I once wrote a book entitled "Voyaging on a Small Income" and the parts about provisioning and cooking proved very popular. "The Voyaging Vegetarian" would have followed, but so few people were then vegetarians that I thought no-one would publish it. Now many more people realise that eating dead animals is unkind and bad for the planet. I hope a blog, which I can update with new recipes, will work better than a book for liveaboards and aspiring voyagers, and those living simply in small spaces.
Back in the 80s, I wrote a book called "Voyaging on a Small Income", which was published and sold astonishingly well. It’s become almost a “classic” and is probably why you’ve found this site!
I’ve been living aboard and sailing since the 70s. Nine different boats have been home, sometimes for several months, sometimes for many years. I love the way of life, the small footprint and being close to Nature. I’m a great fan of junk rig and having extensive experience with both gaff and bermudian rig, I wouldn’t have any other sail on my boat. It’s ideal as a voyaging rig, but also perfect for the coastal sailing that I now do. I’d rather stay in New Zealand, not having to keep saying goodbye to friends, than go voyaging, these days.
Between 2015 and 2021, I built the 26ft "FanShi", the boat I now call home. For the last 45 years or so, my diet of choice has been vegetarian and is now almost vegan. I love cooking and particularly enjoy having only myself to please. I am combining all these interests (apart, perhaps, from junk rig!) in this blog. I hope you enjoy it. I also have other blogs: www.anniehill.blogspot.com and http://fanshiwanderingandwondering.wordpress.com
If you haven't made seitan before, I recommend you read my introduction to the process here.
The
basic proportions for making seitan are 1/4 cup of water to 1/2 cup
flour. However, this is somewhat excessively basic and the following
recipe is a more appropriate basic 'chicken' recipe.
Before
we go any further, and at the risk of shattering all your hopes and
illusions, seitan doesn’t taste remotely like chicken. I say this
as someone who hasn’t eat chicken for well over a decade, but for
all that, I say it with some certainty. I don’t want anyone to be
disappointed.
This is the one to
use if you are copying a tofu recipe: add the seasoning suggested for the marinade (if
any) to the dry ingredients. This 'chicken' can also be used to
replace beans and chickpeas in various recipes or even to replace the meat in a
well-flavoured chicken dish. However, I wouldn't recommend serving a
slab of it on a plate, with roast potatoes, two veg and gravy!
In a bowl, mix vital wheat gluten,
gram flour,
nutritional yeast,
mushroom stock
powder, salt,
onion
powder and garlic
granules.
In
a small jug, mix the water
and soya sauce
and add them to the bowl. Combine everything into a soft dough, starting with a knife or spatula and ending with
your hand. If the mix seems a little bit dry, add some more
water, a teaspoonful at a time. If too wet, carefully add some more vital wheat gluten. Use the dough to clean your bowl
thoroughly, otherwise the dried seitan will need to be soaked off.
Put
the dough on a board and flatten it down. You will be cutting it into
bite-sized chunks, so it wants to be a suitable thickness.
Put
the trivet into your pressure cooker, along with ½ cup water. Place
the seitan on the trivet, and bring up to pressure for 5 minutes.
Let the pressure go down naturally.
When
you can take the lid off, take out the seitan and cut it up – or
tear it for a more ‛organic’ appearance.
If
you want to, you can now fry the chunks in some oil so that they are
crisp on the outside. On odds, I think I prefer them soft.
The
seitan can now be added to your recipes and, simmered for as long as
suits you. Because it's completely cooked, it only needs reheating;
however, it is robust and doesn't start to dissolve - I've often
simmered it for about 20 minutes. It is also quite happy to be shoved
around by the spoon without collapsing. I've seen recipes for tofu
kebabs and this seitan, suitably flavoured, should also be a success in
this context, too.
Lasagne is generally served up sizzling
hot from the oven, with a crisp top, and often crunchy bits of
lasagne sticking out. I’ve read that some Italians prefer to pop it
into the oven for only about a quarter of an hour and to eat it moist
and soft. That being so, I think we’ll go for the latter ‘gourmet’
version, which means that instead of using an oven, we can use the
pressure cooker. However, be warned that this may not work in a cheap
pan because it’s likely to stick. (If your pressure cooker is a bit
on the thin side, what you’ll have to do is to put the lasagne into
something like a cake tin, that will fit in your pressure cooker. Put
half a pint of water in the bottom of the cooker, with the tin on the
trivet, loosely covered with greaseproof paper or foil. It can then
be cooked at high pressure for 10 minutes.)
