Venetian rice and peas - 'risi e bisi'
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- čas přidán 6. 07. 2022
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**RECIPE, SERVES 4-6**
2 cups (450g) risotto rice
12 oz (350g) shelled fresh peas, pods reserved if possible (you can use frozen, but put them in unthawed when the rice is almost done)
1 white onion
about 5 oz (140g) spinach (only if your peas didn't come with pods)
white wine (highly optional)
butter (replace with vegan sour cream if you don't do dairy)
parmesan cheese (ditto)
salt
pepper (some people prefer white pepper for this, for color)
1 bunch parsley leaves
a few mint leaves
olive oil
Dice the onion finely. If you have the pods from your peas, combine them with about half of the onion in a pot with about 2 quarts (2 liters) of water and two big pinches of salt and boil for 20-30 minutes. If you don't have the pods, just boil half of the onion in the same amount of water and salt until it's softened a bit, throw in the spinach and boil for another couple minutes until wilted. Regardless of which broth you made, take it off the heat, puree it with some kind of blender, strain and discard the solids.
Heat a film of oil or butter in a big pan and throw in the other half of diced onion. Cook gently for a few minutes to soften the onion without browning it. If you're using arborio rice (or another relatively long-cooking risotto rice), stir it in now, then stir in just enough white wine to cover (or your vegetable broth if you're skipping the wine), cook for a few minutes, then stir in the fresh peas. If you're using the traditional vialone nano rice, it cooks a little faster, so you'd want to put the fresh peas in first with the wine/broth, cook them for a few minutes, then stir in the rice.
Simmer, stirring frequently, and keeping it topped off with just enough broth to cover. If you run out of broth, you can just switch to water. The rice should take 15-20 minutes, depending on the type.
While you wait, chop the parsley and mint leaves finely and grind them up with a little salt - you can use a food processor, mortar and pestle, or just the side of your knife. Mix with enough olive oil to make a thick sauce.
When the rice tastes almost done but still a hair crunchy, turn off the heat. Melt in as much butter and cheese (or vegan sour cream) as you want to make it creamy. If necessary, add in more broth/water/wine to get a texture between a thick risotto and a soup. Taste for seasoning, add salt if necessary along with pepper (and sometimes people do nutmeg?).
Scoop into bowls, drizzle on some of the herb oil and swirl it in right before you eat. - Jak na to + styl
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You know that your dish isn't vegetarian anymore if you add Parmesan/Parmiggiano Regiano? Because the cheese contains ingredients obtained from cows' stomachs. So real Parmesan can't be vegetarian.
@@24Jackmusic Then don't use it.
Is your ritual code a reference to CHiPS?
Adam, could you please make a video telling all about the different kinds of Rices how long they take to cook and what they are used for?
That's a good idea!
Would be a good video
Rice is 2 type. Per boiled and sun-dried. Perboil take longer, and easy for first time cooking. Sun-dried has various kind of essential oil. So smells nutty /flowery as per origin. Simple Indian technique is 4 finger sinking over rice. And aromatic rice needs soaking to retain flavour. Simple and easy method to cook good rice is roaring boil water. And drip the rice and wait till 80-90% done. Strain the rice. No washing necessary and eat with light gravy of your favorite food or vegetables
Maybe look into it yourself. It’s called the Joy of Discovery.
Excellent idea! Long grain, medium and short grain and arborio vs sushi rice. I would love this.
Yes, yes, yes. We in Croatia LOVE to eat it. We call it "rizi bizi", and I'm so glad ur making a vid on it.
Makes sense, there were quite a few venetian "colonies" in croatia a few centuries back.
Yeah, my grandmother used to cook that for us kids when we visited. This video made me remember that dish.
We eat it in Bulgaria also, a little bit different but close enough. The name is "Peas with rice" though xD
Glory to Hrvatska!
Same in Hungary!
I love how rice and beans as a concept has so many interpretations that are all so good but also so different.
they provide complete protein together as well as plenty of starch and fibre (esp. if using whole grai so they provide a good basis for a meal.
(and that included other grains instead of rice as well)
Grains and legumes are a classic combo because grain crops use up all the nitrate in the soil and the legumes replenish it as they grow.
