, is maybe slightly more Italian, since working middle class Thai often don't cook themselves. But every Thai is able to tell you where to find their best favorite dish.

    And what is on the menu? Loving all kind of noodle dishes, is typical Italian - and typical Thai. Thai have at least as many different types of noodles as Italians. Egg noodles, rice noodles, short, thin, wide versus spaghetti, linguine, penne, farfalle, orecchiette ... OK, Italians have more shapes. Although Thai love it more spicy than Italians, the most loved foreign food by Thai is the Italian cuisine! That is why Italian restaurants are very popular in the land of smile. And you will see many Italian chefs with a big smile on their face.

    But, when it comes to cooking, there is another slight difference. In Italy, la donno di casa cooks herself. In Thailand, you usually have domestic help and a Thai puying (wife) would have one or even two helpers to prepare a dinner for guests. In Thailand it is also popular to buy ready cooked food in the supermarkets, restaurants or even in street stalls, since it is so cheap - and always yummy. Young, working middle class people who often do not have domestic help would rather go to a restaurant or buy food to take home.

    When it comes to eating food with others, especially eating in restaurants, there is another small difference. Thai would put all the dishes in the middle of the table and everyone can try everything. Even a plate of pasta would be shared. While Italians would only share a mixed appetizer plate, and then everyone orders its own dish(es).

    If you think all Asians eat with chopsticks, you are wrong. Thai eat with spoon and fork. There is no knife. All veggies and meats are cut bite-size in the kitchen. With the fork you would shuffle the food onto the spoon and eat from the spoon. (Since many Chinese have immigrated into Thailand in the past, there are of course dishes and regions where chopsticks are used.)

    This reminds me of a funny observation I made at one of the finest Italian restaurants in Bangkok: There was this very elegant, elderly Thai lady, with a bulky hair style. She was sitting well-mannered and slowly eating a fish. She carefully shuffled with her fork the food onto the fish knife - which, well, had a bit of a spoon shape - and then ate from the fish knife!

    But what the Thai lady has in common with Italians is the love for good (Italian) food!


    +++ this post belongs to the new "Life in Asia" label where I will write about observations on life in Asia +++ we spend time in spring and summer in our house in Italy +++ the rest of the year we live in Thailand +++
     

    Sweet Memories of Summer




    
    pesce tabbachiere
    
    Summer is over. But we have sweet memories. Lots of friends came visiting us in Pizzo. Friends from Bangkok, Stuttgart and Munich. And we met old friends in Pizzo and made new friends.

    We ate great food, fresh fruits, lots of ice cream and went to the beach almost every day. Life in Pizzo is different from life in the big cities. One likes it - or not. I am glad, our visitors seem to have enjoyed the slow life in this little fisher village deep down in the very South of Italy. As I said before, here is not much to do - beside eating and going to the beach. Or eating and sunbathing on the balcony. Or eating and reading a book. Or eating and having a good afternoon sleep. Especially after some glasses of wine.

    During summer, streets are deserted in the afternoon. A few people are still at the beach, but most are resting at home. Only in the evenings, the piazza awakes to life. Tables of the bars and gelateries are getting most crowded around 11pm, when people finish dinner and come for tartuffo icecream. During summer holidays in August, various spectacles are organised for locals and tourists. After a long night, the next day, when the sun invites to the beach again, sunbathers arrive at the Marina around 10.30am or later. The locals all have their favorite spots, and meet up with friends to chat in the crystal clear water and get more suntan. Most Pizzitani would leave the beach between 12.30 and 1.30pm to eat lunch at home. Then rest. Around 7pm you can find kids coming out of the houses and playing in the piazza, maybe having a granita or gelato before dinner. Dinner usually is not before 9pm. Only tourists, not adapted to the rhythm of the South, would feed their kids before 8pm. But not many tourist find their ways to Pizzo. Which is not too bad after all. It keeps the village innocent and at its own pace.

    For us, summer passed smoothly, except for one or two incidents, and before I realized, it was already time to leave. I could have gone on and on with the slow peaceful rhythm of summer in Pizzo. And as there was not much to write about, I did not post anything. But I took a lot of pictures with my new 50mm lens. Since food was the major interest of the day, most close-up pictures are food pictures. I uploaded some today to our facebook page. If you want to stay connected with us via FB just "like" Palazzo Pizzo on FB. Not much posts their either, but I will upload sometimes for Sweet Memories of Summer.
    
    
    connect with Palazzo Pizzo on Facebook
     
    PS: we have a medium long "To Do" list for our guest residence. Although our guests had a good time living in the vaulted ceiling residence, we need to adjust some things before we rent out professionally.

    PPS: I love Calabria runs a photo competition on facebook, just a a few more days.

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    The First and the Last

    Although, the weather this April was not very gentle with us, we enjoyed the sweet, delicious and refreshing temptations of Italian gelatiere often enough.

    My first strawberry granita of the season:


    A granita is a semi frozen Italian dessert of sugar, water, and flavorings. My favorite flavours are forest berries and lemon flavour. During the almond harvest an almond granita is very nice too. Originally from Sicily, they are also very popular in Calabria. According to a legend, granita was accidentally invented by a sherbet seller who left her ingredients on ice too long.

