Spring Pea Mint Risotto (Printer Friendly)

A creamy risotto with spring peas, fresh mint, and Parmesan, delivering bright flavors and rich texture.

# What You Need:

→ Produce

01 - 1 cup fresh or frozen spring peas
02 - 1 small onion, finely chopped
03 - 2 cloves garlic, minced
04 - 2 tablespoons fresh mint leaves, finely chopped
05 - Zest of 1 lemon, optional

→ Grains

06 - 1.5 cups Arborio rice

→ Dairy

07 - 3 tablespoons unsalted butter, divided
08 - 0.5 cup grated Parmesan cheese
09 - 0.25 cup heavy cream, optional

→ Liquids

10 - 4 cups vegetable broth, kept warm
11 - 0.5 cup dry white wine

→ Pantry

12 - 2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
13 - Salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste

# Directions:

01 - In a medium saucepan, warm the vegetable broth over low heat and maintain a gentle simmer throughout the cooking process.
02 - In a large heavy-bottomed skillet, heat the olive oil and 2 tablespoons butter over medium heat. Add the chopped onion and cook until soft and translucent, approximately 4 minutes.
03 - Add the minced garlic and cook for 1 minute until fragrant.
04 - Stir in the Arborio rice and cook for 2 minutes, stirring constantly, until grains are well coated and slightly translucent at the edges.
05 - Pour in the dry white wine and cook while stirring until mostly absorbed.
06 - Begin adding warm broth one ladleful at a time, stirring frequently and allowing each addition to absorb before adding more. Continue for 18 to 20 minutes until rice is creamy and al dente.
07 - When approximately 5 minutes of cooking remain, stir in the spring peas.
08 - Remove from heat and stir in the remaining tablespoon of butter, Parmesan cheese, heavy cream if using, chopped mint, and lemon zest. Season with salt and pepper to taste.
09 - Allow the risotto to rest for 2 minutes, then serve immediately, garnished with additional mint and Parmesan if desired.

# Pro Advice:

01 -
  • It feels fancy enough to impress someone, but honest enough that you won't stress making it.
  • The whole thing comes together in under an hour, and the result tastes like you spent all day on it.
  • Mint and peas together are a flavor combination that somehow makes everything feel lighter and more alive.
02 -
  • Risotto demands your attention and your stirring—there's no real shortcut, and the moment you stop paying attention is usually when it starts to stick.
  • The rice should taste creamy and almost melting by the end, not soft and mushy; that al dente bite is what separates good risotto from risotto that feels like baby food.
03 -
  • Use a heavy-bottomed pan—it conducts heat more evenly and prevents the bottom from scorching while you're stirring.
  • Grate your Parmesan fresh from a block if you can; the pre-grated stuff has anti-caking agents that make it feel grainy instead of silky when it melts into hot risotto.
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