Normally I am a very patient individual, obsessive compulsive, but still fairly patient about it, at least on some things. I know it doesn't make a lot of sense. But this evening's meal is a perfect example...
I have been patiently waiting to get my grubby little hands on Zucchini Blossoms for years now, mainly because it reminds me of my farm boy roots in the "wilds" of Oregon. Well, my patients finally wore thin this spring, and I now have a couple of 20 inch pots on my patio, with Zucchini squash plants...
I have also been patiently waiting to acquire some morel mushrooms. Yes, the ever elusive Morel mushroom... In my humble opinion, the epitome of mushroomdom, white truffles from Alba aside, followed closely by the Bolete family (which includes porcini). Although this is up for some debate... Not because morels aren't tasty. But "mushrooms" are actually a very ancient organism, but morels didn't appear until the last ice age. They are actually a genetic mutation of yeast, not the bloom of a subterranean fungus like most mushrooms.
Mycology lesson aside, I was blessed this weekend, just by chance. I was at Whole Foods, looking for the first figs of the season, when mine eyes beheld a tiny basket full of atrociously priced Morel mushrooms... IN SoCAL... Who'd a thunk it? I broke down...
Morels are a quintessential flavor of spring, at least to an Oregonian farm boy. So I bought 5 medium sized mushrooms, which came to less than 1/4 lb (Thank GOD!) I always forget they are lighter since the stem is hollow.
This brings me to tonights meal. I had two problems....
- I had Morels and they NEEDED to be used before they went bad (they don't last long in captivity) and they had to be in a dish where their flavor would not be masked by ANYTHING.
- One of my Zucchini had started blooming, well, 1 bloom was open this morning... This meant it was time to do something with it, for once picked, they don't last long in captivity either...
I decided on Risotto ai Fiori di Zucca (Zucchini Blossom Risotto)... With Morels added. Yes, Yes, Yes. Absolutely delicious...!! I was SO pleased.
The light flavor of zucchini from the blossoms (cause they taste like zucchini, just fainter) and nutty yet sultry earthiness of the morels (They really are almost as incredible as white truffles). It tasted just like spring, at least to an Oregonian Farm boy. Now all I need are some Fiddleheads (and some more morels, or course) ;)
Risotto ai Fiori di Zucca e Fungi Morel
1 Shallot, minced
3 TB Olive oil
10 Morel Mushrooms, sliced into rings
1 cup Arborio or Vialone Nano
3/4 cup Prosecco (warm); Divided
2 3/4 – 3 1/2 cups Vegetable Stock; Simmering
8 Zucchini Blossoms; Thinly sliced
3 TB Grana Padano; freshly Grated
3 TB Unsalted butter
Salt and Fresh Ground Green Pepper to taste
Gently Wash the blossoms, removing the stems and pistils,
When the rice is almost done, about 3 minutes remaining, stir in the zucchini blossoms and the Morel/Shallot mixture.
Remove cover and stir in the remaining 1/4 cup warm Prosecco.
Serve immediately and swoon....
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5 comments:
That risotto is a marriage made in heaven. Any left over?
Cool post! I love how you served the risotto in the lemon cups. I never had morels before. I don't think they are included in the package of assorted mushrooms.
It's all beautiful!! My neighbors went foraging a couple of weeks ago and brought home a HUGE basket of Morels...and passed them out. It was like heaven!
Absolutely lovely and delicious, both the combination of ingredients and serving idea.
When I left for Croatia, one week ago, my zucchini plants had two leaves each. I came back and found them all in bloom. A dumb question, how do you distinguish male from female blossoms, I've never grown zucchini before?
Aren't those yellow round zucchini that you used to serve risotto in? I've only seen green ones before.
Linda - Sadley, no.. :( I only made 1/2 batch. I wish there I had made a whole one.. LOL
Michele - Thank you.. :)
Girli - oooo How Lucky!!!
Dajana - Thanks, The male blossoms have a normal stem, the females have the zucchini squash as a stem. Yep they are yellow globe zucchini, I found them at the farmers market :)
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