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Great Food! : Lazy person's vegetarian risotto
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 Message 1 of 10 in Discussion 
From: MSN NicknameCaliforniaDreamer©  (Original Message)Sent: 7/4/2008 6:33 AM
I love risotto, but I always found the traditional method a pain. My wrist would ache with all that stirring. Then I discovered the cheat's way - using a rice cooker.
 
1 leek, peeled and chopped
300g arborio rice
1-2 cups orange sweet potato (Kent pumpkin works well too)
1 cup peas
1/2 cup white wine
3.5 cups vegetable and/or chicken stock (go for low-salt variety if you can)
1 oz butter
2 cloves minced garlic
1 teaspoon chopped thyme
pepper
olive oil
parmesan cheese
 
Pre-heat the oven to 180C (350F). Chop the sweet potato into small cubes and toss in olive oil, half the garlic, black pepper and thyme. Put in an oven-proof dish and bake for 15 minutes or until soft when pricked with a fork.
 
Meanwhile, melt the butter in the rice cooker and then add the leek. Give it a stir and let it cook until the leek softens. (Keep an eye on the rice cooker in case it shuts off automatically at this point). Add the rest of the garlic and stir thoroughly together.
 
Add the rice and stir until it is all glistening. Then add the wine and stir until the rice soaks up the wine.
 
Add in the peas and the stock, stir it all together, cover and let the rice cooker do its magic.
 
When the sweet potato is ready, add it into the risotto mixture and give it a stir.
 
When the rice cooker turns itself off, add some freshly grated parmesan and mix it in. Serve.
 
(Note that you will probably find the butter has burned on the bottom of the cooker. No big deal, and the taste is worth the effort of cleaning it).
 
 


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 Message 2 of 10 in Discussion 
From: MSN NicknameJohn-MargettsSent: 7/4/2008 11:13 AM
I have an even easier method - she's called Bestbeloved and cooks a mean risotto.  One of the joys of my latter life is the discovery of edible food - risotto and tarte tatin are two of my favourites that Bestbeloved has introduced me to - and pesto sauce.  I really, really do not miss mother's home cooking - veg cooked until they surrendered - except my her fruit pies.

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 Message 3 of 10 in Discussion 
From: MSN NicknameJoethree56Sent: 7/16/2008 11:26 PM
John, our mothers were trained in the same culinary school. CD, the  risotto sounds delicious as to the stock we buy chicken wings as cheap as we an get em' and presssure cook them to make our stock and add nothing other than water. Herself being premier peasant here then rescues the scraps of meat to be combined with herbs and spices and turned into 'something with rice or pasta' with the essential veg.
Today I used some of that frozen stock with equal parts potatoes and sliced leeks plus mixed herbs and simmered for an hour to make a stew eaten at lunch with wholemeal bread. The blackcurrant crumble that followed was, shall we say, just a little sharp to the taste due to Herself being diabetic. decadent me lashed it with very sweet custard.

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 Message 4 of 10 in Discussion 
From: MSN NicknameCaliforniaDreamer©Sent: 7/17/2008 3:20 AM
Sounds a great lunch Joe. I don't mind a bit of tartness myself, but fresh custard is always good.
 
I don't have a pressure cooker, so I have to make stock the traditional way on the stove. I did that a while ago when I had loads of leftovers from a baked lamb shanks dish I made. It was a long, slow process, but we ended up with a really nice lamb shank and vegetable soup the next day.

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 Message 5 of 10 in Discussion 
From: MSN NicknameLodi-_Sent: 7/17/2008 2:57 PM
Sometimes I wonder why most men are better cooks than women.
 
Heck I can spend all day in the kitchen making a great dinner, but my husband can use the kitchen for 30 minutes and his dish always tastes better than mine.  Maybe I have a problem and don't want to admit it.
 
Why is it that he can barbeque such great things that taste so good but I can't?  Even if it's only hamburgers, his always taste better than mine.
 

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 Message 6 of 10 in Discussion 
From: MSN NicknameJoethree56Sent: 7/17/2008 10:34 PM
My wife contends that are two reasons why I am the better cook. the first is job satisfaction as I enjoy cooking and she does it as a necessary chore. The other is that I have the confidence to  substitute ingredients and to try new sauces and spices and of course have learned from  past experience which of these will rescue a near disaster.

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 Message 7 of 10 in Discussion 
From: MSN NicknameJoethree56Sent: 7/18/2008 1:19 AM
CD. the humble pressure cooker is a useful bit of kit that even puts you in touch with saving the planet mode as it is a fuel friendly device. for batch production of the said chicken stock or the quick rendering of 'nearly' the last juices from the lamb shanks it cannot be bettered. The 'nearly' though refers to the ultimate for such a task. this is the earthenware saltglaze stewpot which was placed in the side oven of the fireplace. Its thick clay walls evened out any variation in oven temperature due to stoking the fire over the long days cooking period.The result after perhaps 16 hours slow cooking was out of this world.
        When I worked on the coalface my grizzled oppo. there was a racing pigeon enthusiast who regularly ate the under performers from his loft. he claimed the 16 hour long slow cooking was the only way to make a good stew with pigeon. He said that what you did was to put them in a brown stewpot with a large pebble....When you could stick a fork in the pebble the pigeon only needed another hour.

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 Message 8 of 10 in Discussion 
From: MSN NicknameCaliforniaDreamer©Sent: 7/18/2008 3:32 AM
racing pigeon enthusiast
 
Now there's one of those long-lost terms redolent of a bygone era. Like "train-spotter".
 
You've convinced me. I think I'll go looking for a pressure cooker.

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 Message 9 of 10 in Discussion 
From: MSN NicknameLodi-_Sent: 7/19/2008 12:22 AM
Thanks for #6 Joe.  I really appreciate it
 
I sure agree with you that PressueCooking is better.  I don't mind doing that at all.

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 Message 10 of 10 in Discussion 
From: MSN NicknameJoethree56Sent: 7/19/2008 10:30 AM
Lodi, I find the pressure cooker comes into its own for making stock as mentioned and for soups and stews. I also cook becon joints in this way as sliced boiled bacon is a firm favourite in our part of the world. It reduces the time spent on cooking these by a considerable amount but I am not a fan of vegetables cooked in this way. To me each type of veg needs individual consideration and as most of them only take a few minutes anyway, I use this bit of kitchen time to finish the sauce and of course to sample the wine

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