Greg
Greg's risotto alla milanese
Greg's home page
Cooking main page
Recipe index
Cooking times
Noodle cooking times
Weights and measures
Food suppliers
Greg's diary
Copyright info
Google

This is a traditional accompaniment to ossobuco. It's surprisingly filling; the quantities below should be sufficient for 4 people.

Ingredients

quantity       ingredient       step
100 g       onion       1
20 g       butter       1
15 g       veal marrow       1
200 g       short-grained rice (Arborio)       2
800 ml       beef broth       2
0.4 g       saffron       3
6 g       salt       3
40 g       Parmesan cheese       4
20 g       butter       4

Preparation

  1. Finely chop the onion and fry with the marrow in 15 g of butter until it becomes transparent.
  2. Add the rice and mix well. Add broth bit by bit, letting it be absorbed before adding more.
  3. Meanwhile soak the saffron in a few tablespoons of hot broth. When about half the broth has been added, add the saffron and continue to add the broth a little at a time. Also add the salt at this point.
  4. When all the broth has been absorbed, remove from the heat and add the remaining butter and the Parmesan cheese. Cover and let settle for a few minutes before serving.

Discussion

This dish takes an amazing amount of broth. Normally, for long grain rice, I reckon about 1.5 times as much water as rice, but here 4 times really seems to be correct.

Older versions

This is a version that I made (for 3 people) probably in July 2014, but I have no record of it. It omits the marrow.

Ingredients

quantity       ingredient       step
80 g       onion       1
40 g       butter       1
600 ml       stock, beef or chicken       2
0.25 g       saffron       2
150 g       short grain rice       3
4 g       salt       3
30 g       parmesan cheese       4

Preparation

  1. Finely chop the onion and sauté in butter until translucent. Do not brown.

  2. Meanwhile, bring the broth to the boil, reserve about 50 ml and put in the saffron.

  3. When the onion is translucent, add rice and mix well until the rice absorbs some of the butter. Add salt and enough of the broth, including the saffron strands, to just cover the rice. Bring to the boil and reduce. Continue to add the broth, a little at a time, until it is mainly absorbed and the rice is just a little moist. It shouldn't get as dry as cooked rice for Asian cuisines.

  4. Shortly before serving, mix in the Parmesan cheese. Traditional recipes want more cheese on top, but I find that too much.


Cooking home page Recipe index Greg's home page Greg's diary Greg's photos

Valid XHTML 1.0!

$Id: risotto-alla-milanese.php,v 1.5 2022/08/30 00:47:30 grog Exp $