As a portuguese I wasn't expecting to see a Casal Garcia bottle out of nowhere in a venetian recipe haha
Vinho verde is a gift to the world. Thank you, Portugal!👏👏👏
I didn’t see this comment until after he’d put the bottle in, but I *knew* it was Portuguese. The h gave it away!
They carry at my local Costco now, definitely my go to sub $10 white wine.
Adam, I'm for one very glad you decided to give peas a chance.
That's all we are saying.
Imagine whirled peas, its easy if you try.
I'm from Venice and it's so great to see a dish from my region be represented here! Great video as always Adam! :)
Se te magni risi e bisi come questi, coe spinaze e col pesto de ojo e parsemoeo, no te si venesian.....
@@michaelesposito5464 risi e bisi coe verse
@@michaelesposito5464 Dai dio bon è un americano che pure se con radici italiane (del sud tra l'altro) resta americano. Essere troppo pedanti non è molto utile, e il mio commento è per esprimere la mia felicità nel vedere una ricetta della mia regione mostrata in un canale così famoso ad un pubblico internazionale.
@@michaelesposito5464 porcodio io il riso coi piselli li faccio con riso basmati e piselli saltati e fine. Chi se ne frega non è la ricetta tradizionale.
@@squarz che classe!!! Complimenti alla mamma!
As a vegan version of parmesan, nutritional yeast (aka inactivated yeast or deactivated yeast). It has some funkiness that is reminiscent of aged cheese. Here in Sweden it's hard to find in supermarkets but easy to order online.
Blend it with cashews, salt, garlic and onion powder and you have a "parmesan" that you can sprinkle on pasta, works perfectly. Haven't eaten "real" parmesan in ages
Swede here, just letting you know I regularly find and get it at slightly larger coop and maxi stores, typically close to the spices section :-) But I understand it may be different from city to city :-)
@@mintketchup3681 Bor man i en håla så gör man, haha. Finns säkert på lite större ställen men inte i min håla på ~3000 pers :P
My mama veneta, who made it and was enjoyed regularly, would be rolling in here grave with your version.
However, yours does get a nod from me, out of curiosity if nothing else, and tradition be damned.
Thanks for your ongoing and great work Adam, including the podcasting.
Hey Adam, could you please make a video about the pawpaw fruit? It’s a delicious North American fruit similar to the custard apple, and its fruiting season is coming right up. I, for one, think that more people should know about this unbelievably awesome fruit.
As someone out of the native range, I would love to live vicariously through a Ragusea video!
I absolutely adore the fruit -- not so much for its culinary properties as for its important role in the ecosystem -- I've got one growing in a pot right now! The fruit tastes fine but smells absolutely fantastic. Thank you for the suggestion! A month or so from now I'll go see if I can't find some more growing along rivers on accessible land.
my dumb ass initially thought of Kuma from One Piece lmao.
ME TOO LMAO
Also known as papaya, and I hate it fresh. I don't mind dried pawpaw though.
Literally last week my nonna cooked me risi e bisi for lunch.
Thank you Adam for bringing up these regional dishes and to show such respect for italian traditional cusine: you seem to know how much we care!
Everyone knows how much we care, we keep reminding them in every botched carbonara video 😂
"You can do this in a food processor but I didn't want to get mine out" - it's moments like this that make Adam my favourite CZcams chef. It's all so relatable, it's useful real-world cooking except with the science explained.
This is perfect! It's pea time in my garden right now. Thanks Adam!
i always go in back yard and take a piss.
@@fullawful130 i used to piss in my yard all the time
Enjoy yourself!:D
@@adog3129 piss on earth, finally
@@adog3129 hell yeah brother
I beginning to think that he made that bean video just so that the comments wouldn't be filled with "but a pea isn't a bean!!!"
He really minds his peas in queues
This is the first time I've heard about this as a dish on its own. In Hungary 'rizibizi' is just regular rice with some peas mixed in. It is eaten as a side dish typically next to some kind of fried meat (pork chops or chicken).
Hey fellow Hungarian Adam Ragusea follower, I'm happy I found your response so I didn't have to explain it myself :D
Yup! At school in Austria, we had the same thing. 🙂
Very interesting. As ''Risi e bisi'' is from the Venetian language, I think you say rizibizi because Veneto was ruled by the Austrian Hungarian Empire before being part of Italy.
