Sweet Corn Risotto

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Ryan Goodwin avatar
Recipe video made by Ryan Published on 06/24/2020, viewed by 1484 , 0 Comments
yield4 portionstotal time35m

A great summer dish. Gotta love that sweet corn crunch with the creaminess of a well-made risotto.

What you will need

1 Yellow Onion

2 ears Sweet Corn

1 bunch Chives

2 Tbsp OIive Oil

1 cup Arborio rice

32 oz. Chicken Stock

2 oz. Grated Parmesan

1 Lemon

(Nutritional facts 112 calories, 5.52 g fat, 12.32 g carbohydrates, 3.15 g protein, 6 mg cholesterol, 562 mg sodium)

How to cook

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from the top, perpendicular to the sliced stem face without cutting through the root end. Slice again from the top, perpendicular to the previous slice to dice.

Remove the stem tip and slice in half through the stem to root axis. Slice from the top, perpendicular to the sliced stem face without cutting through the root end. Slice again from the top, perpendicular to the previous slice to dice.

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rom the cob. Perching the cob endwise on a small bowl placed upside down in a large bowl is one of the easiest ways to minimize the mess as corn kernels tend to fly everywhere.

Husk the corn and brush or wipe away all of the fibers. Slice the kernels from the cob. Perching the cob endwise on a small bowl placed upside down in a large bowl is one of the easiest ways to minimize the mess as corn kernels tend to fly everywhere.

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 is appreciable in this dish.

Slice the chives. Don't slice them too fine. A little of that chive texture is appreciable in this dish.

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Heat oil in a saucepan over medium heat.

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d translucent.

Add the diced onion. Stir constantly over heat until the onion is tender and translucent.

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e a faint change in color and aroma after 3 or 4 minutes. When this occurs, move on to the next step.

Add the rice. Stir constantly over heat to toast the rice. You should notice a faint change in color and aroma after 3 or 4 minutes. When this occurs, move on to the next step.

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icking to the bottom. This is the beginning of a process you will carry out until the stock is gone and your risotto is complete.

Stir in just enough broth to get the rice flowing around the pot without sticking to the bottom. This is the beginning of a process you will carry out until the stock is gone and your risotto is complete.

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 away is what builds the characteristic creaminess of a good risotto. When I first learned to make risotto, I was told to never stop stirring. While this may be somewhat overkill, it is far preferable to not stirring enough.

Stir vigorously, scraping the bottom. Keeping the rice moving as it bubbles away is what builds the characteristic creaminess of a good risotto. When I first learned to make risotto, I was told to never stop stirring. While this may be somewhat overkill, it is far preferable to not stirring enough.

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e out of stock, then taste the rice for doneness. If you run out of stock and the rice is still a little firm, continue with water in place of stock. When the rice is tender, move on to the next steps.

As the pot dries out, whip in another splash of broth. Continue until you're out of stock, then taste the rice for doneness. If you run out of stock and the rice is still a little firm, continue with water in place of stock. When the rice is tender, move on to the next steps.

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Toss in the grated parmesan. Stir to distribute.

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Squeeze in the juice. Watch out for those seeds.

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tly. Add a little liquid if necessary.

Stir in the corn kernels. Give them a few minutes to cook, stirring frequently. Add a little liquid if necessary.

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Toss in the chives and stir to distribute.

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ou're happy with the balance. Risotto is an exercise in balance. The first rule is to keep stirring, but once you can build a creamy base for those perfectly cooked rice grains, the trick is to hit that textural matrix with just enough salt and acid to tease the palate. When you really nail it, you know, and it becomes something quite moving.

Add a little salt, some black pepper, maybe another touch of lemon, until you're happy with the balance. Risotto is an exercise in balance. The first rule is to keep stirring, but once you can build a creamy base for those perfectly cooked rice grains, the trick is to hit that textural matrix with just enough salt and acid to tease the palate. When you really nail it, you know, and it becomes something quite moving.

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