Friday, 10 April 2015

Ossobuco and Risotto

Here goes my bi-annual post. I'm really not very good at keeping up with this blog. Life gets in the way. I have a few hundred photos of food, and can't even remember all the ingredients for some of those dishes. Spring is in the air, but it's still cool and damp enough for comfort food.

Today I made ossobuco and wild mushroom risotto. This dinner was fairly inexpensive. I used ingredients that I already had. This was the first time I made ossobuco, though it wasn't the first time I've eaten it. I didn't use a recipe, because I wanted to use stuff I already had. The ossobuco I bought a few weeks ago, but didn't have a chance to make it then, so I froze it. For 9.40 CDN, it was enough for 2, and lots of marrow and gooey bits. Mmmm.



Here is what I used and did, but feel free to substitute anything. If you're familiar with my way of cooking, you'll notice that I eyeball amounts, and often don't make the same thing twice (because I like to use up what I have).

Ossobuco

• Melt butter in a pan or pot, something that has a lid and isn't too shallow.
• Take the veal and cover both sides in flour, then fry on both sides for about 10-15 minutes.
• Remove meat from pan, put it on a plate, then add sliced onions and garlic, simmer for a bit, add chopped celery, basil, tomato, lemon balm (or lemon peel or some other lemon herb). Stir, then add stock (I used turkey, because I roasted a whole turkey last week, so I saved the stock, used a bit for this, and froze the rest for future use).
• I also added a bit of white wine vinegar and a bit of red port. Ideally I would've used white wine, but I didn't have any. Veal works with reds and whites, so you can choose which you want, or mix.
• Place the veal in the pan, cover and simmer for 2-2.5 hours.
• This yummy sauce covers the veggies in this meal.



Risotto

• Melt some coconut oil or lard in a pot.
• Coat (dry) short grain rice in the fat. I used Arborio.
• Add 3x the liquid relative to the dry rice, but do it about 1/2 cup at a time. I used water, but you can use stock. Since the ossobuco is rich, I wanted the rice to be light, which is why I didn't add grated parmesan at the end.
• After the first or second portion of liquid, add spices. I used rosemary, tarragon, thyme, salt, pepper, celery seed, and dehydrated mushrooms. Keeping dry mushrooms in your pantry is awesome, they add so much flavour to all kinds of things, are inexpensive, and have a lengthy shelf life (just keep them in a dry place).
• Keep adding the liquid.
• Part way through I added a piece of Grana Padano rind (a cheese similar to parmesan, but milder), just because I had it and wanted to use it up. You can add grated cheese (parmesan or something like it) at the end to add flavour and creaminess, but like I said I wanted to keep it light. The mushrooms and herbs added lots of yummy flavour.



Easy and delicious!

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