I watched this while sitting next to my fiance (who's from Veneto). Between the spinach and the wine, she was quite aggravated and gesticulated a fair bit. She gave up midway though, declaring "he's not making risi e bisi, he's making what he likes!" Thought you'd enjoy that.
Came here for this, che schifo
Nicholas Guarracino, it looks like your fiancée would enjoy Pasta Grammar and Vincenzo's Plate much more (for her sanity's sake)... 😉 Just reserve Adam for your eyes 👀 only. ☺️
Making what you like is what it's all about isn't it. I view recipes as idea generators. I don't think that I have actually truly followed one in my life, 59 YO BTW. It backfires with baking recipes occasionally. Everything else is usually great. I'm kinda a mad scientist in the kitchen and everywhere else, life is an experiment, c'est la vie! 🤓
Hi, Galician here, Spain's corner "over" Portugal. About "vinho verde", I'd like to point out that, although the "h" is silent in Spanish or Galician(*), when you have "nh" in Portuguese then it becomes like the Spanish/Galician "ñ" or the French "gn" when it comes to pronunciation. So, the pronunciation in the video uses the "h is silent" rule we have in Spanish, but it's not the one to apply here as it is a different language.
(*) Which means it has no sound of its own, but when it comes after an "n", it changes the pronunciation as well. So, you have works like "inhibir" (to inhibit) and it's not pronounced as if it were "inibir" but as if it had a blank space instead of the "h", you make a little "pause" as if there were two words instead of one, "in ibir". This way, the syllables in the word change from "i-nhi-bir" one might think if you follow the "h is silent" rule, to "in-hi-bir"
I'm not trying to be pedantic about it, but telling it how it works so now you can share this knowledge with your friends whenever you take some vinho verde.
By the way, vinho verde ("green wine") is called this way as the grapes used to make it are picked very early in the season. They use different varieties of white grapes (all in all it actually is a white whine, hehe), including albariño (or "alvarinho" as they say in Portuguese, and yes, the "b" in Galician/Spanish also changes to "v" in Portuguese, it happens a lot, also with "v" to "b") which is a variety we also produce in the South of Galicia (me included) but we make it with ripen grapes.
Either way, great wines for whatever your, say, need of white wines.
Portuguese viewer here! Came to point out this exact thing not in a pedantic way but rather as an informative one and looking at the way you wrote and worded everything ,yeah, I think you got it all right ;)
@@Dudae_ Obrigado!
I'm sure I'm leaving stuff out because I actually don't speak Portuguese, though I can understand it most of the time and, anyway, it was already a long comment for youtube standards, but if it worked, that's ok for me.
All in all, the "tl;dr" version: "nh" in Portuguese is not pronounced with a silent "h" but like the Spanish "ñ" or the French "gn".
But telling it like so may seem harsh or something.
Really appreciate you keeping recipes more veg forward, even when they traditionally call for it
Seconded!
I made (a variation) on this today, as i had literally nothing in the house but rice and tinned peas :D
I mashed half the peas to get that lovely color instead of spinach, and used chicken stock instead of wine, turned out great! thanks
Made it today! Was absolutely delicious and was a great hit with everyone who had it!
I love the weeks where the Monday(?) video turns out to have been information relevant to the Thursday video. It isn't always the case, but it is a nice treat when it happens.
100% agree.
I can't wait 'til he tries *FRESH* (garden?) spinach and goes insane with spinach recipes the next week. Fresh peas and tomatoes are absolutely a godsend, but garden spinach is just out of this world tasty and really scratches that "fresh vegetable healthy for human" reward center. I crave more with each harvest. I really can't stop growing spinach this is a cry for help
Italian from Veneto here, amazing to see Risi e Bisi on CZcams from an American channel ahah great job as always Adam
This was a great little dish to add under my belt I like having simple 2-5 ingredient dishes that I can make with little hassle if I ever find myself low on food
Oh hey! As I live very close to Venice, I've had this many, many times as a kid. One of the best rice dishes, up there with risotto ai funghi (mushrooms) for me.
Just made this today with pea pod broth and sans pesto. It was soo good! Maybe too much broth but it was still delicious.
As a vegan I really appreciate your extra effort for recommended alteraritions to the recipe!
i will have to give this a try, as someone with a vegetarian diet I appreciate your recipes but i can not always cook them myself :D
My sympathies... change your life...
