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saffron

Classic Valencia Paella

November 7, 2014 by Michelle Michelotti-Martinez

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Madrid Spain is one of my favorite cities in the world. Cosmopolitan and full of history, outstanding museums and sites, and INCREDIBLE FOOD (the male flamenco dancers are pretty amazing too but we will leave that for another post :)!!!

The coolest thing about the Spanish is that they start their day at about 10, stop for lunch around 1, siesta from 2-4, work from 4-8, and then their evening begins. They adore being out and about, young and old, it doesn’t matter. It is SO refreshing to see kids playing in the streets while the parents visit and take in a meal or a stroll. I totally dig it.

Typically, they don’t just hit a restaurant for dinner although, that may be slowly changing with the influx of tourism but instead, start out by “tapa-hopping”. This is so awesome….they go to a local tapa bar, order a sangria or drink of choice, pick a tapa or two (small appetizers), share with friends and then off to the next spot. This goes on till about 10 or 11 when it comes time to gather at a restaurant for the main course. After this, dancing till 2 or 3……gotta love it!

On my first night in Madrid, we decided to try this ritual; I mean, “When in Rome, do as the Romans do, right?” Plus we are suckers for trying whatever is new and part of the culture. Anyway, we made it through with flying colors for the first 4-tapa stops and I am thinking “seriously, this rocks, I must have been a Spaniard in my last life!” Partying for 6 hours every night? What????

Time came for the main course and our hotel concierge led us to the direction of paella, the infamous rice dish of Spain. We pranced off to the hot spot only to be stopped about a block away with a line of giddy and hungry patrons. We asked the group in front of us if this was “normal” or should we try another place less busy? They looked at one another and giggled, I am sure thinking….AMERICANS, and answered back that all of Madrid comes out at night so hunker down and grab another sangria! NICE!! I can follow directions…

Another 2 sangrias and we finally made it into the restaurant to be seated at a cozy table bustling with laughter and pan after pan of mouth-watering paella. We were salivating!

We perused the menu consisting of 50+ varieties of paella, each one made to order, and realized we probably still were at least an hour away from chow time and it was nearing midnight. It wasn’t helping that the flowing glasses of sangria throughout the tapa bars and in line were finally catching up to me and my eyes were getting so heavy that it felt like someone was standing on the lids. Great, I see it now, the paella comes and I fall face first into it, what a rock star partier. Pathetic.

I managed to somehow stay awake and sober up and when the paella was presented to us, we were ready to devour! We stayed classic and ordered the Valencia paella, laced with chorizo, chicken, seafood, veggies, and topped with huge mussels and clams. Not only did it look delicious it was a culinary art piece. It was colorful and carefully crafted and each piece of food was meticulously placed in a methodical order, it was amazing…no wonder it took an hour, it was worth it and we hadn’t even taken a bite. We look at each other and decided if it tastes as good as it looks, we are moving in.

It did and more. We finished it all, it was 2am and dancing would have to wait.

