Categories
Pasta

Real Risotto

Real risotto is about two things — the rice and the stirring.  Without the right rice and some elbow grease, one should just be realistic and make pilaf!

I’m a longtime fan of risotto, with memories of holding my infant daughter in one arm while obsessively stirring a risotto with the other.  When she was less than a year old, I whispered to her about the key elements of a great risotto.  When she’s living in some college dorm, do you think she’ll become the “go-to” chef for late night munchies and cook her mother’s mushroom risotto recipe for her friends?

In the U.S., we typically use Arborio rice for risotto, and the result is quite satisfying. However, on my previous trip to Italy, I learned that the Italians wouldn’t think of using Arborio — they use Carnoroli rice.  So, I bought some and made a risotto in our Venice apartment last summer.  And we loved it.  I carried the remainder of the package home and recently used the last of it.

When we arrived at our Lucca apartment in Tuscany last week, the cabinet contained another unopened package of Carnoroli, which I happily used to make two risottos during our visit.  The first was (of course!) a mushroom risotto.  The second was a sundried tomato risotto with onions and white wine, where the rice served as the backdrop for delicious sundried tomatoes I picked up in the weekly market in Pistoia.

 I buy very few souvenirs on our trips, as my focus is really on the experiences rather than on the things (ok…..I did come home with a couple new Italian leather handbags this time!).  But, my most gratifying “souvenir” is my new bag of Carnaroli rice!

Categories
Pasta

Butternut Squash, Blue Cheese and Rosemary Risotto — Chopping Block Report

This recipe called to me for weeks before I got around to making it.  And it was worth the wait!   

As is typical for me, I didn’t follow the recipe exactly.  I omitted the spinach, as I really wanted this recipe to be about the squash, cheese & rosemary.  In my opinion, even with this simplifying adjument, the recipe needed more squash and rosemary.  I realized this in time to add extra rosemary, but not to add extra squash.  Next time, I’ll use half as much rice for this amount of squash!

Categories
Pasta

Lasagna, Love, and Lowell

For last weekend’s Green Goddess reunion, I prepared a recipe that has become a classic in my repertoire — roasted butternut squash lasagna.  For me, a “classic” is a recipe that friends and family request in advance of get-togethers, one I’ve made so many times that I no longer refer to the actual recipe that first inspired it, and often, one that invokes extra special memories.

This recipe hits a home run on all 3 points!

I first made this recipe for a big work-related gathering in February 2001.  I can’t tell you how many times I’ve made it since, but I can tell you that it was the meal I made in advance of our daughter’s birth and froze, which I then served at our first family dinner with my parents-in-law when KC was 3 days old.  I can tell you that it was one of the many offerings at a combination wedding party, housewarming, and meet-the-new baby weekend that we hosted several weeks later.  And I can tell you that it is one of the recipes that comes to mind whenever the Green Goddesses are gathering and whenever I start to feel the first crisp fall air of the season.

But none of those things are the most memorable thing about this recipe for me.  The most memorable thing about this recipe for me is that it inspired the only marriage proposal I’ve ever received.  Now, you might be thinking that my husband must REALLY like this dish.  But you’d be wrong.  Peter likes this dish, but he’d take a classic lasagna over this one in a heartbeat.  One of the ironies of my life is that the only marriage proposal to which I’ve ever been a party did not involve my husband.  It came from the late Lowell Trede, father of one of my best friends, who was the recipient of a pan of this lasagna that was leftover from that very first gathering where it was served.  That’s right….I sent a pan of lasagna home with Teri, who gave it to her father. The pan came back spotlessly clean and accompanied by an endearing marriage proposal!  Lowell LOVED this lasagna!  And I adored Lowell for his enthusiasm!  But I held out, after promising Lowell more lasagna….and the rest is history! 

Make this lasagna and share it with the people in your life.  Let me know what happens!