I specify ‘no-cook’ lasagne, but in
fact I believe that nearly all lasagne sheets can be used without
pre-cooking. If you can find the right pasta, this recipe can be gluten free.
Serves 2
Ingredients
6 pieces ‘no-cook’
lasagne
1/2 cup whole lentils
2 tbsp olive oil
1 onion, chopped
2 garlic cloves, diced
1 red or green pepper,
chopped
400 g/14 oz can chopped
tomatoes
1/2 tsp sage
1/2 tsp basil
1/2 tsp oregano
1/2 tsp cinnamon
1/4 tsp chilli flakes
salt and pepper
cheese
sauce, mixed more thickly, as shown in
the Variations on that post
Method:
Cook the soaked lentils as
usual and set aside.
Heat the olive oil in a
saucepan. Add the onion, garlic and pepper
andfry until the onion is golden.
Add the tomatoes and mix in
the sage, basil, oregano, cinnamon, chilli flakes, salt and
pepper.
When everything is mixed together
and heated through, add the lentils. Cook gently for ten minutes or
so to let all the flavours combine. Taste and check the seasoning.
Pour half the sauce into the
bottom of the pressure cooker. Add half the lasagne sheets.
Unfortunately, these will not fit very neatly, but you will have to
do your best. Now add the rest of the sauce and the remaining
lasagne. Cover with the cheesesauce, pouring
carefully, to ensure that all the lasagne is covered.
On a medium heat, bring the
pressure cooker up to pressure. Cook for 3 to 5 minutes and reduce
pressure at room temperature. Ideally, leave it for a further five
minutes so that if the lasagne has caught at all, it will lift
easily from the pan. It’s impossible to serve this dish at all
elegantly, but if you spoon it carefully from the pan, the layers
should remain more or less intact.
Serve with a cooked green vegetable or
salad.
Variations:
Use 4 or 5 freshtomatoes
and 1/4 cup redwine in the sauce.
Arrange the lasagne in a shallow
oven-proof dish and cook it in a moderate oven for a quarter
of an hour or so. I don’t find it needs the 45 minutes that most
cookbooks recommend. In this case, you can substitute the cheese
and yoghurt sauce for cheese sauce.
It’s quicker and easier to make, and probably more nutritious, but
due to the yoghurt, it might separate in the pressure cooker.
Layer the lasagne into a deep
frying pan, or wide saucepan. Heat over a low heat, using a flame
tamer if necessary, to ensure it doesn’t catch and get burnt.
Cover and cook for about 15 minutes, checking every now and then to
see if the sauce has cooked, by which time it will be quite firm.
In this case you can also use the cheese
and yoghurt sauce.
Although I have a recipe under Basic
White Sauce, I thought that as cheese sauce is so much used and
loved, maybe it should have its own post.
I have two versions here: classic
cheese sauce and vegan cheese sauce. Actually, it isn’t really a
classic cheese sauce, because I suggest use cornflour instead of
plain flour, because I don’t think most people can be bothered to
make a roux, which involves very gently flying flour in butter and
then gradually adding infused milk, stirring all the time, until the
sauce is cooked. It takes quite a long time for white flour to alter
its personality and you need to carry on stirring, or put the sauce
under an incredibly low heat until you get your perfectly cooked
white sauce. You can, of course, mix and match the recipes to suit
your tastes.
If you have any choice, try to use a
sharp, yellow cheese, such as (real) Cheddar, Double Gloucester or
Red Leicester for a fuller flavour and a more attractive appearance.
I am sure there are plenty of good vegan cheeses being made on this
planet, but if they exist in New Zealand, they are unavailable
outside the big cities. I therefore suggest nutritional yeast in the
vegan version: the advantage of using gram flour, is that it makes
the sauce a pretty pale yellow colour.
I say this serves two, but of course it
depends what you’re doing with it: my assumption is that you are
pouring it over something life stuffed pancakes. I make suggestions
for using the recipe for lasagne
in the variations.
Serves
2
Ingredients
2
tbsp cornflour
1
cup milk
1
cup grated cheese
a
good shake of *Worcestershire Sauce OR 1 tsp Dijon mustard
salt
and pepper
Method:
Put
the cornflour into a small saucepan and add about a quarter
of the milk. Stir well until the mix is smooth. Add the rest
of the milk.
