Arroz de carabineros. (Photo: Josh Elliott) |
I´ve eaten a lot of paellas in my time, from the classic València version, with rabbit and snails, cooked on a wood fire in the rice fields of the Albufera, to a rustic Andalusian campo one where we picked the fava beans and peas from the nearby huerta to add to the rice with chicken and shrimp. I’ve made my share of paellas too, some pretty good.
But the best paella rice I’ve ever eaten was at a beach restaurant on the Costa del Sol, a glorified chiringuito. We ordered arroz de carabineros, rice cooked in paella (the typical flat pan is called “paella” as is the rice cooked in it) with jumbo red shrimp. It contained almost no protein matter. The shrimp had been reduced to essence giving the perfectly cooked rice intense flavor. The arroz was served topped with a few pieces of the barely cooked carabineros plus their heads, for sucking. No baroque garnishes. No sauce. No lemons. Arroz in its purest form.
I vowed to try to make rice that good. Because it’s World Paella Day (September 20), today I took up the challenge.
My arroz--rice in paella with shrimp. Flavor is fantastic, texture pretty good. I served cosas, accompaniments, as side dishes. |
What I learned about building flavor can be applied to any rice cooked in paella, including more elaborate ones with chicken, squid, clams, shrimp, artichokes, beans, etc. There are three steps—a sofrito, the foundation for building flavor; a fish/shellfish stock, and the cooking of the rice.
Sofrito, first step in building flavor. |
Sofrito
This is where flavor begins so make the sofrito as intense as possible. If possible, cook shrimp heads, small crabs, squid bits, etc., with the vegetables, puré the sofrito, shells and all, then push the thick sauce through a fine sieve. Lacking crustaceans, add a few canned anchovies to contribute umami to the basic sauce. This recipe makes enough sofrito for three or four paellas. It can be prepared in advance of cooking the rice and refrigerated or stored in the freezer.
Makes about 2 ¼ cups sofrito.
2 ¼ pounds ripe tomatoes
Olive oil
2 cups chopped onions
½ to 1 cup chopped green peppers
4 cloves chopped garlic
¼ cup white wine
2-3 anchovy fillets, chopped (optional)
2 teaspoons smoked pimentón (paprika)
Sprig of thyme
1 bay leaf
Sprig of parsley
1 teaspoon salt
Freshly ground black pepper
Heat oven to 400ºF.
Place the tomatoes on a rimmed sheet pan, drizzle them with oil and roast them until very soft, about 30 minutes. (Alternatively, drop the tomatoes in a pot of boiling water until the skins begin to split. Drain.) When tomatoes are cool enough to handle, cut out cores and slip off the skins. You should have approximately 3 cups of tomatoes.
Heat ¼ cup of oil in a pan. Sauté the onions on medium-high until they begin to brown around the edges, 5 minutes. Add 2 tablespoons of water and continue sautéing until the water cooks away and onions begin to sizzle again. Add the peppers and garlic and sauté 5 minutes more. Add the anchovies, if using. Add the wine and cook 1 minute to cook off the alcohol.
Use kitchen scissors to cut the tomatoes into pieces. Add them to the pan with the thyme, bay, parsley, salt and pepper. Fry the tomatoes on high heat 2 minutes. Lower the heat and cook the sofrito, covered, 15 minutes, stirring occasionally. Uncover the pan and cook 10 to 15 minutes more until the sofrito is quite thick. Discard the bay leaf and parsley.
Puré the sofrito with a hand-held blender. Set aside ¾ cup of sofrito for use in the paella. Divide the remainder in half and store in the refrigerator or freezer for future use.
Fish Stock
Caldo de Pescado
Fish head for the stock pot. |
Rice with Shrimp in Paella
Arroz al Marinero
Unlike traditional paella, this arroz starts on top of the stove and is finished in the oven. If you want socarrat, the crunchy rice on the bottom, you will need to return the pan to the stove-top after the oven.
Size matters. I used a 34-centimeter (13.3-inches) paella pan for 2 cups of rice (400 grams/ 14 ounces), serving 6. This size fits on a large burner of an induction stove and into a normal oven. The cooked rice reached a depth of 1 ½ inches. The restaurant version was made in a similar size pan, but with half the quantity of rice and liquid, changing the timing, the texture of the rice and the yield. I’ll try that method next time, using a thinner layer of rice for the same pan diameter, and see how it changes the rice.
Use a medium-short grain rice, sometimes called “round rice,” for paella. València varieties include Bahia, Senia, Marisma and Bomba. They are similar to Italian risotto rice, but, unlike risotto, paella rice is never stirred during cooking.
Serves 6.