@@DerSaa Triggered by kindness. That is sad.
You keep trying to stay vegie. I grew vegetarian (though I am not now), so I support anyone who is.
@@DerSaa I’ve been vegetarian for over 30 years. I don’t miss the death or cruelty at all. Sympathies to you.
Here in Veneto I grow up with risi e Bisi... Thanks Adam for making this video, I really miss my nonna
I grew up celebrating fresh peas but I've never heard of rice and peas! Sounds interesting!
This looks really tasty. I may actually have to try this recipe
Adam ragusea recipes:
The original recipe calls for chicken but we are using just wheat flour
It's not traditional, but I'm adding pure grain alcohol
More recipes like this please! Can't wait to try it!
Adam, fantastic your showcasing less known (or 'typical' to outsiders) italian food, but, vegetable stock exists, and it's perfectly okay to use in such a dish if you don't eat meat (I feel like North Americans forget this sometimes and even use meat (usually chicken) stock in even 100% vegetable dishes).
Great video again Adam. I remember my Dad cooking this for us when we were little and to this day I thought it was a funny word he made up for this meal for us kids 😄
This meal is a new concept to me. I'll have to try it. I love trying new foods.
Thanks for keeping it veggy! Lovely recipe!
Ahhhh yes, the Legume and Grain combo we see with a reginal twist in every culture!
love the inclusion of the casal garcia's vinho verde, it's so good!
Great recipe thanks Adam! One you can make with stuff I keep in the freezer and cupboard.
Love the veggie meals, Adam. I'm making this right now
I love this and here at home we use high quality frozen peas and make the green stock with leek tops and celery leaves
This receipe looks awesome great video
Adam ragusea vids just make me happy
As kids we loved to say "risi bisi" because "bisi" means piss in our local dialect. I never knew about the actual dish until today! Thanks!
I will have to try this when I dip into my rice stocks and the peas are done growing.
My Hungarian father made rizi bizi all the time as the side dish to dinners. Although it was really just "rice cooked with peas", nothing near as fancy as this.
Yummy! I'll give this recipe a try.
Can't go wrong with the rice and beans/peas format
Dayum, that looks awesome
Veneto dentro approvato Diolama
zio ladro semo tutti veneti nel cuore
@@venadore Onesto anca masa
i just made this with peas grown in my own garden!! i dont think i did it right but it still tastes pretty good :)
I read rice and pears and now I want it
Thanks for this.
Fancy mattar chawal
Looks really good!
Portugal here, love the vinho verde from casal Garcia! A staple here in Portugal
I love this rice dish very much, I have it a lot
Hey, average guy from Hungary here, i knew about this dish and we consume it here fairly regularly, its a really common thing in every household and in almost every restaurant, but im kinda surprised to learn that this is meant to be a main dish. We use it as a side here, just like fries or mashed potatoes. We eat rice as a side, and "rizi bizi" (as we call it too) is just a *fancy* version of plain normal everyday rice.
Never thought and never knew this rizi bizi thing can be this fun.
One of the classics my dad always made for me. For us it was Arborio rice with peas and bacon, always hearty and still one of my favorite meals to cook when out camping. Very nostalgic
Great video. :) Another reason to have a garden. Peas are a really easy to grow crop too!
at my home we call this vegetable risoto and for us rizi bizi is made with kuskus rice. probably not the original but i like the poridge like texture.
So happy to see Casal Garcia, wine from my homeland: Portugal. Hope you liked it!
Risi e besi sounds fun to say also could be a tongue twister
actually in Venetian dialect s is often pronounced like sh, so it sounds something like rishi bishi
Props on the wine choice mate!
Yum! This is an upgrade over a favorite dish that I’ve encountered in Tuscany: peas spooned over rice with olive oil and parmesan cheese. Like so much of Tuscan cooking, it’s about a very few quality ingredients presented simply.
I'm actually eating this right now, and it's amazing 10/10 :)
Indeed, vialone nano is great (it is my favourite for making risotto), but I think it is only used for risi e bisi for its higher starch content (compared to other type of rices). Personally, I doubt there'd be a big difference between carnaroli/arborio. Texture will be surely smoother, but it is perfectly fine to use them as substitute.
Adam i love your videos!
Always appreciate more vegetarian recipes from my favorite YT cook 😀
Never in my life did I think I would crave peas and rice.
