2.13.2012

You Get a Bonus Day

I wish there had been a better time than the night before Valentine's day for me to get around to posting this recipe.  I'm afraid it will get lost in a sea of pink and red recipes and you will never get around to trying this for yourself.


But I urge you to take a stand:  pink food is appropriate 364 other days a year.  And since this year is a leap year, you get a bonus day.  Take that bonus day to treat yourself to Roasted Beet Risotto.

The process of making the risotto was simple enough, especially since I made the beet puree a few days in advance, though it did require standing next to the stove for a half an hour; a sacrifice that I'm willing to make when the payoff is this big.  And when I served it along side some of our favorite roasted chicken and a green salad, Tim thought maybe he had forgotten a special occassion.

Roasted Beet Risotto
recipe adapted slightly from Gourmet, November 2004
serves 6 to 8

Ingredients
3/4 cup to 1 cup roasted beet puree
4 cups chicken broth
2 cups water
1 small onion, diced
2 tbsp olive oil
2 cups Arborio or Jasmine rice
1/2 cup dry white wine
1 tbsp fresh thyme, chopped
salt & pepper

In a medium pot, bring broth and water to a simmer.  Cover and keep on low heat.

Heat olive oil in a large sauce pan or dutch oven over medium heat.  Add onion and cook until softened, stirring occasionally, until soft, about 3 minutes.  Add rice and cook, stirring constantly for 1 minute.

Add the wine and simmer, stirring constantly, until wine is absorbed.  Stir in 1 ladle (about 1/2 to 3/4 cup broth/water mixture) liquid and stir until liquid is absorbed.  Continue simmering, stirring, and adding liquid, 1 ladle at a time, allowing liquid to be absorbed before adding more, about 20 minutes, until rice is creamy and  just tender.  When there is about 2 ladles of liquid left, stir in fresh thyme.  Add another ladle of liquid and beet puree.

Salt and pepper to taste (about 1 tbsp kosher salt and 1/2 tbsp freshly ground black pepper).  Thin if necessary with remaining liquid.  Risotto should spread in the bowl or plate.  Serve hot.

6 comments:

  1. This Risotto is so pretty. Risotto is one of my favorite dishes, this would make a great valentines dish.

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  2. Great dish, and I love this photo. Might be my favorite so far since you got your new camera!

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  3. Thank you so much Diana and Sharon!

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  4. I'm intrigued...maybe I'll try this some day!

    Happy Valentine's Day!

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  5. What a pretty picture! I need to get better at photography. I've never made risotto before, I might have to give this a try.

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  6. This is a beautiful dish, and knowing you I'm sure it's also scrumptious! :)

    2 notes from my risotto-making experiences:
    *I typically use regular old long-grain white rice, and it turns out just as well (and I get to have risotto more often because it costs way less!). :)
    *Canned chicken broth often contains trace amounts of gluten--I had no idea, but I discovered this the hard way when making carrot risotto for a highly gluten-intolerant friend. About 3 bites of the supposedly GF risotto and she could already tell! Now I use Wyler's bouillon cubes instead, 2 cubes to 3 cups of water. That way I don't poison any friends by accident. :)

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Thanks for sharing your thoughts!