grilled mushroom risotto
main courses | serves 4-6
A mushroom risotto can be taken in many different ways, depending on what kind of mushrooms you have and whether they are introduced at the very beginning of cooking or just added at the end, as I’m going to do here. The inspiration for this recipe came when I was in Japan and saw mushrooms being cooked completely dry on a barbecue or griddle pan. This way of cooking brings out a really fresh and nutty flavour in them; perfect for being dressed lightly with olive oil, salt and lemon juice or stirred into a risotto at the last minute before serving.
Heat your stock in a saucepan and keep it on a low simmer. Place the porcini mushrooms in a bowl and pour in just enough hot stock to cover. Leave for a couple of minutes until they’ve softened. Fish them out of the stock and chop them, reserving the soaking liquid.
In a large pan, heat a glug of olive oil and add the onion and celery. Slowly fry without colouring them for at least 10 minutes, then turn the heat up and add the rice. Give it a stir. Stir in the vermouth or wine – it’ll smell fantastic! Keep stirring until the liquid has cooked into the rice. Now pour the porcini soaking liquid through a sieve into the pan and add the chopped porcini, a good pinch of salt and your first ladle of hot stock. Turn the heat down to a simmer and keep adding ladlefuls of stock, stirring and massaging the starch out of the rice, allowing each ladleful to be absorbed before adding the next.
Carry on adding stock until the rice is soft but with a slight bite. This will take about 30 minutes. Meanwhile, get a dry griddle pan hot and grill the wild mushrooms until soft. If your pan isn’t big enough, do this in batches. Put them into a bowl and add the chopped herbs, a pinch of salt and the lemon juice. Using your hands, get stuck in and toss everything together – this is going to be incredible!
Take the risotto off the heat and check the seasoning carefully. Stir in the butter and the Parmesan. You want it to be creamy and oozy in texture, so add a bit more stock if you think it needs it. Put a lid on and leave the risotto to relax for about 3 minutes.
Take your risotto and add a little more seasoning or Parmesan if you like. Serve a good dollop of risotto topped with some grilled dressed mushrooms, a sprinkling of freshly grated Parmesan and a drizzle of extra virgin olive oil.

• from
Jamie at Home
ingredients
• 1.5 litres hot chicken stock
a handful of dried porcini mushrooms
• olive oil
• 1 small onion, peeled and finely chopped
• 2 sticks of celery, trimmed and finely chopped
• 400g risotto rice
• 150ml vermouth or white wine
• sea salt and freshly ground black pepper
• 4 large handfuls of wild mushrooms (try shiitake, girolle, chestnut or oyster – definitely no button mushrooms, please!), cleaned and sliced
• a few sprigs of fresh chervil, tarragon or parsley, leaves picked and chopped
• juice of 1 lemon
• 25g butter
• 2 nice handfuls of freshly grated Parmesan cheese, plus extra for serving
• extra virgin olive oil
Do you have to use a specific rice for risotto?
Enjoy your cooking, Thanks Mate
I love your risotto recipes! A year ago I couldn't cook at all. This year I've got a kitchen aide mixer, a pasta maker and have made all sorts of brownies,muffins and cupcakes. This week I made my own fresh pasta and have tried 4 of your risotto recipes. My nephew eats all my experiments and loves you to death now! I made that one risotoo with the roasted garlic and the breadcrumbs with almonds and mascarpone cheese and it was pure heaven!!! My sisters think it's so weird that I went from not cooking at all to making fresh pasta!
This is really cool, a few minutes ago I watched on TV this series, where Jamie is preparing this risotto. I've seen a lot of series, and I am really excited! I am from Ukraine, Odessa and I wish to open my own restaurant in the future, so I watch a lot of TV-shows with Jamie. And it is great!
Regarding the salt, if you run out of stock part way through, just use boiling water instead of more stock. Or you could use a salt-reduced stock. I go easy on the salt, myself, but I think that's personal preference.
Lynn - I find that risotto is a dish that waits for no-one! You need everyone ready around the table, and serve it within 3-5 minutes of it finishing, otherwise you can have a stodgy, gelatinous mess. So, by all means serve it to company at your house, but probably don't take it to someone elses'. Also, to serve 10-12 people, you would need an enormous pan.
My husband and I adore risotto, but we never order it at a restaurant, unless it is an incredibly authentic Italian one and we know they are going to cook it from scratch there and then (which usually means a wait on the order).
Did you boil it too quick rather than simmer it on maybe half power?I am going to make this next week so will let you know if I have the same problem!
But that is not the main reason why I adore it.
I run a soup lunch club once a month and would like your permission to reproduce the recipe for a soup cookbook I'm making. We're hoping to raise £20,000 for a school building to be built in a poor community in Northern Uganda. This is just one of our fund-raising efforts.
It won`t be forgotten.
Thank you!!!