Instant like because of the Casal Garcia green wine. 🇵🇹
adam: I don't want to get my mortar and pestle out, my chopping board is already dirty
also adam: *pulls out a cup to mix the herbs with oil*
Stupid comment
When I saw the top of that bottle, I was like: hey, I think I know that, then I saw Casal Garcia, great wine to drink cold during the summer from my country!
I love it!!!! More venetian recipes please!!! Try bigoli in sals!
Nice green recipe idea for St Patrick's Day.
i've been wanting nightshade free veg meals for a while from u. Think ill actually make this one
Love to see more
Adam, in one of your garlic videos you said you thought that grinding against salt just draws out water and doesn’t actually grind anything. In at least this video and another you state that it does. Have you changed your mind or seen a difference since that original video?
As venetian, I am very surprised by this lol
(ghe sboro)
If I'm not mistaken peas and rice (especially brown rice) form a complete source of protein, so if you leave out the meat and/or dairy products it's a good dish for a vegetarian/vegan diet
I think it's any type of bean/pea plus any type of grain even
I think the modern understanding is that the rice and beans are complete proteins anyway, but they will balance each others amino acids even more.
Good to note that complete protein just means amino acid coverage, rather than anything about the actual quantity of protein.
(Just like nutritionally complete means covering all 3 macros, but doesn’t imply anything about the ratio between them.)
i wish i knew about this when my sweet peas where ready to be picked
The 'Verde' from this wine it means a fresh wine, not a green wine.
In portuguese we use the word 'Verde' - Green to say unripe things
We made this at home w/ canned tuna or fresh flaky fish. Never knew where it came from thx!
I've had this dish my whole life and not once did I stop to think about where it came from, and I randomly stumble upon the origin from a youtube video... The things I learn huh? :D
Hey Adam, I've always been interested in cooking and food, I grew up watching a lot of cooking shows and learning things from my mom. After finding your youtube channel, I grew a lot as a cook, and I became interested in the actual science of food and cooking and utinsel materials. Partially because of all the science you show on this channel, how you make it really accessible, I'm going to NCSU in the fall majoring in food science! Your work really is helping people learn and find their passion for food. Maybe someday you'll read a paper that I helped publish at NCSU.
This risi e bisi is easy peasy!
Hi Adam, I had a similar thing when growing up here in the UK but it also had sliced mushrooms in it. As far as the pea pods goes, would Mange tout (if you can get it) be a suitable substitute?
I'm from Croatia (that's the country next to Italy) and I just realized why we say riži biži (so close to how Italians say it) when we eat that dish
We eat something similar in Hungary, we call it "rizibizi".
It's basically a lazier version of this where we cook canned peas with chicken buillon powder (vegeta) in a little water, and mix it with the already cooked white rice.
Your camera quality looks like it jumped up 100 levels since the last video the image is so clear I feel like I’m there with you
Hey Adam, a video i'd be interested in seeing is one similar to your dough one, but with mashed potatoes. Just looking at how much, if any, milk, cream, eggs, butter... to add and what it does to the mashed potatoes. Cheers
Its quite interesting because i have eaten RisiBizi so many times and never knew it was from Venice
Really love how a lot of Italian recipes use meat as a garnish. It's fairly easy to leave out.
Awesome, we have some fresh peas in the garden, will try and use them for this.
If you do the stock with the pea pods, would you also purée it? Or just strain out the whole pods?
Looks great! As someone who should be consuming as much fiber as I can - any foreseen drawbacks from keeping the spinach remains in the broth?
Now I want a video on the difference between generic pesto and chimichuri. That seemed like a chimichuri to me but I'll wait to decide until Adam reports
I would describe (and have described) chumichurri as South American pesto.
The word of the week is: B e A n S
Very interesting!
Because in Austria, Risi Bisi is usually a dry side dish (just rice, peas and some herbs) to accompany meat. I didn't know that that's not what it traditionally is...
Your comment is very interesting to me (I'm Venetian). As ''Risi e bisi'' is from the Venetian language, I think you have a version of this dish because Veneto was ruled by the Austrian Hungarian Empire before being part of Italy.
Finally a recipe I can afford..
i love the veggie recipes
Lovely recipe, Adam.
We have something similar in India, could be of Italian origin, called bisi bele bath.