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Classic Valencia Paella
 
Print
Prep time
1 hour 30 mins
Cook time
1 hour
Total time
2 hours 30 mins
 
This is one of my all time favorite dishes to cook for a party along with a bunch of tapas and the evening can carry on as though we are on the streets of Spain. Cava On!
Author: Michelle Michelotti-Martinez
Recipe type: Entree
Cuisine: Spanish
Serves: 10
Ingredients
  • 10 cup Paella Pan
  • 6 cups chicken broth
  • ½ ounce saffron (about 8 threads)
  • ½ tsp sea salt
  • ⅛ tsp black pepper
  • 2 red bell peppers
  • ¼ cup olive oil
  • 10 skinless chicken thighs cut in thirds
  • ¾ lb pound Spanish chorizo sausage
  • 1½ pounds med-sized shrimp (raw)
  • 1 pound sea scallops cut in thirds
  • 3 cloves garlic chopped
  • 1 med sweet onion chopped
  • ½ tsp turmeric
  • 2 cups arborio or bomba rice
  • ½ cup white wine (Sauvignon blanc preferred)
  • 4 med ripe tomatoes (cut in half, grate, and discard the skin)
  • 2 tsp sweet paprika
  • 25 mussels or clams
  • ½ cup peas, fresh or frozen
  • Lemon wedges for garnish
Instructions
  1. Heat chicken stock on stove in large pot with saffron, salt and pepper. Steep on low heat until adding it to paella.
  2. Roast peppers under broiler until charred on all sides, remove and put in plastic bag to steam, about 5 to 10 minutes. Remove and gently peel, remove seeds and veins. Slice in strips and set aside.
  3. In paella pan, either on stove, barbecue, or paella burner, add olive oil until somewhat hot. Add chicken and cook until 80 percent done. Add a little salt and pepper to start building flavor. Remove and cover. Add sausage in same oil until flavor is distiller into oil. Remove and save. Add shrimp and cook until there is color. Remove and cover. Add scallops and cook till translucent. Add a little oil if needed.
  4. In same oil add garlic for about 20 seconds and then onion. Add a little salt and pepper. Stir until translucent.
  5. Take measured rice and create well, add turmeric and spread over onion and garlic. Add grated tomato and paprika and stir. Now this is all being flavored with ingredients that went into oil, flavor will flow into rice as paella cooks. Cook this for 3 minutes. Add wine and stir. Raise temp underneath pan for a couple of minutes and then add stock, stir. Turn heat down until liquid has mixed well with other ingredients.
  6. Start putting in chicken and mussels or clams, spread evenly. Add sausage, shrimp, and scallops the same way.
  7. Observe at rate liquid is absorbing the rice, if too watery at beginning, fine. You want low simmer so paella cooks evenly.
  8. Cover with foil and simmer for about 45 minutes. DON'T STIR!
Notes
ADDITIONAL TIPS:
DRY VS MOIST
The paella can stay moist for about 20 minutes, if left too long on fire, it will dry. A lot of Spaniards like it crusty on bottom and some soupy, you choose.
FINISHING TOUCHES
Just 5 minutes before done, put on bell peppers and peas. Place decoratively for color. Place on table and eat out of pan or buffet style and serve with lemon wedges
PREPARATION
The French have a wonderful saying, mise en place, meaning to have everything in place and chopped, cleaned, and ready.
SEAFOOD
Keep clams or mussels closed and cold before using them by immediately running them under cold water and washing them when you return from store. Use a wire mesh colander. Place a large plate underneath and put in fridge with a wet cloth over them, this keeps them moist and breathing. You want the shells closed, they will open during cooking. If they don't, throw them away.
SUBSTITUTIONS
You may substitute other shellfish and various vegetables to match to your liking be creative!!!
SHOPPING TIPS:
Shopping can be done 2 days ahead for all ingredients except for chicken and seafood, purchase these the same day you cook paella. It is essential to use arborio or bomba rice, other types don't hold up to cooking.
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Filed Under: Entrees, Fish and Seafood Tagged With: bell peppers, chicken, clams, mussels, paella, peas, rice, saffron, seafood, spanish, valencia

Grilled Calamari Stuffed with Chorizo-Saffron Risotto

June 15, 2014 by Michelle Michelotti-Martinez

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I can still taste the first time we ate these, on the streets of Rome in a small trattoria in Trastevere, you know the ones, down the last alley on the right, dimly lite and a table or two sitting in front of modest facia. These are ALWAYS the best “stumbles”, they NEVER disappoint and we seem to end up back there at least another night, or two, or three. On this trip, I think it was three. We became known enough to have a table reserved for the following evening, same one, in front, with a red tablecloth and a candelabra. I know there are a million of these in Rome but it didn’t matter because this one hit a magical note.

When we sat down to this meal I honestly thought that maybe I didn’t get the memo that I had ordered my last meal of my life….I would have been okay with that, really. It was 4 courses of sheer bliss and this was just one of of the many delicious delectables. We started with freshly forged mushrooms and baby potatoes sautéed in butter and served with crostini and then moved onto homemade pasta with freshly shaved truffles from Alba and then onto the infamous calamari dish and only to finish off with the BEST tiramisu and espresso I have ever had. Oh did I mention the  amazing wine with every course?  Now you get why I would have been fine with this being my last meal.

