
I began making risotto back in the early ’80s, and there was — and still is — a great deal of mystique surrounding the dish. First, I was warned to never stop stirring. I must stir the risotto constantly or a disastrous mass of glutinous rice stuck to a burned pot would be inevitable. That’s 40 or so minutes of constant stir-time, my friends.
I was raising babies during that era and was torn; ruin my risotto or pick up my colicky, screaming infant? Motherly instincts (reluctantly) prevailed, and I learned a valuable life lesson: one can leave the risotto a couple of minutes without a culinary disaster. Just remember to douse the rice with stock and give a little stir before you stray.
Second, I was instructed by venerable Italian chefs that the only rice I could consider using for a proper risotto is Arborio rice and it must come from the Po Valley of Italy. I still agree with this dictate. It is the classic rice for risotto, yielding the holy grail of creamy texture and toothsome bite. And Arborio from this region produces a far superior risotto than those poseurs calling themselves “risotto rice” from Missouri or China.
With that said, I often take poetic license in the name of adding nutritional whole grains to my diet. The photograph is, indeed, risotto made with Po Valley Arborio rice. I couldn’t bear the thought of a million and one black-clad Italian grandmother’s swarming down on me in my sleep. (Those chefs taught me well.) But if you substitute semi-pearled farro or pearled barley for the Arborio rice you may be quite pleased with the result.
Local asparagus, an ingredient in this recipe, is finally poking its nose into markets around town, two weeks later than last year. Can one have too much of a good thing? Not when it comes to home-grown asparagus.
Fresh asparagus is available year round but, to me, May asparagus from Michigan soil has a brighter, fresher taste, and a crispier texture than Mexican asparagus bought January in Michigan. Purchasing asparagus from local farmers when the morning dew sweats their pointy little helmets is a sweet treat, indeed.
This Ina Garten recipe for Spring Green Risotto is a marvelous celebration of flavors sprung from the soil with the sunny flavor of abundant lemon. Ina’s addition of mascarpone in the end is one of the many reasons why we love her so!
This adaptation of Ina Garten’s recipe may be found in her Barefoot Contessa “Back to Basics”cookbook.