My Favourite Paella

  • Level: Easy
  • Yield: 4 to 6 servings
  • Total: 1 hr 20 min
  • Prep: 20 min
  • Cook: 1 hr
As a young boy, the idea of meat and fish together in one dish never made sense to me. But once I tried paella the combination of textures and smoky flavours completely won me over. It's one harmonious, exciting, stomach-pleasing smasher of a dish. Some locals will say you don't add chorizo, but because I love it, I'm adding it here. You can pick up a proper paella pan at most department stores, but a large shallow pan about 12 inches/30 cm across will also work a treat. Without question this is one of Spain's hero dishes. Although incredibly flexible and delicious, it was never intended to be as visual and flamboyant a dish as it is. It was invented by farmers, grabbing whatever bits of meat, vegetable and fish they had available to them and using rice to bring it all together. Over time it's been refined and claimed by all sorts of people around Spain as their own. That's the great thing about paella, you can make it your own by taking the principle of it and adjusting it to embrace whatever ingredients are in season and around you.
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Ingredients

Olive oil

2 raw chorizo sausages (approximately 9 ounces/250 g in total), thickly sliced

11 ounces/300 g pork belly, skin removed, the best quality you can afford, cut into

1 green pepper, deseeded and roughly chopped

1 red pepper, deseeded and roughly chopped

5 cloves garlic, peeled and roughly chopped

1 onion, peeled and roughly chopped

A small bunch fresh flat-leaf parsley, leaves picked and roughly chopped, stalks finely chopped

Sea salt and freshly ground black pepper

A good pinch of saffron

14 ounces/400 g clams or mussels, scrubbed clean and debearded

11 ounces/300 g paella rice

7 ounces/200 g jarred red peppers in oil, drained and torn into pieces

1 (14-ounce/400 g) tin (can) chopped tomatoes

34 fluid ounces/1 litre chicken or vegetable stock, preferably organic

12 large prawns, shells on

5 1/2 ounces/150 g squid, cleaned and finely sliced

5 1/2 ounces/150 g green beans, sliced very thinly at an angle

1 lemon, cut into wedges

Directions

  1. Heat a large wide-based pan over a medium heat and add a lug of olive oil, the sliced chorizo and the pork belly. Fry for around 10 minutes, stirring occasionally. As soon as the chorizo starts taking on colour and the fat is beginning to cook out of it, add the chopped green pepper, chopped red pepper, garlic, onion, and parsley stalks along with a good pinch of salt, pepper, and the saffron. Fry gently for another 10 minutes, or until the vegetables have begun to soften. Meanwhile, pick through the shellfish and get rid of any clams or mussels that aren't tightly closed.
  2. Add the rice and jarred peppers and keep stirring for a few minutes until the rice is coated in all the lovely flavours, then pour in the tinned tomatoes and 3 1/3 cups (27 ounces)/800 ml stock, seasoning again with salt and pepper. Bring everything to the boil, then turn down to a medium to low heat and stir constantly for about 15 minutes. This combination of flavours will be absolutely beautiful, but you've got to help the dish along by doing your job and making sure each grain of rice gets the same amount of love. So every now and then, stir from the outside of the pan into the middle so you get a sort of pile of rice in the centre, making sure nothing is sticking to the bottom. Flatten the pile out with your spoon, then start the whole process again.
  3. After 15 minutes, the rice should be cooked, but still have a bit of a bite, so add the mussels or clams and the prawns.
  4. Keep stirring, and as the clams and mussels start to open and the prawns begin to turn pink, add your squid and green beans and cook for a further 5 minutes or so.
  5. Discard any clams or mussels that don't open. Stir in the chopped parsley leaves and the juice from 1/2 the lemon wedges, and bring to the table with the remaining lemon wedges on the side.

Cook’s Note

You may want to add an extra splash of stock here if the rice looks a bit dry.

Let's Get Cooking!

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