Put
the pan over a moderate heat and start to cook, stirring
constantly. If you leave it even for a moment, once it starts to
thicken, it will form lumps that are just about impossible to get
rid of.
Reduce
the heat, add the cheese, Worcestershire sauce or mustard
and season with salt and pepper.
Use
immediately.
Vegan
cheese sauce
Ingredients
1
tbsp gram flour
1
cup plant milk/water
1
tbsp nutritional yeast
1
tsp Dijon mustard
salt
and pepper
Method:
Put
the gram flour into a small saucepan and add about a quarter
of the milk. Stir well until the mix is smooth. This will
take some time and you may prefer to use a whisk. You don't want to
start cooking until you've got rid of all the lumps. Add the rest of
the milk.
Put
the pan over a moderate heat and start to cook, stirring constantly.
As the sauce starts to thicken lower the heat and stir vigorously.
It will start to form alarming lumps, but if you keep stirring they
will disappear.
When
the sauce is smooth, reduce the heat again and add the nutritional
yeast and mustard and season with salt and pepper.
Use
immediately.
Notes:
*
I
ought to mention that Worcestershire sauce, at least the original
and peerless product made by Lea & Perrin's, contains a very
small amount of anchovies. Considering that you merely shake a few
drops into the sauce, the amount of anchovies must be about
homoeopathic, but if you take your vegetarian principles seriously,
I suppose you should avoid it. Sadly, I have found all the
alternative brands to be significantly inferior.
I find the gram flour is
sufficiently creamy that I don't need to add plant milk. However,
you may well prefer the taste.
You
can, of course, use gram flour in the first recipe, instead
of cornflour.
If
you are trying for an elegant result, use white pepper
instead of black, to avoid little black flecks in the sauce.
If
you have any freshherbs, chop them and sprinkle over the top.
To use the sauce in a flan
or lasagne, I
suggest making more and making it thicker. So double
the amount of flour
and use one and a half times
the liquid.
When I was a little girl, one of our
favourite meals was ‘spaghetti mince’; my father had been in
Italy during the Second World War and had brought back a taste for
their food. This was about the only ‘foreign’ food we ever ate.
The spaghetti had to be bought from a speciality shop – an ‘Italian
Warehouseman’ – and came in long lengths, which were doubled over and wrapped in blue paper so that each strand must have been about a metre long! Usually, Mum patiently bent it into the boiling water, but when she
was in a hurry, she guiltily broke it into more convenient lengths.
Over the years, the name changed to
‘Spaghetti Bolognese’ and garlic was included and a sprinkling of mixed herbs. Eventually, my
mother started to try different recipes, which included bacon or
chicken livers or whatever the recipe writers of the day considered
appropriate. I suspect very few resembled 'classic' spaghetti Bolognese - if there ever was such a thing. Parmesan cheese was sprinkled over the top, sparingly,
from a shiny, green cardboard container.
By the 80s, spaghetti Bolognese
had become a standard in most households and, for that matter, it was
about the first meal most people learnt to make on leaving home. The
recipe varied greatly and I doubt that many citizens of Bologna would
have recognised it.
‘Spag
bol’, as it was disrespectfully known, was, of course, one of my
first attempts at cooking - an effort to reproduce a favourite, which I had seen cooked many times. My own recipe became firmly established
when I created a vegetarian version, and I’ve used it ever since. I
got the idea for using carrot and the dash of hot sauce/chilli flakes, when I ate
spaghetti Bolognese in the Portofino restaurant in Lancaster. The recipe always goes down well, and because of its familiarity, many meat
eaters enjoy it. Dressed up with some freshly grated Parmesan cheese
– or, if you want to be really trendy, slivers
of Parmesan – it’s certainly good enough for the proverbial
dinner party, as long as your guests are used to eating spaghetti,
that is!
The most pleasing sauce is made with
the tiny brown lentils, (those which become red lentils when split), but any
whole lentils will do and it’s fine made with split ones, too,
although the resemblance to the ‘real thing’ is considerably
less. I have used the sauce, or something very similar, in a number of iterations, such as lasagne.
You can make this recipe gluten free, using the appropriate pasta.
