Squink Risotto

  2.5 – 2 reviews  • Rice Recipes
Level: Easy
Total: 45 min
Prep: 20 min
Cook: 25 min
Yield: 2 as main course, or 4 as starter

Ingredients

  1. 8 ounces (cleaned weight) baby squid, optional
  2. 1 quart vegetable broth (can, carton, or cube is fine), preferably organic
  3. 2 tablespoons regular olive oil, plus 2 teaspoons
  4. 6 scallions, thinly sliced
  5. 1 clove garlic, peeled
  6. 1 1/4 cups risotto rice
  7. 1/2 cup red wine
  8. 2 sachets squid ink
  9. 1 fresh red or green chile, seeded and finely chopped
  10. Pepper to taste
  11. Small handful chopped fresh parsley (approx. 2 tablespoons)

Instructions

  1. I have said that I usually use white wine or dry white Vermouth in a risotto, but I must concede that the recipes here don’t appear to bear this out. I’ve got an excuse with this one, too: the whole point of this risotto is that it’s black, tinted by the squid ink (the squink of my title) and I had no desire to lessen its impact with some pallid white wine. But it’s not just a question of colour: the squid ink is so richly, headily flavored that nothing less than a robust red would stand up to it.
  2. As strange as it might sound for so exotic a dish, this may even pass muster as a storecupboard standby. The rice, the broth and the squid ink (it comes in sachets, from a good fishmonger or Italian deli, or online source) can be kept easily. I have marked the squid-ring topping as optional, but even that can live in the freezer for a few months.
  3. While I am more than happy to eat it plain black, I can’t help feeling cheered by the jaunty tricolore adornment provided by the squid rings, red chile pepper and parsley. Not that I’m being cheered is altogether the point of such a beautiful, sombre dish, the perfect date meal for Goths.
  4. Cut the squid (if using) into thin rings and set aside while you get on with the risotto.
  5. Heat the broth until almost boiling, and keep the broth warm in a saucepan on the lowest heat
  6. Warm the 2 tablespoons oil in a large, heavy-based saucepan and soften the sliced scallions for 2 minutes on a low heat. Keep stirring and don’t let them burn. Grate in the garlic and turn up the heat. Toss in the rice and turn it in the oil and so it is slicked and shiny. Pour in the red wine and let it bubble up over the rice.
  7. Wearing disposable vinyl gloves, snip in the squid ink and carefully dunk the squeezed out sachets into the separate pan of hot broth to get out any remaining ink. Then add and keep adding ladlefuls of hot broth to the rice, letting one ladleful be absorbed before adding the next, stirring all the while.
  8. When the rice has had 15 minutes, you can be less assiduous on the stirring front and get on with the squid, if you’re using this. In a frying pan, heat 2 teaspoons olive oil and the chile, until sizzling, then add the squid rings and cook, stirring or shaking the pan a little, for 3 minutes. Season with ground pepper, to taste.
  9. By this time, the black risotto should be ready, so divide it between warmed shallow bowls or plates, top with chile and squid, if using, and scatter with parsley.

Nutrition Facts

Serving Size 1 of 2 servings
Calories 867
Total Fat 22 g
Saturated Fat 3 g
Carbohydrates 113 g
Dietary Fiber 2 g
Sugar 3 g
Protein 41 g
Cholesterol 462 mg
Sodium 174 mg

Reviews

Chris Contreras
My experience is you need 6 C of broth for 1 C of rice
Cynthia Lynch
Where can you get squid ink in the USA? I substituted forbidden rice and small amount of clam base with a few extra baby squid. Actually pretty good, great color.
Erik Mills
1 1/4 cups rice for 2 people?!? This has to be a typo. Which average person can eat that much stuff in one go? I also found the rice ended up too dry, with less broth than rice as indicated in the recipe.

 

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