How long to brown rice before....
I have always found it takes patience to do a good risotto, as does a good polenta. The classic risotto rices are:
Arborio: large grains that are also long. Very good in risotto because the high content of starch is ideal for risotto;
Carnaroli: a cross between Vialone and Leoncino, large, uniform sized grains that absorb flavours easily and combine well with most ingredients. The most popular after Arborio in Italy.
Baldo: gourmet's rice, large, translucent grains, consistently reliable, high in starches, it absorbs extremely well and is the perfect risotto rice, and also rice dishes cooked in the oven.
Roma: Good all rounder, long grained and acclaimed for its versatility in cooking. Good not only for risotto, but also oven dishes, soups and as a binder in some recipes.
Vialone nano: medium sized grains, oval in shape, with characteristics similar to Carnaroli. Mostly used in North East Italy. Ready in about 13 minutes, and is also good for risotto.
Balilla: small roundish grains, good absorption and swells well in cooking. Usually used for soups, dessert dishes, rice moulds, and rice croquettes, such as supplì al telefono or Sicilian arancini.
To make a risotto, you need 200g risotto rice
100g dry white wine
Give or take a litre of stock
100g soffritto ( mix of equal quantities of carrot, onion and celery)
garlic if the recipe calls for it
olive oil or butter, depending what risotto you're making
Parmesan cheese. Quantities will vary according to the risotto you're making. You're looking for a loose, creamy finish to the dish.
Start by sweating the soffritto in the oil or butter.
Then add the rice. Watch it go translucent, and then only slightly golden, not browned. Now add the wine, evaporate off the alcohol, stir until the rice has absorbed the liquid. Now start adding the stock, in the same manner as you did the wine, and don't stop stirring. Have some extra stock on hand in case you need it at the end. Keep tasting the rice for doneness. It should be 'al dente' and there shouldn't be a hard core in the centre of the grain. The finished consistency of the risotto should be like a medium thick porridge.
If you're adding other ingredients, such as seafood, you need to start adding them along with the stock, to give the risotto flavour. For a vegetable risotto, you can add the vegetables after you've cooked the soffritto. If you're adding cheese, you add it last thing before serving.
Hope you don't mind me sending all this
di reston
enough is never as good as a feast Oscar Wilde