I don’t know what it is about Italian Cuisine, maybe it’s the way a tall dark handsome man comes to your table and explains the dishes with a gorgeous accent while passionately gesturing every word with his hands as though they are his backup singers for his musical gig or if it is the fact you are in one of the most incredible cities in the world without a care or a concern or perhaps its the fact they use nothing but the local, freshest, and best ingredients. All I know is that I still think about this dish and Italy.

So we took the table and the handsome waiter approaches welcoming us to the trattoria and whisping us away with his explanation of  the featured dishes. He used words like bellissima and succulento (secretly I’m thinking he must be talking about me) and instead I quickly realize he is speaking about a calamari tube. Time to snap back to reality.

You might be wondering why I choose the calamari dish to highlight and honestly, this was the dish I sincerely wondered if it was as good as he explained or was it his explanation and fab accent? I mean we all know that calamari, especially the tubes, can get really rubbery if  not cooked correctly and then the dish has the consistency of a tire.

Whatever it was, him, the words, or Rome (probably all 3), I ordered the calamari. It was everything he said and then some. Stuffed with risotto and then grilled to perfection topped with local, freshly pressed olive oil with enough at the bottom of the dish to mop up with some home made bread from the antique wooden oven next door. Oh yes, and that fabulous glass of house made wine….I forgot to mention how he explained that, I was ready to spend the night in the cellar.

So here’s my version of  one of “the unknown last supper” dishes. I changed up the risotto to include chorizo as I love it with seafood as it adds a incredible dimension to the flavor profile. I hope you enjoy it as much as I and even though I can’t superimpose the Italian waiter or Rome for that matter, I’ll dig up a photo for you to transport yourself…….

I never should have doubted the kings of cuisine…….

The red tablecloth and candelabra…

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Buon Appetito!

Grilled Calamari Stuffed with Chorizo-Saffron Risotto
 
Print
Prep time
10 mins
Cook time
50 mins
Total time
1 hour
 
The key is to be careful not to overcook the squid as it can easily become to "tough and rubbery". Serve with a simple arugula salad, crusted bread and a glass of pinot grigio or rose and transport yourself…..
Author: Michelle Michelotti-Martinez
Recipe type: Entree
Cuisine: Italian
Serves: 4
Ingredients
  • 8 calamari tubes
  • 1 cup arborio rice
  • 4 cups chicken stock (more if needed)
  • pinch of saffron (put in stock)
  • ½ cup cured chorizo, diced*(hot or mild or combo)
  • ½ cup sweet onion, diced
  • ¼ cup white wine
  • 2 T unsalted butter
  • ½ cup parmigiano-reggiano
  • sea salt and freshly ground pepper, to taste
  • olive oil
Instructions
  1. Rinse the calamari "tubes" and pat dry
  2. On stovetop, heat chicken broth until warm and add saffron
  3. In a medium stockpot, heat oil and add chorizo.
  4. Saute until juices release a bit and then add onion, sauté until transparent and add garlic.
  5. Stir and add rice.
  6. Add wine and allow to absorb into rice
  7. Begin to add stock, ½ a cup at a time until it absorbs into rice (don't fully allow the rice to get "dry" before adding more stock. Stir constantly.
  8. Taste rice and it should be "al dente". Consistency will be creamy but not "gooey". This is KEY to a good risotto
  9. Add parmigiano-reggiano and butter.
  10. Open Calamari tubes and fill about ¾ full with risotto mixture. Fold over and seal with a toothpick. Repeat with remaining calamari.
  11. Brush with olive oil and salt and pepper.
  12. Heat grill to medium and place calamari directly onto grill. Cook for a total of about 5 minutes turning over to get even grill marks on each side.
  13. Serve immediately.
3.2.2802

 

Filed Under: Fish and Seafood Tagged With: calamari, chorizo, grilled, risotto, saffron, seafood, stuffed

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Eatentions is a way of being with our food experience. It is a thought-filled process starting with connection to source all the way through the finished creation. We like to call it "from root to experience". Its the entire thing, its that conscious. Thank you for popping by and welcome to our life.

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