Risotto alla Milanese — Saffron Risotto
Milan's golden risotto, stained and perfumed with saffron and finished with a generous mantecatura of butter and Parmigiano. Traditionally made with beef bone marrow and a rich meat stock, it's the classic partner to osso buco — but it's a glorious dish in its own right: creamy, glossy and all'onda (rippling like a wave).
Steep saffron threads in a ladle of warm stock. Soften onion in butter, toast the rice until the edges turn translucent, then add wine and let it evaporate. Add hot stock one ladle at a time, stirring, for about 18 minutes until the rice is creamy but al dente. Stir in the saffron, then off the heat beat in cold butter and grated Parmigiano (the mantecatura) until glossy and rippling. Rest a minute and serve.
- Use a starchy short-grain rice — Carnaroli or Arborio — and toast it well before adding liquid.
- Keep the stock hot in a separate pan so each addition keeps the risotto at a steady simmer.
- The final mantecatura — cold butter and cheese off the heat — is what makes it creamy and all'onda.
Equipment
- Wide heavy pan
- Stock pot
- Wooden spoon
- Ladle
Składniki
Risotto
- 320 g Carnaroli or Arborio rice
- 1 small onion, finely chopped
- 30 g butter, for the soffritto
- 100 ml dry white wine
- 1.2 L hot beef or chicken stock, or vegetable stock
- 1 generous pinch saffron threads (about 0.2 g)
Mantecatura (to finish)
- 50 g cold butter, cubed
- 60 g Parmigiano-Reggiano, finely grated
- Salt to taste
Traditional (optional)
- 30 g beef bone marrow, diced, softened in the soffritto
Przygotowanie
- KROK01
Put the saffron threads in a small cup with a ladleful of hot stock and leave to steep — it will turn a deep gold and release its aroma.
- KROK02
Melt the butter (and bone marrow, if using) in a wide pan over medium-low heat and soften the onion gently without colouring, about 6 minutes.
- KROK03
Add the rice and stir for 2 minutes until the grains are hot and the edges look translucent. Pour in the wine and let it bubble away completely.
- KROK04
Add hot stock one ladle at a time, stirring often, adding more only when the previous addition is nearly absorbed. Keep it at a lively simmer for about 18 minutes until the rice is creamy but still al dente in the centre.
- KROK05
Stir in the saffron stock for the last few minutes — the risotto turns golden. Take the pan off the heat, beat in the cold butter and Parmigiano vigorously until glossy and creamy. Season, cover and rest 1 minute, then serve all'onda (it should ripple on the plate).
Make ahead
Restaurants par-cook risotto: cook it 12 minutes, spread it thin to cool fast, then finish with hot stock and the mantecatura to order. At home, full make-ahead isn't recommended — but leftovers make superb risotto al salto.
Storage
Risotto is best eaten immediately. Leftovers keep 2 days refrigerated and firm up — they're ideal for risotto al salto (pan-fried crisp cake) the next day. Reheat gently with a splash of stock.
Variations
Risotto al salto
Press cold leftover risotto into a thin cake and pan-fry in butter until crisp and golden on both sides.
With osso buco
Serve alongside braised veal shanks (osso buco alla milanese) — the classic Milanese pairing.
Vegetarian
Use a good vegetable stock and skip the bone marrow — the saffron, butter and Parmigiano carry the dish.
Serve with
Nutrition per serving
Nutrition values are estimates based on the metric measurements. Adjust as needed.
Najczęstsze pytania
What rice should I use for risotto?
A starchy short-grain Italian rice: Carnaroli (the most forgiving, holds its bite), Arborio (widely available, very creamy), or Vialone Nano. The starch is what makes risotto creamy, so don't rinse the rice.
Why is my risotto gluey or gummy?
Usually too much stirring at high heat with too little liquid, or overcooking. Stir often but not constantly, keep a steady simmer, and stop while the rice is still al dente — it keeps cooking off the heat during the mantecatura.
What does 'all'onda' mean?
'All'onda' means 'like a wave' — properly finished risotto should be loose enough to ripple and spread slightly when you shake the plate, not stand in a stiff mound. The mantecatura with cold butter and cheese creates that creamy, flowing texture.
Do I really need bone marrow?
No. Bone marrow is the most traditional touch and adds richness, but a fine Risotto alla Milanese can be made with just butter, saffron, good stock and Parmigiano. Use it if you're serving with osso buco for the full classic.
Can I use saffron powder instead of threads?
Threads are better — steep them in warm stock to draw out colour and aroma. If using powder, use a small pinch and add it the same way; quality varies, so taste.
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