Skip Navigation
Paella - almost traditional style

The paella is a staple of Spanish cuisine, more specifically, the Mediterranean coast. It's become wildly popular, so multiple versions have been created to accommodate to all tastes, especially tourists: paella with chorizo, with too much seafood, and other disasters. To each their own, it's positive that people love the dish so much that they venture into those extreme modifications, but they are missing on the great dish with subtle tastes that is a traditional paella.

Therefore, if you want to prepare a basic "core" paella, this is a pretty decent version with stuff you can have in your fridge. I'll mention the modifications I made from the traditional recipe, and how you can substitute ingredients for other food you can find in your local market.

The dish is quite easy (fry meat, fry vegetables, add rice and cover with stock), but getting the perfect cook point takes experience.

Use one pan and one fat source for everything - hence the name "paella" ("pan"), as ingredients go in and out, but the pan stays.

Fry the meat

  • Stir fry the meat in a very generous amount of fat. The pan should be fully covered in 5-10 mm of fat. The recommended fat source is olive oil. Alternatively, sunflower oil, canola oil, or lard. Never use butter. Salt and pepper to taste, but don't add too much, we'll rectify it at the end.
  • About the meat type. The traditional paella uses rabbit and chicken, I used rabbit and pork sausage as pork provides a heartier taste. Do not abuse pork (no chorizo, no bacon, no 100% pork) unless that is specifically your goal. Classic paellas use white meat / poultry exclusively. In cultures that do not eat rabbit, use chicken. Ensure 100-150g of lean meat per serving, therefore include the raw weight of meat to account for bones.
  • You can make a vegetarian paella by removing meat and adding more vegetables (for ideas, see below)
  • The meat should be around 80%-90% cooked as it will finish cooking later. If in doubt, cook it fully, you don't want raw rabbit. Once it's done, reserve it.

Fry vegetables

  • Using the same oil, stir fry onion, green or red Italian pepper (alternatively, bell pepper), and tomato. Roughly, 1 onion, 1/2 pepper and 2 tomatoes per person. Optionally, one or two garlic cloves. This is the vegetable base. The original version uses an extremely specific type of pepper called nyora. Don't sweat it. Italian or bell.
  • For added texture and body, the traditional recipe also includes lima beans and green beans, the flat type, cut in half or thirds. I included wild mushrooms (no button) and artichokes which blend in pretty well with the canonical paella.
  • Make sure the onion, pepper and tomato are thoroughly cooked, as you don't want to find hard bits in the final dish. If you use green beans, however, they should add texture, so don't let it get too soft. Salt and pepper to taste, but don't add too much, we'll rectify it at the end.

Add the rice and cook it

  • Add in the meat and the rice to the pan with the vegetables, and cook the rice 1-2 minutes until it starts to become transparent. Aim for 80g-100g of rice per serving. Don't be afraid of making too much, paella becomes an excellent leftover. Just reheat it in a pain with a bit more oil.
  • Use round rice, like the one used for risotto. It needs to have some starch. Never, never use basmati or long rice for a paella, it will be too dry.
  • Add in the stock. I used chicken and vegetable stock. You can also use pure vegetable stock. As a last resort, use water. In that case, increase the amount of the vegetable base by 50% to compensate for the lack of flavor of water.
  • The proportion of rice to stock should be around 1:2 by weight. This varies a lot depending on the type of the rice, the evaporation rate, and even weather conditions. My advice is to start with 1:1.75 and add the stock whenever needed.
  • The traditional paella includes saffron, I didn't have any.

How to tell when it's done

  • When the rice is done it will stop absorbing liquid. This usually takes 15-20 minutes. This is why it's better to add liquid when necessary rather than dumping it all at the beginning.
  • In some places there seems to be a misconception about the socarrat (sticky bits of rice). In the traditional recipe this is a by-product of cooking the rice on a wide and thin pan over a fire. It tastes nice, but it shouldn't be the focus of the paella. Furthermore, it is very difficult to control when cooking at home at a regular kitchen with a regular pan. Just avoid it until you are an expert, otherwise instead of socarrat you will get disgusting burnt rice.
  • Therefore, stir the rice very gently every 2-3 minutes to avoid it getting stuck to the bottom of the pan and undercooked.
  • Taste, taste, taste. Rectify salt and pepper. If the paella lacks flavor, add in a bit of acid like the juice of 1/4 of a lemon or a bit of white wine. This is 100% non-traditional, but I think it is a reasonable modification.
  • Taste the texture of the rice every 2 minutes after the 15th. When it is al dente, meaning that you could eat it but it's still a bit hard, and a thin layer of liquid still remains (see picture) turn the heat off and let it rest for 3-5 minutes. You can cover it with a cotton cloth, but do not fully cover the pan with a lid because the rice will get soft and overcooked. It needs to breathe.

Enjoy!

That's it! You can now enjoy the paella as spaniards eat it at home, using ingredients that are available worldwide.