Serves 2
Ingredients
1/2 cup whole lentils
2 tbsp olive oil
1 onion
2 garlic cloves
1 carrot
1/2 green/red pepper
4 fresh OR 400 g/14 oz can chopped
tomatoes
1/2 tsp sage
1/2 tsp basil
1/2 tsp oregano
1/4 tsp cinnamon
a good shake of hot sauce OR 1/4 tsp chilli flakes
1/2 tsp salt
pepper
25 mm (1 in) column spaghetti
Method:
Cook the lentils as usual.
Heat the olive oil in a saucepan.
Dice the onion and garlic and fry until starting to brown. This will add more colour to the sauce.
Dice the carrot and add. Cook
until it’s slightly softened Now add he diced pepper.
Dice the tomatoes and mix in the sage, basil, oregano, cinnamon and chilli (sauce). If you’re using fresh tomatoes and the
sauce seems too thick, it can be thinned by the judicious addition
of a little wine. This also improves the taste. Water can be
substituted in extremis.
Now add the salt. When everything is mixed together
and heated through, add the lentils. Cook gently for ten minutes or
so to let all the flavours combine. Taste and check the seasoning –
the hot sauce should just give it a slight ‘lift’. If the
tomatoes have produced too much liquid, simmer a little longer, with
the lid off. The sauce should be fairly thick, when it’s ready.
While the sauce is simmering, cook
the spaghetti. Check that it's cooked to your taste, and toss it in olive oil and cracked black pepper.
If people are to help themselves, it’s easier to put the spaghetti
and sauce into separate dishes. Freshly grated - or shaved - Parmesan cheese is
the ideal accompaniment; have a small bowl of 'Parmegan' for vegans.
Note:
Italians don't serve their pasta and sauce separately and you might prefer to tip the spaghetti into the sauce before serving it. Remember to save some pasta water in case the sauce looks too dry. The only issue with serving it this way, if you are giving it to guests, is that it's really difficult not to flick bits of sauce around while dishing up the food!
In heavy weather, however, it's probably worth mixing it first and serving in bowls. You might want to break the pasta into shorter lengths, too.
Variations:
Use linguine, fettucine or another long past, instead of the spaghetti
If you’re fortunate enough to be
in the land of cheap red wine, a dollop in the sauce improves
it immensely.
In really hot weather, when
appetites are failing, the sauce is still quite delicious without
the lentils.
Use a cup of mixed, finely
chopped nuts, instead of the lentils. They will not need water,
of course and you would add them after frying the vegetables.
You will find more pasta, main-course recipes here.
I entitled this 'Some notes', because it definitely is not definitive. For a start, I cannot tell you how to cook long-grain white rice because I haven't personally done so since I was around 20 years old. However, if you are a veg~an, chances are that you are interested in both food and health (as well as being compassionate towards animals), so I will assume that you, too, will want to eat brown rice, with its extra nutrition and fibre. In a nutshell, the bran and germ, the two outer layers of brown rice, contain most
of the vitamins and minerals in the grain. Those layers get removed when
manufacturers make white rice, and that’s why brown rice is the
healthier choice. You can find out a lot more on the Internet - there are thousands and thousands of websites comparing and contrasting white and brown rice. In my opinion, white rice, like white flour and white sugar comes under the description of 'pure, white and deadly'.
For me, the best of them all is brown basmati rice and while
I will endlessly sing the praises of brown basmati rice, if I don't
actually state it in the ingredient list, assume the recipe is written
for 'brown rice', which takes longer to cook, although any Indian recipes can be assumed to include it.
To cook perfect brown rice in a saucepan
2 portions
1 cup water OR 1/3 cup seawater + 2/3
cup fresh
1/2 cup brown rice
1/4 tsp salt
Method:
Put the water and rice in a medium
saucepan. Add the salt if you're not using seawater.
Bring to the boil and cover.
Put the pan over
a low heat and cook for 35 to 40 minutes. Use a flame tamer if necessary, but the water should be just simmering. If it boils too quickly, the water will steam off rather than beaing absorbed
Take off the heat and let the rice
stand for a few minutes to absorb the last of the water, if necessary.
Notes:
Brown basmati
rice, as well as tasting the best, in my opinion, is much quicker to
cook - 20 - 25 minutes - and much more likely to absorb the water perfectly
and end up with nicely separated grains. I really recommend it.
If you are buying 'long grain, brown rice', it will vary
tremendously from one brand to another. While the 2 of water to 1 of
rice has always worked for me, the cooking time can vary from about 25
minutes up to 45 minutes, obviously depending on the varietal. When
you stock up with new rice, its worth spending a bit of time getting to
know it.
