Easy risotto recipe | Jamie Oliver recipes (2024)

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A basic risotto recipe

Smooth, creamy & oozy

  • Gluten-freegf
  • Vegetarianv

Easy risotto recipe | Jamie Oliver recipes (2)

Smooth, creamy & oozy

  • Gluten-freegf
  • Vegetarianv

“Making a beautiful risotto is so easy! All it takes is a little love and care and this base recipe ”

Serves 6

Cooks In45 minutes

DifficultySuper easy

Jamie's KitchenItalianMains

Nutrition per serving
  • Calories 446 22%

  • Fat 14g 20%

  • Saturates 6.3g 32%

  • Sugars 2.6g 3%

  • Salt 1g 17%

  • Protein 15.1g 30%

  • Carbs 55.8g 21%

  • Fibre 1.6g -

Of an adult's reference intake

recipe adapted from

Jamie's Kitchen

By Jamie Oliver

Tap For Method

Ingredients

  • Metric
  • Germany

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  • 1.1 litres organic stock , such as chicken, fish, vegetable
  • 1 large onion
  • 2 cloves of garlic
  • ½ a head of celery
  • 90 g Parmesan cheese
  • 2 tablespoons olive oil
  • unsalted butter
  • 400 g risotto rice
  • 2 wine glasses of dry white vermouth (dry Martini or Noilly Prat) or dry white wine

Tap For Method

The cost per serving below is generated by Whisk.com and is based on costs in individual supermarkets. For more information about how we calculate costs per serving read our FAQS

recipe adapted from

Jamie's Kitchen

By Jamie Oliver

Tap For Ingredients

Method

  1. Heat the stock. Peel and finely chop the onion and garlic, trim and finely chop the celery. Finely grate the Parmesan.
  2. In a separate pan, heat the oil and 1 small knob of butter over a low heat, add the onions, garlic and celery, and fry gently for about 15 minutes, or until softened but not coloured.
  3. Add the rice and turn up the heat – the rice will now begin to lightly fry, so keep stirring it. After 1 minute it will look slightly translucent. Add the vermouth or wine and keep stirring — it will smell fantastic. Any harsh alcohol flavours will evaporate and leave the rice with a tasty essence.
  4. Once the vermouth or wine has cooked into the rice, add your first ladle of hot stock and a good pinch of sea salt. Turn the heat down to a simmer so the rice doesn’t cook too quickly on the outside.
  5. Keep adding ladlefuls of stock, stirring and almost massaging the creamy starch out of the rice, allowing each ladleful to be absorbed before adding the next. This will take around 15 minutes. Taste the rice — is it cooked? Carry on adding stock until the rice is soft but with a slight bite. Don’t forget to check the seasoning carefully. If you run out of stock before the rice is cooked, add some boiling water.
  6. Remove the pan from the heat, add 1 knob of butter and the Parmesan, then stir well.
  7. 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 outrageously creamy and oozy like it should be. Eat it as soon as possible, while the risotto retains its beautiful texture.

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recipe adapted from

Jamie's Kitchen

By Jamie Oliver

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© 2024 Jamie Oliver Enterprises Limited

© 2024 Jamie Oliver Enterprises Limited

Easy risotto recipe | Jamie Oliver recipes (2024)

FAQs

Easy risotto recipe | Jamie Oliver recipes? ›

The technique of risotto is to slowly and gradually cook a starchy ingredient by adding liquid in small amounts and stirring. This technique's main purpose is to draw starch out of the main ingredient to give the dish a creamy texture.

What is Gordon Ramsay's recipe for risotto? ›

ingredients
  1. 1 large shallot, chopped finely.
  2. 4 tablespoons olive oil.
  3. 8 ounces baby portabella mushrooms, sliced.
  4. 10 ounces arborio rice.
  5. 12 cup dry white wine.
  6. 4 cups low sodium chicken broth.
  7. 8 ounces plum tomatoes, skinned, seeded and finely chopped.
  8. 1 tablespoon fresh basil, chopped.

How do restaurants make risotto so creamy? ›

The technique of risotto is to slowly and gradually cook a starchy ingredient by adding liquid in small amounts and stirring. This technique's main purpose is to draw starch out of the main ingredient to give the dish a creamy texture.

How do restaurants get risotto so fast? ›

We par cook it. We make the recipe without finishing it with cream or butter or cheese. We pour the hot risotto onto a sheet tray to cool quickly and then store it in a container. Once we are ready to serve, we reheat the risotto with a little chicken stock, and finish with cream, butter, and some parmesan cheese.

What is the trick to creamy risotto? ›

Sure, whipped cream won't save a gluey or gummy risotto (hey, there's always arancini), but it will make good risotto recipes even better. In the corn risotto recipe, that means whipping ½ cup of heavy cream to stiff peaks and then gently folding it into the pot.

What is the secret to a good risotto? ›

Always use warm stock.

Warming the broth before adding it to the warm rice coaxes more starch out of each grain of rice and helps prevent it from overcooking. Cool broth takes longer to warm up in the risotto pan and may shock the grain into holding onto its starches while the rice itself continues to cook.

What is the secret ingredient in risotto? ›

For risotto, that ingredient is salted water, according to chef and writer Naomi Pomeroy (via The Kitchn).

Is it better to make risotto with butter or olive oil? ›

According to Salvatore, it all depends on the ingredients. The chef prefers oil over butter (and oil works particularly well with seafood risottos), but butter is better for vegetable-based dishes like Rampoldi's black truffle with mushroom or mixed vegetable and ginger risotto.

Why do you put vinegar in risotto? ›

Try adding sherry vinegar for mushroom risotto, white or red wine vinegar in place of white or red wine, or even rice or apple cider vinegar to boost the taste in asparagus risotto. Just be sure not to overdo it. A little vinegar goes a long way — remember, you're looking for balance, not a sour, overpowering tang.

Why do you put butter in risotto? ›

It comes from the Spanish word for butter and means to gently work something—usually a dish—into a creamy consistency by blending in some sort of fat or butter. With risotto, at the very end, melt some butter in a spoon of hot stock (or wine) and work it into the rice to form a creamy texture.

Why is risotto so expensive? ›

Shortages make prices spike

As the Po Valley continues to face devastating droughts, the farmers who grow their crops there are facing crop shortages, reports The Washington Post. The droughts have dried up the river where arborio rice (most commonly used for risotto) is grown.

Why is my risotto always hard? ›

If your risotto is still hard, it hasn't finished cooking. Keep adding more stock until it becomes al dente or your preferred texture. How do you make risotto creamy? To make risotto even creamier, add butter and good quality grated cheese like parmesan or Romano at the end of the cooking and stir well.

What gives risotto a creamy texture? ›

Unlike long-grain rice, medium-grain rice has a higher starch content, perfect for risotto, because when cooked, it releases that starch and when simmered with broth and stirred, it thickens giving it that signature creamy and more compact texture without needing butter and cheese – but keep it handy for an extra ...

Why isn't my risotto creamy? ›

Overcook the rice, you quickly ruin it. Over-stir, and you lose the creamy, rich texture risotto is renowned for. "Cooking risotto is not as simple as it looks; there is a real skill to it," explains San Pellegrino Young Chef finalist Antonio Salvatore, who helms the iconic Monte Carlo restaurant Rampoldi.

How do you add cream to risotto? ›

A common misconception is that cream is added to risotto to give it its creamy texture. Classic risotto, in fact, does not contain any cream. Although adding cream is not the worst of culinary sins, it should be added for richness and flavor, not texture.

References

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