Up until 1994 I had never had kielbasa a day in my life, let alone even knew what it was. I grew up on German, and Pennsylvania Dutch cuisine. This delightful sausage is Polish, and until I met my husband, didn't even know where Poland was on the map. Not that he's strong in his heritage or anything, but with a last name with 10 letters, one must assume homeland food runs in the family somewhere right? I mean, I grew up with sauerkraut (YICK). Well, eventually I learned it's actually a pretty common food in this area, eaten by more than just Polish heritage. And it's freaking AWESOME! So of course, I cook with it as much as I can. And this time around decided to put it into risotto. I present to you, Kielbasa Risotto.
Ingredients
- Kielbasa, one link, sliced down the middle then diced so you have half moons
- Chives, 3 or 4 stalks. I prefer to use chive over onion as it's not so strong a flavor
- Olive Oil
- Garlic Cloves, 3 or 4 small ones, smashed and minced
- Aborio Rice, 1 cup
- Chicken Stock, or boullion/water, 6 cups
- Sweet Vermouth, splash
1. In an 8 cup pot, drizzle olive oil in the bottom and place in chives and garlic. Saute on med heat until the garlic is brown and chives are softened. Add to that your kielbasa and cook until browned, continuously stirring so as not to burn the bottom too much. It's OK if some of it turns brown. That's called "fond" and it's flavor. Besides it goes away in this next step.
2.) Take meat out, retaining juices and oil in the pan. Set aside in bowl for later. Pour the rice into the pot. Stir briefly then, then splash with the sweet vermouth. If you HAVE to measure, it was probably 1/4 cup. Keep stirring until the vermouth is absorbed into the rice.
3.) Pour 1 cup of chicken broth in and bring to simmer on low. You don't ever want this to boil, just a soft simmer. Continue to stir. We don't want the water the boil away, we want the rice to absorb it. Continue to add water at 1/2 to 3/4 cup at a time. Wait until you have nothing but rice left before adding the next addition of water. This WILL TAKE FOREVER. Or approximately 30 minutes, of you standing there stirring rice and adding stock. But it's SO worth it. When you have just 1-1/2 c of stock left, dump the kielbasa back into the pot with 1/2 cup of water and continue to stir and let it absorb.
4.) With 1/2c of stock left, optional... dump in some frozen peas. I'm a mom, gotta have that vegetable. Oh hey, speaking of mom, this is also a ONE POT MEAL! Score. Let the last of the stock absorb into the rice and you'll notice that it has taken on a creamy consistency without actually having any cream in it. Ta-da, you just made risotto.
AND... the kids and husband gobbled it up!
Serve and Enjoy!
Side Note: This reheats well in the microwave. Just be sure to re-heat after adding a splash of water for it to steam by.
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