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Mushroom Risotto

6 Apr

As promised, Mushroom Risotto! I don’t use a recipe for risotto… well, not really. For every risotto I make there are five central ingredients: arborio rice, white wine, chicken stock, good quality parmesan, and butter. The rest depends on what’s good. Asparagus in season is great, so are chopped ham and fresh garden peas. But today, a tray of mixed mushrooms are getting the risotto treatment.

First of all, there’s half a rib of celery and a quarter of an onion all chopped up. I’ve really been getting into celery as a base flavour lately – I use it anywhere I use onion, which is basically in everything. I even like it braised in stock as a side dish, though I realise that might be a little extreme for some people. Still, even if you think you don’t like celery, give it a try in your bolognese, casseroles, and what have you. It adds a really nice flavour. Just make sure to chop it up fine.

Right. Celery and onion are chopped. Let’s get ‘em in the pan. See those other pans on the stove? The smaller one (please forgive its appearance, it’s old but functional!) is some chicken stock on the simmer – I made it a few days ago from the bones of a roast chicken. I just throw ‘em in the slow cooker with half an onion and a rib of my friend celery, plus some garlic and peppercorns. I leave it for the day on medium, and I’m all set. I have a big slow cooker, so it makes a ton. I used less than half for this risotto and froze the rest. The bigger pan is waiting for the rest of the mushrooms. A few of the less-exotic mushrooms are going to go straight in the pan with the celery and onions here in a second, but the rest will just be sauteed over really high heat with butter and a little salt – this way the distinct flavour and texture of each mushroom can really shine.

Aren’t they pretty? I like the curly edges on the criminis.

So let’s get on with this risotto business. The onions and celery are soft and transparent, the chopped criminis are soft and buttery. Time for the main ingredient! In goes the rice, along with a finely chopped clove of garlic. Stir it all around just until the rice barely starts to go a little brown and toasty. It looks thirsty doesn’t it? Let’s give it a glass of wine.

This is where the fun starts. Keep the heat pretty low, and stir the rice until it drinks up almost all the wine. Add a ladle of the simmering chicken stock. Stir until THAT’S almost gone – and repeat, repeat, repeat with the stock. If you start with a cup of rice, you’ll end up using about 4 cups of stock – but the exact amount depends on how fresh the rice is, how fast or how slow you cook it, the weather, the NASDAQ, etc. You’ll need to taste it to know when it’s done – the rice will be creamy, without any trace of hardness in the middle. Now you can turn the heat off for a minute while you cook up the rest of your mushrooms in plenty of butter over high heat – you want them nice and brown, even a little bit crispy on the edges. Make sure you stir them and toss them around while they cook so they don’t burn.

Now that you’ve got mushrooms nice and toasty, it’s time to finish the risotto. Put it back on the heat and add one final ladle of stock so it’s creamy and oozy. Risotto should spread out on the plate, not stand up in a stiff mound. That’s why you need to have a sense of urgency here at the end- you need to serve it hot hot hot on hot plates, or it will stiffen up. The last step is to stir in a little more butter – half a tablespoon-ish – and a handful of grated parmesan. Give it a good stir, ladle it onto the plate, and throw the sauteed mushrooms on top. I recommend serving it with a piece of toasty crusty bread, rubbed with a clove of garlic. Like so.

The Sunday Farmer’s Market at Kirkgate Market, Leeds

4 Apr


My fella and I got up and out of the house unusually early for a Sunday and made a trip to the Leeds Farmer’s Market. There was a serious shortage of stalls, probably because lots of the stallholders were celebrating Easter with their families (those farmer’s market types are so wholesome!), but we still managed to come away with a bit of this and a bit of that.

Fresh eggs from Church View Farm are, indeed, lovely and fresh – I could tell because most of the white sort of holds itself together in a mound beneath the yolk instead of spreading all over the dish, as you can see in the photo. I used  the lovely fresh egg to bind breadcrumbs to some well-trimmed free-range chicken breast fillets from Stanacre Poultry for Chicken Parmesan, a recipe from Cook’s Illustrated by way of Serious Eats. I really like the simplicity of the sauce in this recipe – it’s just garlic, canned tomatoes, and oregano with a touch of sugar. I almost never make a tomato sauce without adding every vegetable in the refrigerator so this is a nice change. The recipe calls for dried basil, but that’s the most useless herb since dried coriander leaves and I would never let it in my house. Dried oregano can be nice, though, especially the Mexican kind, which is less flowery and more savoury (the chicken, by the way, was great – it didn’t rip apart when it was pounded out thin, as badly-trimmed or not-perfectly-fresh chicken tends to do, and as thin as it was it stayed tender and juicy when fried).

Anyway, I digress. We got a few other things at the market but I was silly and didn’t make a note of the stallholders’ names. We bought a tasty coconut cake with coconut buttercream and a layer of jam in the middle. We were able to buy just half, which is a nice touch for singles and couples who might not make it through a whole cake before it goes stale. I also picked up a massive round loaf of sourdough bread with a big, airy crumb,  tons of little swiss cheese holes and just the right level of chewiness.  You can see a corner of the loaf next to the egg in the photo above.  Finally, I bought a tray of mixed mushrooms – oysters, wood ear ( I think) and a few others, which will be going into a mushroom risotto later which will warrant a post of its own.

We did manage to come across a loser – stuffed Italian focaccia breads (mine with pineapple and ham, Matt’s with peppers and mozarella) were edible but bland. We have a couple of pepperoni calzones from the same stall in the fridge to heat up tomorrow, but if they aren’t a major improvement on the focaccia, their fate might be one bite followed by the bin (edit – they were pretty good. A little too bready, and could have used more sauce and less cheese, but we ate ‘em up all the same). I didn’t get the name of this stall either… seriously, I really need to work on my review skills.

The Farmer’s Market in Leeds is on the first and third Sunday each month, but word on the street is that the first Sunday is where the real action is – the market is much smaller on the second Sunday.

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