Splash and stir, splash and stir, splash and stir. Yes, risotto is an exercise in patience (or tedium), and yes, there comes a point about halfway through the cooking time when you wonder if its all worth it, but when you jam that first creamy, satisfying spoonful into your gob, you realise that your time has truly been well spent. Also, this recipe has nuts, goats cheese and an ungodly amount of butter in it – how could you not??
Ingredients:
Serves 2
- 150g risotto rice
- 450ml light chicken or veg stock
- 400g mushrooms (I used a mix of chestnut mushrooms and oyster mushrooms)
- 1 generous pinch of dried porcini mushrooms (not essential, but adds a mega-burst of woodsy mushroom flavour)
- 1 onions(peeled and very finely diced)
- 1 clove garlic (peeled and finely chopped)
- 75g walnut halves
- 50g goats cheese
- 50g parmesan cheese (finely grated)
- A lot of butter (best to have a whole pack ready)
Method:
Put the stock in a saucepan on a medium heat to keep it warm.
Put the dried mushrooms into a small bowl and cover with boiling water from the kettle.
Toast the walnut halves in a hot dry pan until they start to darken and the room fills with the scent of toasted nuts. Leave aside to cool.
Add a generous knob of butter (mushrooms love butter – I mean seriously, like Britney loved Justin) and a tablespoon of olive oil to the pan and quickly stir in the garlic. Before the garlic starts to darken ‘crumble’ in the mushrooms (simply break them up using your fingers – much quicker than chopping and gives you risotto a nice rustic look) and stir frequently. It will look like an awful lot of mushrooms, but they will reduce as they cook. Add a pinch of salt and pepper and cook until the mushrooms release their liquid and the pan becomes dry again. Transfer the mushrooms to a bowl and leave aside until later.
Remove the dried mushrooms (well actually, rehydrated mushrooms) from the liquid, finely dice and chuck in with the other mushrooms. Don’t throw away the mushroom water, pop this in the pan with the rest of the stock.
Add another tablespoon of oil to the pan and fry the onion until translucent. Stir in the rice until all of the grains are coated in oil. Ladle a spoonful of stock into the pan (you can always start by adding a glass of white wine if you’ve got one knocking about) and stir constantly until the liquid is incorporated. This is the boring bit – keep adding stock and stirring until it is absorbed by the rice.
Once you’ve used about 3 quarters of the stock try tasting a few grains of your rice. There is a lot of debate about the ideal consistency of risotto, classically I think you’re meant to aim of a bit if ‘bite’ to the grains, however, I prefer mine a bit more on the soft and creamy side. If you’re like me you won’t be able to tell by eye, so just try a few grains between each additional spoonful of stock until you get to a consistency that you like (you may not need all the stock, or you may need another splash of hot water from the kettle). Taste and adjust the seasoning if necessary – you probably won’t need any salt (the parmesan will add that) but you will probably like a few grinds of coarse black pepper.
Stir in the mushrooms until warmed through then add in the parmesan and another knob of butter. Remove from the heat, cover and leave for a minute or two to get all sexy and unctuous. You can roughly chop your nuts while you wait – oo-er.
Give the risotto a final stir before heaping into big bowls. Sprinkle with the toasted nuts and crumble over some goats cheese. Serve immediately with a glass of wine or a nice bottle of lager.