If you have only one burner, you
can cook the rice for 5 minutes, take it off for 5 minutes, put it
back on, etc.
If you don’t want to juggle or
use more than one burner, cook the rice for 20 minutes and then
leave it to one side. It will continue cooking. About 5 minutes
before you intend to serve it, check to ensure that it’s fully
cooked and that all the water is absorbed. If it isn’t or hasn’t,
put the pan back on for 5 minutes. This method is not entirely
foolproof, however, and you might end up with a less-than-perfect
result, although the rice will still be satisfactory.
If you have good appetites, you
might find 3/4 cup a more appropriate amount for 2 people. I find 1/2 cup makes me two ample portions.
Pressure cooker rice
It's
hardly worth doing this with brown basmati, but the other types vary
tremendously. It appears to me that the longer and thinner the grains,
the easier and quicker brown rice is
to cook. You will have gathered by now that to me, brown basmati is the
queen of
rice, and well worth investing in if you find some
that is affordable. Because I am now almost vegan, I have a bit more
money to spend on food, and so basmati rice is one of my primary
indulgences.
Cooking
rice in the pressure cooker is a bit more
hit and miss than in the saucepan, simply because of its
variability, so you may need to experiment a little with the timing.
However, the good news is that the longer it needs to cook, the less
chance you have of overcooking it. Moreover, I think that brown rice
is anyway much more forgiving and much less likely to dissolve into a
horrid mush. (To be perfectly honest, it is literally decades since I
cooked long-grain, white rice, so forgive me if some of my comments
about it are awry.) I have also come to realise that there is a big
difference between cooking on paraffin and cooking on meths, for
example, so it's hard to be too definite with timings, something which
is only exacerbated by the facts that not all pressure cookers announce
at what pressure they cook and a big stainless steel pressure cooker
will take a lot longer to heat up than a small alloy one. All in all, I
am rather flabbergasted at how the majority of recipe bloggers can tell
me that my onions will be cooked to perfection in 7 minutes and similar
statements! I find cooking - well at least cooking on a boat - much
more art than science. Anyway, back to the pressure cooker rice,
assuming 'standard' brown rice.
2 portions
Ingredients
1 cup water OR 1/3 cup seawater + 2/3
cup fresh
1/2 cup brown rice
1/4 tsp salt
Method:
Put the water and rice into a
pressure cooker. Add the salt if you are using all fresh water.
Bring up to pressure.
Lower the flame and cook over
a medium heat for 10 to 15 minutes, just keeping the
pressure going.
Take the pan off and let the
pressure reduce naturally. The rice will stay hot for a long time in
the sealed pressure cooker, and, within reason, the longer it
stands, the drier it will be.
Note:
As
mentioned above, brown rice varies widely from varietal to varietal and
brand to brand. If you eat a lot of rice, like I do, you will probably
be buying at least 5 kilos at a time, so it's well worth carefully
experimenting with cooking times, when you restock. When I was voyaging
I would often buy 20 k at a time.
Wild rice takes a long time to cook - you want to give it 45 minutes. However, It will cook in the pressure cooker in 10 to 15 minutes (depending on the usual variables) and when I mix it with basmati, I find the latter hasn't suffered from the extra time. If I am cooking it on the stove top, I put the wild rice in first and put the basmati in about 10 minutes later.
Black rice and red ricealso take a lot of cooking. I can't say I am impressed with black rice and that being so, I'm afraid I haven't tried red rice. But then, I'm besotted with basmati!
Short grain, eg Arborio I'm about to make a liar out of myself here: I use Arborio rice for risotto and paella and it confess to using white. This is because my attempts with brown shot-grain rice have been less than successful. Because New Zealand is a small country and because I live far away from cities in the Far North, there is little demand for 'exotic' foods. Possibly there are types of short-grain, brown rice that go satisfactorily starchy, but the are not available to me. To cook this type of rice, simply follow the instructions in the recipe, because sometimes you want obviously separate grains and other times you want the result to be creamy.
Risotto is something that I’ve come
to since living on my own, because it isn’t the sort of
rib-sticking tack that my skippers would have liked. I adore it.