1 pound heads-on shrimp
¼ cup olive oil + additional if needed
¾ cup sofrito
½ teaspoon saffron threads
2 cups medium-short-grain rice
4 ½ cup fish or shellfish stock, heated (see note below)
Salt if needed
Finely chopped parsley
Cooked romano green beans (optional)
Alioli garlic sauce to accompany (recipe follows)
Shell the shrimp. Save the heads (clip off the antennae) and tails in a covered container. Save the shrimp bodies in another container. Refrigerate them until ready to cook.
Heat the oil in a skillet and add 1 cup (or more) of shrimp heads and tails. Fry them until they start to brown, crushing the shells with a wooden paddle to extract all the flavorful juices. Remove the pan from the heat, tip it so that the oil drains to one side and scoop out the shells and discard them. (If you do this step in advance of preparing the rice, the fried shrimp heads can be added to the fish trimmings to make the stock.)
Preheat oven to 425ºF.
Taste the cooking liquid for salt. |
Place the shrimp oil in the paella pan. Add additional oil to make 2 tablespoons. Heat on medium and stir in the sofrito. Cook it until it begins to darken slightly. Sprinkle the saffron into the pan. Add the rice and mix it until coated with the sofrito.
Bring the stock to a full boil and carefully pour it into the rice. Stir thoroughly. Taste the liquid and add more salt as needed.
Cook the rice on medium-high for 5 minutes.
Very carefully transfer the rice to the oven for 10 minutes.
While rice is in the oven, sauté the shrimp bodies in the skillet just until they turn pink. Remove from pan and sprinkle them with chopped parsley.
Taste the rice. It should be al-dente tender, with just a little kernel of resistance in the center. Remove the pan from the oven. (If you want socarrat, place the pan on medium-high heat for 2 to 3 minutes.) Scatter some of the shrimp on top. Scatter the beans, if using, on the surface. Let the rice set at least 5 minutes before serving.
Lettuce hearts with garlic. |
How to serve paella rice. Arroz might be served in its pristine glory, as a primer plato, a starter, to be followed by a main course of fish, meat or chicken. Or it can be preceded by an assortment of salads and shellfish para picar, to be shared amongst diners at the table.
I chose to accompany the rice with side dishes to be eaten alongside the rice— sautéed shrimp, fried fillets of gallineta, red rockfish; tiny calamaritos; green beans, sliced tomatoes, and lettuce hearts with fried garlic, piquillo peppers and serrano ham. And, why not? a garlicky alioli sauce.
Rice is minimally garnished, with side dishes. |
Garlic Sauce
Alioli
This is not a true alioli, which is made with only crushed garlic and olive oil. It’s a simple blender mayonnaise with garlic added. Use an immersion blender with a narrow container. (This recipe calls for raw egg.)
1 medium egg, room temperature
½ teaspoon smoked pimentón (paprika)
1 tablespoon lemon juice
1 clove garlic
½ teaspoon salt
¾ cup extra virgin olive oil
Wash the egg. Break it into the blender container. Add the pimentón, lemon juice, garlic and salt. Add the oil. Insert the blender blade to the bottom of the container and run the blender on high speed without lifting it until the egg and oil thicken. Then lift the blade to incorporate any oil on the top and move the blender up and down briefly until it is completely incorporated. If desired, thin the alioli with a little warm water.
Store the sauce refrigerated and use within 3 days.
Finalists in the World Paella Day competition, which takes place annually on September 20 (time of rice harvest) in València with participants from all over the globe, came from Puerto Rico, Colombia, Japan, Romania, Mexico and China. The winner was Joe Padilla from Puerto Rico.
Where we ate the superb rice: Parador Playa, Benalmadena Costa (Málaga).
Where to get all kinds and sizes of paella pans in the U.S.: La Tienda.
I made seafood 'rice with stuff' last night. Clams, shrimp, squid and hard smoked Pacific salmon, along with a can of broad beans and cherry tomatoes. http://www.davebert.photos/paella.jpeg
ReplyDeleteDavid: Sounds good. Smoked salmon would be an interesting addition.
DeleteHa ha me too! I made Arroz con Gambas y Merluza last night. I've found (oddly) that allioli made with a room temperature egg splits more often than a cold one. I'm sure it should be the other way round. I usually use a mortar and pestel, but sometimes use a food processor and even a hand whisk. Splitting occurs occasionaly with all methods, but at least the split mixture can be reincorporated if you start again with clean aparatus. Your Arroz al Marinero looks very good!
ReplyDeleteMad Dog: Huh, I always heard cold egg is more likely to break in making mayo. In Spain, eggs are not refrigerated, so I always use them room temperature.
DeleteI know! It makes no sense, room tempreature should be best, but in my experience, that combination splits on me more often, though perhaps humidity is also a factor... I make a lot of allioli - probably every week and I keep eggs in the fridge wherever I am.
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