Risotto: More than 100 Recipes for the Classic Rice Dish of Northern Italy
Risotto: More than 100 Recipes for the Classic Rice Dish of Northern Italy
- ISBN13: 9780020303954
- Condition: New
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--Arrigo Cipriani
"Delectable."
--Booklist
"For the rice lover . . . this well-crafted book is a unique source."
--Chicago Tribune
Risotto is the hottest development in Italian cooking since pasta, and Risotto is the definitive book on this classic rice dish from Northern Italy. Risotto contains more than120 authentic riso
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The Classic of American Cookbooks on the Classic Risotto of Northern Italy,
In the late 1980s, I first started seeing risotto offered frequently in Mediterranean or even New American yuppie restaurants in the SF Bay Area when I visited on business–but not yet readily in fine restaurants in Seattle, for instance. Risotto was a clear trend for foodies, but hadn’t yet hit mainstream nationally. So it was with impeccable timing that Barrett and Wasserman released “Risotto” in 1987.
I caught the bug early and hard. After I got this cookbok–in one my inspired food specialty frenzies–I wanted to make everything risotto. It was the perfect, versatile one-bowl (though usually 2-3 pots) meal that could fit any flavor or fancy, a base for any vegetables, seafood, meat, fruit, or herbs you wanted to cook with that day. I literally cooked risotto two or three times a week for 8 months, from fall harvest through a Seattle winter and into springtime baby vegetables. And I used this cookbook for all of it.
This cookbook “Risotto” had many virtures. First, it is an exceptionally clear introduction to risotto: its history, varieties of rice, geography, how it is cooked and used, etc. Second, as other reviews state (and you can see in the Search-Inside-The-Book table of contents), it covers many kinds of risotto and has plenty of recipes: cheese, vegetable, meat, fish, fruit, liqueur, leftover.
But the strongest (and non-obvious) feature of this cookbook is how it makes use of its Basic Recipe. Up front, with tips and tools and techniques, it describes a canonical recipe for making risotto: the broth, the oil/butter and minced onion and rice, the first stir of liquid, the stirring and adding broth, the sauteed “soffrito” ingredients, and the final additions of cheese, broth, and sometimes cream to stir in. The cookbook gives ingredient amounts for cooking the basic recipe for different size dinners, with a few additional tips for making more or less than the canonical (serves 4) recipe.
In the rest of the book, recipes all can then say, for instance: Start with the basic recipe, but this time we’re going to add the chopped spinach after 10 minutes of stirring in step 3; or Once the rice is coated in the oil, stir in 1/2 cup of white wine (instead of broth); or In the last step, omit the cheese and broth and use 1/2 cup of cream. And of course the soffrito, the usually-sauteed ingredients mixed in, were different for every one.
I usually resist a standardized recipe, feeling like a straitjacket. But this had the opposite effect. Having a single Basic Recipe was a great way to build confidence and proficiency with a new way of cooking. And building 100 recipes off of it–including restrained, classic Italian risottos, together with more creative or adventurous combinations–made it clear how once you’d mastered the Basic Recipe and how to apply it, you could do anything with risotto! And even though I may have made the cookbook sound mechanistic by focusing on the Basic Recipe, it really is one of those cookbooks where all the recipes are a joy to read, with notes about the history of the recipe or about the ingredients, etc.
Now, nearly 20 years later, this cookbook easily stands the test of time. The techniques are clear, straightforward, complete. All of the best-known, classic Italian risottos are present. And there are dozens of variations that are great on their own, and as a guide to what you can create beyond them.
The only small hesitation that I have today with this cookbook is a consequence of its strength. The Basic Recipe is a good learning tool, and is the way that a generation of American home chefs have now been introduced to cooking risotto. But there are actually variations in how risotto is made–what fats to use, how much broth to add and how to stir, using alternative tools like pressure cookers, etc. Once you’re an over-the-top risotto fiend like I became, you’ll want to explore those as well. Fortunately, one of the co-authors of Risotto (Barrett) went on to publish a follow-on risotto cookbook that is just as delightful–and goes all out with different ways of cooking risotto and more novel and creative recipes. See “Risotto Risotti” at [...]
Oh, so what was my favorite single risotto of the dozens I made from this book? A simple one, actually. An asparagus risotto made with early-spring skinny shoots. It was the most completely-green risotto I’ve made, and was brimming, overflowing with that aromatic “grassy” flavor of the best asparagus–the closest I’ve come to ethereal grazing in a bowl.
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If You Love Risotto, Then This Book Is For You!,
Also included in this book,are also chapters that contain important information on risotto ingredients and traditional preparation methods. Although I found it disappointing that this book contained no photographs or illustrations, which would only have enhanced my opinion of this book, I feel that if you love risotto, you’ll enjoy this book. When it comes to risotto, this book has everything you could ever need!
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Ah, Risotto!,
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