For
a long time I couldn’t get it just right. I kept reading all
different recipes; I carefully kept my stock hot and ladled it
assiduously into the pan, just like the maestros told me to, but the
rice never seemed really to cook through and I never got the creamy
consistency that the cookery books raved about: I think all the variables of
heat, pan size and quantity are very important and unless you cook the same amount in the same pan each time, there's a lot of trial and error. Keeping the water/stock hot is a further complication. Moreover, some recipes imply that you heat up more water/stock than might be called for, and pouring water away on a boat, is a capital crime! Finally, however, I came
across a complete iconoclast who cooked her risotto in the pressure
cooker and, moreover, she assured me that so do lots of Italian
cooks, who, I assume prefer to sit down with the rest of the white
wine, rather than standing over the risotto pot, ladling and stirring for three-quarters of an hour. So
I
tried it, and since then I have produced what I consider to be perfect
risotto (although I have to admit that the one in the photo is a bit dry)! You will have to experiment a bit to get the timing just right: the usual caveat about how long it takes your PC to get up to pressure and at what pressure it cooks applies as usual.
I
have tried it
with short-grain brown rice, rather than arborio, but the result has
been disappointing. From what I have read, risotto is meant to be of a creamy consistency, so it shouldn't stand up on its own, moulded on the
plate. Nor should it have any cream in it - the creaminess comes from the starch in the rice - and really, not even
that much cheese. The Italians are firm believers in Less is More.
Jamie Oliver adds lots of celery to his
risotto and very good it is too. However, celery is not the sort of
thing that most voyagers carry, because it comes in large quantities
and doesn’t keep that well. Instead I have gone for a unique Annie
touch (or so I would like to think) and use fennel seeds. Very
Italian and very voyager friendly. I also occasionally add celery seeds, too, in a nod to Mr Oliver. Classic risotto recipes use neither, however, so feel free to leave them out if you prefer.
What
follows is the basic recipe
with the usual variations at the end. Although I see a lot of recipes include vegetables early in the cooking process, traditionally most appear to be added at the end. I dare say that's because after all the stirring, etc, the veg would be mashed. However, with those that will re-heat quickly like mushrooms, it's better to pre-fry them with the onion and garlic and then set aside. I usually sprinkle in some of my mushroom stock powder, just before adding the water and recommend it, but if you only have commercial stock you can use that, in which case go carefully with your salt. If you don't particularly want to fry your vegetable of choice, for example if you're making, for example
green bean risotto, partially cook the beans first and use the
cooking water for stock. But in reality – just go for
it!
Please check the Notes before cooking :-)
Basic Risotto
Serves 2
Ingredients
A knob of butter and/or olive oil
1 onion, diced
2 cloves of garlic crushed and diced
1/2 tsp fennel seeds
1/2 tsp celery seed
2/3 cup short grain (ideally Carnaroli or Arborio)
rice
1/2 cup white wine (or, in desperate
circumstances, water)
Heat the oil and/or butter in the
pressure cooker and then add the onion and garlic. Cook gently until
softened, but don’t let them brown.
Add the fennel seeds and/or celery, if you're using them and quickly
mix them in.
Add the rice and stir it around
for a few minutes until it’s thoroughly heated and covered in the
oil and onion mixture. It should be starting to turn translucent and to crackle slightly.
Pour in the wine and continue
stirring until it has evaporated.
Now add the water/stock/cooking water
from your vegetable of choice, or water and stock powder; stir to ensure that everything is
covered in liquid and well mixed.
Put on the lid and bring up to pressure.
Cook for 5-7 minutes and allow the
pressure to reduce naturally.
Meanwhile, grate the cheese and
heat up about a cup of water.
Remove the lid and gently stir the
risotto. Add salt and pepper and taste it. The risotto should be of a creamy
consistency that flows rather than stands on its own. If it looks a
bit dry, add some of your hot water and mix carefully.
Add the Parmesan/Parmegan and gently mix it in. Taste to see if you've added sufficient.
* At this stage, add your
partially-cooked vegetables and mix carefully again.
Put the lid back on and either let the vegetables reheat in the hot risotto for a few minutes, or put the pan back over a very low heat, if you are worried the risotto might cool down too much. Give the consistency one final check adding more hot water/stock if necessary and serve straight away, with more cheese, if you wish.
A green vegetable or side salad go well with any risotto, but especially with the basic one above.
Notes:
If you don't have or use butter, add a couple of tablespoons of olive oil; otherwise just use one tbsp plus the butter.
Substitute vegan ghee for butter.
