Time 45m Yield 4 Number Of Ingredients 10 Steps:

Sauté shallots: Heat the olive oil in a medium-sized pot over medium-high heat. When it is hot, add the shallots and stir to combine. Let these sauté for 2-3 minutes. Heat stock and water: Meanwhile, heat up the stock and 1 cup of water in a small pot. You want this at a simmer while you make the rice. Add garlic and prosciutto to shallots: Add the garlic and the diced prosciutto to the pot with the shallots, stir well and cook for another 1-2 minutes. Add rice: Pour in the rice, stir again and sauté for 2-3 minutes, stirring constantly. Slowly ladle in stock: Ladle some of the hot stock into the pot and start stirring. Risi e bisi is cooked like risotto, and is supposed to be pretty soupy, so you need a lot of water and you need to stir it constantly. Let this first ladle of stock cook down before you add the next. Keep adding stock, letting it cook down and stirring until you’re done with the simmering stock. It is likely that you may need at least one more cup of water to finish the dish, because all that stirring in an open pot means you evaporate more liquid than you would when you cook rice the normal way, i.e., covered. If you think you are going to need more water, add more to the simmering stock. When you get to this last cup of water, add the peas: Keep stirring until the water has almost cooked away. Taste some rice and test for salt and doneness: Add a little salt and some more hot tap water if the rice is still crunchy - you want the rice to be a little al dente, but not so much you’re gnawing on raw grain. Add the parsley and the parmesan and mix well: Your finished rice should be slightly soupy, so it’s OK to add a tad more water before serving. Links: Risi e Bisi with Baked Prosciutto Chips - from Sippity Sup Rice and Peas Salad - from The Nourishing Gourmet

Time 35m Number Of Ingredients 11 Steps:

After sauteing the leeks and rice as above. Add at least 7 - 8 cups broth, peas, bay leaves, bring to a boil, cover and cook for 20 - 30 minutes until rice is tender. Remove from heat add in parsley. Let set a few minutes and serve as desired.

Time 4h Yield 8 serving(s) Number Of Ingredients 12 Steps:

Saute rice, onions, garlic and bacon in a skillet with the olive oil until bacon is done, about 5 minutes, stirring occasionally. In saucepan, mix the broths with the water and bring to a boil. Add the Italian seasoning and basil. Add both mixtures to slow cooker. Cover and cook on low 2-3 hours, until liquid is absorbed. Stir in peas. Cover and cook 30 minutes more. Stir in cheese.

Time 30m Yield 4-6 serving(s) Number Of Ingredients 6 Steps:

In a large non stick pan sauté the onions in the butter and oil until they’re translucent being careful not to brown them. Add the peas and a half cup of the broth and cook them for about five minutes. Add approximately one quart of broth and bring to a boil. Add the rice and mix in well. Continue cooking until the rice is ready mixing often. If the rice gets too dry add some more broth. Mix in 1 tablespoons butter and 1/4 cup grated parmesan. Serve hot.

Time 35m Yield 4-5 serving(s) Number Of Ingredients 12 Steps:

Set Rice Cooker for the quick cook or regular cycle. Place the olive oil and butter in the rice cooker bowl. When the butter melts, add the shallots and celery. Cook, stirring a few times, until the shallots are softened but not browned, 2 to 3 minutes. Add the wine and cook for a couple of minutes. Add the rice and stir to coat the grains with the hot butter. Cook, stirring occasionally, until the grains of rice are transparent except for a white spot on each, 3-5 minutes. Add the stock and peas, if you are using fresh, mature peas; stir to combine. Close the cover and reset for the Porridge cycle, or for the regular cycle and set a timer for 20 minutes. When the machine switches to the Keep Warm cycle or the timer sounds, stir the rice with a wooden or plastic rice paddle or wooden spoon. The rice should be only a bit liquid and the rice should be al dente, tender with just touch of tooth resistance. If needed, cook for a few minutes longer. This rice will hold on the Keep Warm cycle for up to 1 hour. When ready to serve, add the peas, if you are using frozen or very tender fresh ones; stir just to combine. Add the butter and close the lid or 2-3 minutes to allow to melt and the peas to heat through. Stir in the cream, cheese and salt to taste. Serve immediately.

Time 30m Yield 4 to 6 servings Number Of Ingredients 15 Steps:

Melt butter in a heavy, wide saucepan over medium high heat. Add onion and cook until softened, about 5 minutes. Stir in rice and season with salt and pepper. Continue cooking for 2 minutes. Add 2 cups chicken broth and bring to a brisk simmer. Cook 6 minutes, stirring occasionally as broth is absorbed. Add 2 more cups broth and cook for another 6 minutes, until rice is cooked through, but firm. Meanwhile, heat olive oil in a skillet over medium heat. Add pancetta and cook 2 minutes without browning. Add scallions, stir to coat and cook 1 minute. Add garlic, sage leaves and peas. Season generously with salt and pepper. Add 1/2 cup broth and simmer until peas are done, about 2 minutes. Add pea tendrils and cook until just wilted, about 1 minute. Add pea mixture to rice mixture and gently stir together. Add enough broth to keep rice a bit soupy. Check seasoning. Stir in parsley, lemon zest and Parmesan and serve immediately.

More about “risi e bisi italian style rice and peas recipes”

Time 35m Yield 4 servings Number Of Ingredients 10 Steps:

Heat broth in a small pot on the back burner over medium-low. Set a wide, shallow, long-handled pan over medium-low. Melt 2 tablespoons butter and 2 tablespoons olive oil until butter foams. Set the remaining 1 tablespoon butter back in the fridge to keep cold. Add scallions, season with a pinch of salt and stir until sweated and soft, 1 to 2 minutes. Add zucchini coins, season with a pinch of salt, and stir until they start to sweat, begin to soften and become a little translucent, about 2 minutes. Push vegetables out to the edge of the pan in a ring, leaving an empty space in the center. Adjust heat - a tad hotter - then add the remaining 1 tablespoon olive oil, then rice. Stir rice until coated and glistening, and keep stirring until it begins sizzling slightly. Microplane the garlic over the sizzling rice, then draw the vegetables into the rice as well, stirring well to combine, leaving a little space - a moatlike ring - along the edges where the vegetables were. Add the peas to the empty outer space you just created. Run your spoon through them, keeping them in their outer ring, coating them in the oil and moisture. Season the whole business with another pinch of salt. Ladle a generous cup of hot broth over the rice mixture in the center, seasoning with salt at each addition of broth, and stirring as the liquid is absorbed. Add another generous cupful of broth, stirring the rice while it absorbs. Repeat once more with a third cup of hot broth, stirring until the rice starts to show signs of its signature starchy and creamy nature. Keep the peas at the outer edge as much as possible. (This might remind you of making homemade pasta, when you are whisking the eggs in the well of the flour and very slowly drawing in the flour.) This entire step should take about 20 minutes. Adjust the heat slightly along the way for a very gentle, hot steaming - not hard simmering - stirring all the while. Add the remaining broth all at once. The peas and vegetables will slightly float on the surface, while the rice will naturally remain submerged. Stir gently or shake and swirl the pan in the classic cresting, swelling wave style, all’onde, bringing everything together - rice, zucchini, peas, broth - about 7 more minutes, maybe 10 at most. Turn off heat. Season assertively with black pepper. Stir or swirl in the remaining chilled butter, and finish with the grated cheese. Serve hot.