Here's the finished dish:

!

0
My two white geraniums are siblings but they have slightly different tinted pink/red tones
  • Maybe cross pollination? Many people have geraniums in the area and the bees likely carry the pollen everywhere

    I also heard as a child that if a red geranium petal falls on the soil of a white geranium it can tint their flowers. But that sounds like a urban legend to me!

  • My two white geraniums are siblings but they have slightly different tinted pink/red tones

    Both are grandchildren of a totally white geranium, children of a slightly red tinted one. Sprouted via seeds from their parents fruits.

    I think they are gorgeous!

    !

    3
    Asmarris - a local fisherman dish from the Mediterranean coast

    Asmarris is a fish stew originated in a very small region in the Mediterranenan coast of Tarragona (Spain).

    This hearthy and delicious dish was invented by fishermen to make best use of small fish, preferably blue fish such as sardines, and as few ingredients as possible, stuff you would find on a fishing boat. Besides the fish, it only requires tomato, stale bread, potatoes and olive oil. Garlic and red wine are optional.

    • Lightly fry the sardines in olive oil. Do not cook them all the way.
    • In the same oil, lightly fry stale bread, tomatoes and garlic. Grind in a food processor, or if you're in a fishing boat, crush it with a mortar. You can leave it a bit grainy or let it grind until it's smooth.
    • Put the paste back on the oil and keep frying it. When it begins to stick to itself, add red wine and let simmer for a couple of minutes
    • Add potatoes and cover with water. Stew them until the potatoes are almost done. If in doubt, cook them all the way, as it is preferable to overcook them than to overcook the fish.
    • Put the fried sardines back and finish cooking along with the potatoes for a maximum of 5 minutes. Be careful not to let them break apart.
    • When it's done, let rest for 3-4 minutes. Serve hot and enjoy.
    0
    Revisiting one of the oldest MS-DOS world atlas applications ever written: PC Globe
  • Excellent memories! I used PC Globe so much when I was in elementary school. I didn't have an encyclopedia, and when some friend handed me that diskette it opened a new world to me. I ran that software so much that I memorized the world map, with capitals and population orders of magnitude.

    My geography teacher was so impressed, they didn't know how a small kid could have memorized the world. I even knew some anthems by playing them on the PC Speaker. Over time we all got Encarta, then Wikipedia, but for a brief amount of time, a floppy disk contained the world for many of us.

  • Sound Off: How many 10+ year redditors have left the site?
  • Since the Digg migration, when was that, 2010?

    Since Reddit's APIcalypse the content of that site has gone to the drain. It is very clear that power users are no longer posting quality content. I am much more amused by Lemmy than Reddit nowadays, though it's true that it has that new car smell and the communities will keep growing and reforming from the Reddit ashes.

    I don't think Reddit will disappear, but it's not the same site it was two months ago, that's a fact.

  • Is there any interest in SDF hosting an "old.lemmy.sdf.org" MLMYM Lemmy front-end
  • As a user, I have 100% interest! I still use old.reddit and it's peak UI design. The feature I miss the most in Lemmy is "show images" to expand all thumbnails. Hopefully it can be deployed at SDF.

  • BeOS - The Forgotten ā€˜90S Operating System (Retrospective & Demo)
  • I actually used beos as a daily driver for a few months. This was maybe around 2000 or 2001. WinME crashed a lot for me and I couldnā€™t make linux detect my winmodem. Installed beos and everything was great. Dual booted with windows 98 when I wanted to play StarCraft.

    Moved to Linux soon after but I will always remember those great days.

  • [@SDF](https://mastodon.sdf.org/@SDF) [@sdfpubnix](https://lemmy.sdf.org/c/sdfpubnix) Please tell me that all [#SDF](https://social.sdf.org/tags/SDF) instances across the Fediverse will be [#defederat
  • I agree with this interpretation too and it is an excellent simile.

    If sdf defederates from big instances I will accept their decision but I will find another server.

  • Has there been any talk of lemmy.sdf.org preemptivly defederating from Meta/Threads?
  • I hope it doesn't. There is always time to defederate if something is going on.

  • Thoughts about defederation with burggit and lemmynsfw ?
  • I agree that it can be problematic to see some weird stuff on All, but defederating is a red button that affects everybody in the instance, and I don't like that. I enjoy seeing new stuff, and people can use the "block" button liberally.

    However it is true that Lemmy still lacks some fine grained controls for users. I am positive that they will be implemented soon, so meanwhile we are living in this very early transition period where random shit can and will appear on our All page and we need to live with it (or use block a lot)

  • cfenollosa cfenollosa @lemmy.sdf.org

    Engineer and entrepreneur from Barcelona

    This is a Lemmy account - If you want to reach me on the Fediverse please use šŸ˜ @cfenollosa@social.sdf.org

    Also on:

    šŸ¦ @cfenollosa

    šŸŒ cfenollosa.com

    Posts 20
    Comments 9
    Moderates