Several years ago I posted a rather infamous recipe for risotto on Chowhound that became something of a legend: I could not have been less flexible nor more authoritarian in stating how to make it. Still, despite my insistence on not changing one ingredient nor altering one step at least 15 of the 40+ that I know who made it, changed something. I had people tell me it was impossible that I used so little stock, others that I was using far too much butter, many more ask me why I would want over a pound of cheese and a half pound of butter in any one rice dish where there was only one pound of rice? So they made it with less.
One person asked me if it could be made in a pressure cooker. Another if it could be baked. I was even asked if Uncle Ben's would do. Several told me it was great then noted they used bouillion cubes and "cooking wine." And gorgonzola that wasn't sweet. Reggiano that wasn't Reggiano. Olive oil that was Wesson.
And so on.
This is a different recipe. It's a bit more complex. Don't change a thing. Don't even THINK about changing anything. If you have to ask the question "if," then DON'T MAKE IT!!!
But if you do, and if you follow this exactly sourcing the ingredients as specified with sources listed below you will have a risotto that will challenge anyone's. Even anyone's "absolute best." I've probably made my gorgonzola risotto for 20 or more over the past several years. I made this for the first time this past weekend and believe that it may be better.
1/4 cup olive oil
1 cup sweet onion, minced
16 ozs. violane nano
1 1/2 cups white wine (I use chardonnay)
3 cups good chicken stock, warm
8 ozs. gorgonzola dolce, room temperature in cubes (slice off "rind")
6 ozs. Taleggio, room temperature in cubes
1/3 cup Mascaperone
3 ozs. Reggiano, freshly grated
6 ounces unsalted Vermont butter, room temperature in cubes
8 ounces coarsely chopped unsalted pistachios, toasted in oven for three or four minutes @350 degrees
2 Forelle pears, 1/4" dice
salt
pepper
In a heavy 3 quart saucepan heat olive oil over medium/medium high heat. Add onions and saute for minute; add rice and toast for two minutes, stirring constantly. Do not let dry or stick to bottom. Add wine and cook until reduced, stirring constantly-about two minutes. Add stock one ladle at a time and, stirring constantly, cook until absorbed. Continue to add stock until all is absorbed. Then add gorgonzola, continuing to stir for 30 seconds. Add Taleggio and continue to stir for another three minutes. Take pot off heat and add, in order continuing to stir, Mascaperone, Reggiano, butter, pistachios and diced pears. All of the cheese must be at room temperature when added. All should be absorbed within a minute or so into the risotto. When completely absorbed this will have a creamy consistency yet each individual kernal of arborio will be visible. The texture will actually "set" with a few minutes.
The recipe and size of portions and ingredients are correct. This is rich; extremely rich. Approximately 6,500 calories and will serve at least 8 depending on portion size.
Sources: violane nano (Dean and DeLuca, Italian Market in Vienna, Balducci's)
(Note: Wegman's does NOT sell violane nano)
all four cheeses and Forelle pears are available at Dean and DeLuca,
Whole Food's and Balducci's. Wegman's does not carry Forelle pears
however does carry all four of the cheese.
Chicken stock does NOT come from a can; it is homemade; failing this
frozen chicken stock sold by Balducci's, Dean and DeLuca and some
Whole Foods is a decent substitute.
Vermont butter is fantastic American made butter-the price reflects
this! It is sold by Balducci's, Dean and DeLuca and Wegman's. Whole
Foods, inexpicably, does not carry it.
Original post from 2002:
http://www.chowhound.com/boards/general11/...ages/30466.html
There were additional threads including this one:
http://www.chowhound.com/boards/general16/...ages/52105.html
And this one which includes one of the best I ever saw on CH from "torta basilica"
http://www.chowhound.com/boards/general16/...ages/52298.html