Try to avoid using red onions - they will colour the risotto.
You can heat your extra hot water/stock while the pressure is coming off.
Variations:
Please read through these little recipes carefully before starting cooking.
Broad bean risotto:
Shell the beans to make up about a cup full. Following the basic risotto recipe above, cook the beans in a small amount of water to which you have added 1/4 tsp dried mint, until they are just tender. Scoop them out onto a
plate with a slotted spoon. Make up the cooking liquid to 1 1/3 cups, with stock or water and coninue with the method above. Add the cooked beans at * and complete the recipe.
Broccoli risotto: Following the basic risotto recipe above, cut the broccoli into tiny
heads, simmer them in a small amount of water until just cooked - they will cook a bit more while reheating - and then scoop them out onto a
plate with a slotted spoon. Make up the cooking water to 1 1/3 cups, with stock or water. If you want to use some of the stalk, chop it and cook with the
onions and garlic. Continue as above, add the cooked broccoli at *, and complete the recipe. Sprinkle with chilli flakes.
Cauliflower risotto:
Following the basic risotto recipe above, cut off the
florets, to whatever size suits you, depending on what result you are aiming for. Lightly cook them, remove with a slotted spoon and set aside. Make up the cooking water to 1 1/3 cups, with stock or water. Take the stalk and any trimmings, chop and cook with the
onions and garlic and 1/4 tsp chilli flakes. Add the water/stock and continue with the method above. While the risotto is cooking, you can thinly slice the florets, if you wish. Add the cauliflower at *, and complete the recipe. A variation is to cook the cauliflower more thoroughly and to gently mash it into the cooked rice.
Green bean risotto. Following the recipe above, cook about a dozen beans, sliced into 30mm/1in pieces,in a small amount of water with 1/4 tsp dried oregano, until they are almost ready. Scoop them out onto a
plate with a slotted spoon. Make up the cooking water to 1 1/3 cups, with stock or water and carry on with the recipe. Add the cooked beans at * and complete the recipe.
Mushroom risotto:
Read through the recipe above. (If you have any, soak a few dried
mushrooms in hot water for 30 minutes or so and use the water in the
stock). Take half a dozen or so fresh mushrooms and fry them in the oil/butter with the onion and garlic, together with 1/4 tspthyme and 1/2 tsp rosemary (1/4 tsp sage also goes well if you are using darker mushrooms). When the onions are soft, set everything aside on a plate. Now add some more oil to the pan. Add the riceand cook for a minute or so until the grains start to turn translucent and crackle. Add the mushroom liquid to the water/stock to make 2 cups of liquid (you don't need wine with this risotto), then pour this over the rice. Now add the drained mushrooms, put on the lid and bring up to pressure as per the recipe above. Add the cooked mushrooms at * and complete the recipe. If you are lucky enough to have some, drizzle some truffle oil over before serving.
Pea risotto: Shell sufficient
fresh peas to fill about half a cup. Bring a small amount of water to the boil, together with 1/4 tsp dried mint and a
couple of the pods. Add the peas and cook for one minute, then scoop them out onto a
plate with a slotted spoon. Remove the
pods. Make up the cooking water to 1 1/3 cups, with stock or water, and follow the basic risotto recipe. Add the cooked peas at * and complete the recipe. If you don't have fresh peas, you can use a similar amount of freeze-dried. Cook them in the stock/water, together with the dried mint until they are nearly cooked. Scoop them out with a slotted spoon and set aside. Make up the liquid to 1 1/3 cups and follow the recipe. Add the cooked peas at * and complete the recipe.
Pea and sun-dried tomato risotto:
Follow the instructions for Pea Risotto, but add three or four
sun-dried tomatoes, cut into strips, with the fennel seeds.
Risotto Milanesa: This is the classic Italian recipe and is very beautiful. Saffron is horribly expensive, but its glorious colour and subtle fragrance make it worthwhile using on occasion. Do not be tempted to substitute turmeric: it will overwhelm a dish like this which is so subtly flavoured. For the same reason, leave out the fennel and celery seeds and make sure you use some decent-tasting white wine.Following the basic risotto recipe above, heat 1/4 cup of the water you intend to cook the rice in and add a good pinch of saffron strands (about 1/4 tsp). Allow them to infuse for about 20 minute. Cook the basic risotto as above, and add the saffron liquid to the water/stock to make up 1 1/3 cups. Complete the recipe.