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MILK STOUT RISOTTO
Milk stout risotto
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How to:

Make clarified butter (ghee)

Clarified butter or ghee, as it's known in India, is used when you want to fry something in butter for an extended time or at a high heat. You still get the delicious butter flavour and golden, crisp colour and texture, but without the taste of burnt butter.

For clarified butter (ghee), slowly melt unsalted butter over low heat. Don't let the butter come to a boil, and don't stir it. This allows the milk solids, that burn the fastest, to separate from the liquid butter.

Once the butter has separated into three layers, there will be foamy milk solids on top, clarified butter in the middle, and milk solids on the bottom. Turn off the heat and skim the foamy white solids from the top. Then ladle off the clarified butter. Be careful not to disturb the milk solids at the bottom of the pan.

Clarified butter can be used immediately. Or, let it solidify and keep it in the refrigerator for up to three to four weeks. Just remelt to use. One pound of unsalted butter yields 1-1/4 cups clarified butter.

Tip: you can flavour your clarified butter to use in just about any dish. One example is Ethiopian nitr kibbeh - clarified butter infused with onions, garlic, ginger, black pepper, and turmeric. Cardamom, star anise or fenugreek can also be added. It's used as a spread or to fry off onions or sauté meat and is absolutely delicious.

Use ghee to cook Indian chana magaj 

 



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Recipe by: Luke Dale-Roberts
Serves: 4
Allergens: Wheat free / Gluten free
Category: Easy
Prep time: 15 minutes
Cooking time: 20 minutes
Ingredients:
1 cup vegetable or chicken stock
50 g butter
2 t fresh thyme, chopped
2 cloves garlic, minced
1 pinch salt
250 g arborio rice
330 ml stout bottle
200 g butternut, cubed and roasted
150 g assorted mushrooms, sautéed
50 g parmesan, grated
1 onion, finely chopped
Cooking instructions:

Place the stock in a saucepan and bring to a slow boil.

Place half the butter in a wide-bottomed pan over a medium to low heat.

Add the onion, garlic, thyme and salt and sweat with the lid on until soft and transparent.

Add the risotto and fry for 5 minutes, then add the stout and simmer for a further 5 minutes.

Add the stock, a ladle at a time, allowing the liquid to be absorbed before each new addition, and cook gently for 15 minutes, stirring continuously.

When the rice is starting to soften but still has a bit of a bite, add the roast butternut, sautéed mushrooms, Parmesan and remaining butter.

Tip from the Chef: When I teach my guys how to cook risotto, I insist that the stock be boiling when it’s added.

And the way I tell them to check if the rice is ready is to have them bite on a few grains with their back teeth – if they are left with a hard pip stuck in a tooth, it’s not done.



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Useful Tools

conversion table

½ t = 2 ml
1 t = 5 ml
1 T = 15 ml
½ cup = 125 ml
1 cup = 250 ml

Fahrenheit - Celsius

Subtract 32, then multiply by 0.56

Celsius - Fahrenheit

Multiply by 1.8, then add 32




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