    My last tartufo in April:


    It is said, that the famous tartufo di Pizzo was invented to honor the visit of Italian Prince Umberto I of Savoy in 1943. All gelaterias in Pizzo, there are at least 20 something, offer the famous tartuffo nero ice cream desert. It consists of half hazelnut and half chocolate ice cream with a heart of melted dark chocolate, covered with cacao powder. Every single tartufo is handmade. And very gelateria has its one recipe. So, if you ask a Pizzitani, who is making the best tartufo ice, you will hear lots of different opinions.

    Since Belvedere was closed on Tuesday, our last day, we went to Ercole. I must say, I like their tartuffo very much! There is a lot of yummy melted chocolate inside. I almost forgot to take a picture, that's why you only see the remaining half.


    Bye Bye Italia for now - we will be back soon!

    Summer wirth friends (part II)

    
    A house coming to life
    
    Our last summer, actually the first summer IN the house, was determined by two phases:

    First, we were still hectically arranging the house to move - ourselves - in, and prepare the basics for our first guests to come.

    Second, we were finally spending our first holidays together with friends and family in our new Italian home.


    Our dream came true:
    Having a holiday house by the sea
    to reunite with friends and family
    while living abroad


    In Summer with friends (part I), I described the arrival of our first guests - a dear German family with two kids from my hometown Stuttgart. Our time together was like a dream where girlfriends would chat and have drinks, the men would chat and cook, the kids would run around, eat and play - and from time to time - between meals and drinks - we would walk to the beaches to cool down in the crystal clear sea.

    But if you ever wondered, what happened in Summer with friends (part II), I have to admit, it just continued that easy going way:

    The morning, after my lovely German friends had left....

    guest departure accompanied by running JUVE fan
    ... we changed the bed linen, washed the sheets and hang them on the balcony were they dried in a moment since we had a nice breeze that day.

    Our helper Rosy did a great job, like always, mainly de-sanding the floors from sand that had fallen off sandy feet - and cleaning after Angelo, who was still working in our "guest residence" downstairs in the garden floor.

    I had sent our second visitors, an Italian family from the Veneto, the same picture as last time to indicate the left turn into the pizza.

    So, in the evening of their arrival, I was waiting there, at the entrance to the piazza and looking for their rented car to come in sight. It was then, when I suddenly thought I had run out of sparkling wine and went across the street to buy a bottle of prosecco for a welcome drink. Of course, when I was standing at the cashier waiting for the change, they had arrived. So we couldn't do it as last time (one of the visitors gets out of the car and walks with L to the house while I would sit in the car and give direction). But there was no need. The piazza was so crowded in the evening that the car could only drive at walking pace, and through the narrow alleys, you are even faster by walking.

    After dropping the luggage we went for a "pizza in piazza". And here we were sitting, a large Italian family: our new guests, the cousin of my mother-in-law, his teenage son, his wife, my friend, and the wife's brother - together with my small family, and the Italian parents-in-law.

    Meanwhile it was August. The piazza crowded with locals and tourists from other parts of Italy and Europe. We had to wait very long until our dinner finally was served.

    Same on the beaches, people everywhere. But my guests, coming to Calabria for summer holiday since many years, knew how to find the good spots:
    
    Torre at Briatico beach in August - not far from Pizzo by car
    
    When it was becoming too hot at the beach, we would drive home for lunch and an afternoon nap.
    
    Italian lunch time ...

    There was a slight difference, between the German and the Italian during preparing lunch:
    Italian men leave the kitchen territory preferably to the ladies! - The pic above shows them totally concentrating, almost meditating, over  their laptops, iPad and guitar. - And there were less aperitifs too... (probably its the Germans fulfilling the Italian cliche when in Italy).

    For the music, with a music addict teenager in the house, we would listen mainly to rock bands. Not only the new stuff, but also the good old Rolling Stones and Pink Floyd. Very educational for my little boy...

    local fruit for desert

    cipolla di Tropea, pomodori e chili di Calabria

    For cooking we used the fresh locally grown products, like sweet onions from Tropea (cipolla di Tropea), super tasty tomatoes and Calabrian chili - displayed in my new orange Murano glass bowl.

    For desert we would just serve fruits on a fruit plate and cut a melon.




    Italian light summer lunch with salad, bread, wine, and pasta

    Italians don't eat bread for breakfast (that much), but for lunch they need to have bread on the table (like the French). Here there was no time to unpack the bread for a more beautiful setting... so it's still in the brown paper bag on the table. - And if there is no fresh bread, a pack of kind of crackers will do too to accompany the pasta (and mozarella, and salad):
    
    pasta with tonno a la Fiore

    These pics (above and below) were taken by my friend - the wife of the cousin of my mother-in-law - and I hope, she does not mind I post them here on my blog. I like them! Grazie!

    2 1/2 Italians
     
    Ferragosto Rubbish
    I love to post beautiful pics for memory. But this one, sent in by my friend, needs to me mentioned too, yet "small":

    The garbage collectors in Pizzo usually come every day through our street. But for the long weekend of Ferragosto, everyone, included garbage collectors, are at the beach. So, for a couple of days, lots of garbage was piling up in front of our house... and I don't want to imagine the smell...


    But I cannot finalise a post with rubbish. - Therefore, I am posting another beautiful pic by my friends, who liked the view from our balcony, especially when small fisher boats pass by:

    blue view

    We needed to fly back to Bangkok before our guests left Pizzo for northern Italy, because son's international school starts in the middle of August. - I am sure, they enjoyed their last days of holidays, without us. Although the house is much more lively and fun with lots of friends!

    ----
    ("Summer with friends (part I)" was written in September 2011 and can be found here)