Have ‘Paella Pan' Will travel – Guest post
I have the most wonderful surprise for all of you! A recipe that delivers eye appeal, warmth and satisfaction for all of your friends and family! It is a dish that has fascinated me for years. Presented from Spain as it is cooked in Spain from my newest friend and guest writer Lynsey Drake of www.larosilla.info. Lynsey is a passionate home cook, recipe creator, and hostess of La Rosilla country house restaurant a wonderfully charming culinary school in Inland Axarquia, Spain. Please enjoy – Have ‘Paella Pan' Will travel
Paella or Arroces, have become part of my families’ new life, since immigrating from the U.K to Andalucia Spain 7 years ago. Paella is a dish prepared with love and gusto, to be shared with family, friends & neighbors. It is a dish offered in most Ferias of Spain throughout the year, and comes in many guises depending on the area of Spain you live in. From the traditional Paella Valenciana, with meat & seafood, to modern day arroces (rices) & paellas adjusted to use what it is in season, or to suit the diners.
Paelleras (paella pans) range in size from a 4 portions to massive pans measuring meters across, to feed a whole town. This giant paella is a spectacular cooking outdoor event, when people gather from far around, to watch and taste the local dish. Cooked above a wood fire, these experts tend their giant pans of rice, meat & stock, until the dish is ready, rested and waiting to be devoured. Often taking hours to prepare & cook, eaten in moments.
I like to cook my Paella on a warm summer evenings just as the sun is setting over the mountains. I usually cook a 15 portion Paella, as leftovers are delicious. I use a large pan and special Paella gas burner, which make it very portable, and I can cook anywhere, beach, camping & picnics. It is a very social affair, often friends gather around the ring whilst cooking, many times offering their suggestions or preferences and expertise for the perfect Paella. A favorite with my Family is Chicken, chorizo, asparagus and wild mushroom. Based on 15 servings: The secret is to have all ingredients ready prepared, so you are ready to cook.
Ingredients
Olive oil
1kg of chicken pieces / skin off – Bone-in fine
1 large chorizo sausage, skinned and cut into 1 cm slices.
1 glass of white wine.
1 onion – diced
1 head of garlic, peeled and sliced
1 green pepper – diced
1 red pepper – diced
Handful of fresh thyme
1 dried ‘Nora' pepper
1 kg paella rice ‘calasparra'
1 large tin of tomatoes
Saffron
2 sachets of Paella seasoning or ½ tsp each of Paprika, turmeric, fenugreek.
2 litres chicken stock
1 hand of Asparagus, trimmed.
500 g mixed fresh wild mushroom or preserved in brine
Lemon to decorate
Preparation
Prepare the chicken by marinating in olive oil, thyme, slat and pepper.
Make up stock and add saffron to infuse.
Put a layer of Olive oil in your Paella Pan to cover the bottom.
Heat gently, add your whole Nora pepper, then chicken and thyme.
Brown the meat nicely, then stir and fry 10 mins.
Remove the Nora pepper
Add onion, garlic and peppers – Fry for 5 mins until soft.
Add chopped mushrooms and Chorizo – fry for 2/3 mins
Add tinned toms, and break up in pan, add white wine & stir & bubble.
Season with Salt & pepper
Stir in seasoning / spices.
Add handfuls of rice around the pan, to let rice absorb some of the juices, stir.
Pour in stock and saffron, stir so rice is distributed evenly.
Simmer for 5 – 6 mins then reduce heat to medium low.
DO NOT STIR ANYMORE cook for 20/25 mins until all liquid absorb, you may need to add a little more – you want you rice to be ‘al dente'.
5 mins before end of cooking, lay the Asparagus on the top in a circle, it will cook in the steam.
Turn off heat, and cover with a clean cloth, foil or as sometimes in Spain newspaper, to rest and flavor infuse.
Decorate the edge of the pan with lemon wedges, and sprinkle on some more fresh thyme.
Buen Provecho x
Thank you Lynsey! What a great recipe.
You can find more about Lynsey, her blog and her classes at:
Lynsey Drake La Rosilla – Lifestyle & Food.
Now thats something I have never tried and it looks and reads great. Would Nora pepper be la kind of chilli? Calasparra rice I am not familiar with but hopefully could find something suitable.
Delicious looking dish. The second picture is the one I liked. Now that’s “bulk” cooking. And my kind of food.
Looks like a large shallow wok-type cooking pan, did it use the same cooker as the bottom photo?
Gud
Hi Carolyn,
A Nora pepper is a dried red pepper , small round like the size of a golf ball. You do have to use this, not everyone does. The rice is a short round , fat rice – quite similar to Risotto rice – it needs to hold its shape and be able to absorb list of liquid without breaking down. Hope this helps.
Hi Gus,
The pan is a shallow flat pan, a large frying pan can also be used, as long as it has a large flat area . In both pictures I’m cooking on a gas ring, but different sizes. The rings fit the size of the pan. They can be used on legs or without, on the large paella, I’m tucked behind the wall keeping out of the wind. To cook above a wood fire is traditional , then you can use any size pan. Should you need any more info, please just contact me
Many thanks both & Happy Cooking Outdoors x
I just made paella last night!
Please check it out @ http://chocotuile.blogspot.com/
I’ve never tried Nora pepper or ‘calasparra’ rice, but if I can locate it, I will definitely give it a try sometime. Do you know where I can locate saffron at a more reasonable price?
Hi Jen,
Calasparra is a local rice we use, a short grain rice, similar to risotto rice can also be used.
Obviously I’m living in Spain, so I’m not sure where you would be able to purchase Saffron from reasonably, in fact I don’t think Saffron can be bought reasonably, but as you use just the tiniest pinch, a little goes along way.
Hope this helps, Buen Provecho x Lynsey.