Japanese Seafood Risotto

  • Level: Intermediate
  • Yield: 4 to 6 servings
  • Total: 1 hr 40 min
  • Active: 1 hr
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Ingredients

8 cups chicken stock

2 tablespoons vegetable oil 

2 tablespoons finely minced ginger (about one 1-inch piece) 

5 scallions, sliced, white and green parts separated

2 cups Arborio rice

Kosher salt 

1/3 cup sake 

8 ounces small-medium shrimp, halved lengthwise (I like to use rock shrimp or Laughing Bird shrimp if available) 

3/4 cup frozen shelled edamame, thawed 

2 tablespoons white miso

1/4 cup mirin 

Zest and juice of 1 lemon

8 to 12 ounces jumbo lump crabmeat, picked through for shells 

Toasted sesame oil, for garnish

Soy sauce, for garnish 

Toasted shredded nori, for garnish 

Directions

  1. Heat the chicken stock in a medium saucepot and keep warm.
  2. Coat a straight-sided pan with the vegetable oil and set over medium heat. Add the ginger and scallion whites and cook until aromatic, 3 to 4 minutes. Add the rice, sprinkle with salt and cook for a minute or two to toast the rice. Deglaze with the sake and cook for about a minute to allow the alcohol to burn off. Add a few ladles of hot stock to the rice, just enough to cover, and cook, stirring constantly, until the rice has absorbed the stock. Add a few more ladles of stock and repeat. You will do this 4 to 6 times, until all of the stock is absorbed and the rice is cooked through but still has a nice bite to it. The whole process should take about 20 minutes.
  3. Once the rice is cooked, stir in the shrimp and edamame and let the heat of the rice gently cook the shrimp. Once the shrimp have turned opaque, stir in the miso paste. Beyond this point, do not let the risotto boil; miso tastes bitter if it boils. Check the seasoning and adjust the salt as needed. Add the mirin, lemon zest and juice and scallion greens and gently fold in the crabmeat.
  4. To plate, spoon a generous amount of risotto into a serving bowl, drizzle with a little sesame oil, add a splash of soy sauce and top with some nori.

Let's Get Cooking!

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Robert O.

Great recipe! Easy to make and I loved the Japanese spin on it. I added a little rice wine vinegar at the end to give it a little more of that Asian kick. Overall totally delicious!

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