This dish, rather this method for
making rice, is based on Mark Bittman's Tomato Paella. I've made his original recipe with the tomato wedges
and it's great. But now I just use this method whenever I want a one pan rice
dish, especially when I want to incorporate other cooked ingredients rather
than having just plain rice on the side. This method lends itself to whatever
ingredients you have on hand. And the next day the flavors are even deeper.
For this version I used red peppers that I had roasted on the grill and homemade chicken stock. In the past I've also used vegetable stock, homemade shrimp stock (the shrimp went into the dish), and plain water. Sometimes I add a splash of white wine. And I've added so many different seasonings and vegetable combinations I can't recall them all.
Here is what you need:
2 tbsp extra virgin olive oil
1 large onion, diced
3-5 cloves garlic, chopped (hey, we love garlic)
1 heavy tbsp tomato paste
2 heavy tbsp canned, diced, green chili
1 heavy tsp freshly ground cumin
1/2 tsp freshly ground allspice
salt & pepper to taste
2 cups short grain rice, like Spanish bomba or Italian arborio
3 1/2 -4 cups broth/stock/water, heated to almost simmering
Make sure you have an oven-proof pan with straight sides large enough to hold all of these ingredients. Begin by preheating your oven to 450 degrees. Heat the oil on medium-high. Have your hot stock close at hand. Once the oil is hot, add the onion and cook about 5 minutes. Add garlic and cook another minute. Stir in tomato paste, green chili, salt, pepper, cumin and allspice and combine.
Add rice and stir to coat all the grains. Cook for just another minute or so. Next add the hot stock and stir to combine. At this point you can taste for seasoning and adjust if necessary. This is when you add your starring veggies or shrimp or chicken or anything else.* Bring it all back up to a boil.
For this version I used red peppers that I had roasted on the grill and homemade chicken stock. In the past I've also used vegetable stock, homemade shrimp stock (the shrimp went into the dish), and plain water. Sometimes I add a splash of white wine. And I've added so many different seasonings and vegetable combinations I can't recall them all.
Here is what you need:
2 tbsp extra virgin olive oil
1 large onion, diced
3-5 cloves garlic, chopped (hey, we love garlic)
1 heavy tbsp tomato paste
2 heavy tbsp canned, diced, green chili
1 heavy tsp freshly ground cumin
1/2 tsp freshly ground allspice
salt & pepper to taste
2 cups short grain rice, like Spanish bomba or Italian arborio
3 1/2 -4 cups broth/stock/water, heated to almost simmering
Make sure you have an oven-proof pan with straight sides large enough to hold all of these ingredients. Begin by preheating your oven to 450 degrees. Heat the oil on medium-high. Have your hot stock close at hand. Once the oil is hot, add the onion and cook about 5 minutes. Add garlic and cook another minute. Stir in tomato paste, green chili, salt, pepper, cumin and allspice and combine.
Add rice and stir to coat all the grains. Cook for just another minute or so. Next add the hot stock and stir to combine. At this point you can taste for seasoning and adjust if necessary. This is when you add your starring veggies or shrimp or chicken or anything else.* Bring it all back up to a boil.
Once the liquid is boiling, put the
pan in the oven and cook for a total of 15 minutes. At 15 minutes I check for
doneness by tasting a couple grains. If more time or liquid is needed, I make
the adjustments and continue cooking a few minutes at a time until the rice is
tender. Take the pan out of the oven and let it sit for a few minutes. Do not,
I repeat, do not grab that pan handle without an oven mitt. I did it once.
Once. That was a long night and the blisters lasted a few weeks.
A nice suggestion in Bittman's
original recipe is to "put the pan over high heat for a few minutes to
develop a bit of a bottom crust before serving." I've not tried this yet
because we always eat before I can think to do it but it sounds good. Once you
dig into the steaming dish any design you created with the veggies is ruined so
I photographed the dish in its pre-chow form, still in the pan.
*I have found that arranging veggies
and things in decorative patterns is for naught if you do it right after you've
added the liquid. Everything ends up floating all over the place and whatever
design you've created is lost. If presentation is important, cook the dish for
at least five minutes or until everything is combined and settled. Then add your
artistic touch. That's what I did with the peppers in the photo. I rarely bother
to decorate food but I wanted you to see that it's a nice touch.
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