Let It Be Fall: Butternut Squash and Wild Mushroom Risotto

Walking around New York yesterday was a rather surreal experience. There were cops on every single street corner--sometimes in clusters of threes and fours. Near 8th Ave., barricades upon barricades lined the way to Madison Square Garden, between which protesters stood--in the hot sun--holding signs decrying the horrors of George W. Bush. Red "No Smoking" stickers replaced the cigarette with a "W," and stores appealed to the political climate with cutesy signs that read, for example: "Feeling Bushed? Kerry yourself inside."In many ways this is a good and exciting time to be in New York. In most other ways, though, it's not. I find myself growing more and more weary of the political scene. Also, I'll confess, it's a little bit scary: helicopters flying overhead and sirens wailing past every few minutes. I really want this convention to be over.Therefore, I decided to do the equivalent of a culinary rain dance: I decided to make a dish more appropriate for fall than summer. Call me a rebel, I can take it. I whipped out my newest Strand cookbook purchase---Tom Valenti's One-Pot Meals.I like the concept of this book because you basically end up with a big pot of food that will last you through the week. That's one of my newest goals in this expensive city: to make food that will last a long while.Risotto is no such food. It turns gloppy and pasty once it sits in the pot after being taken off the heat. Yet it's in my fridge right now and I plan to eat it anyway. But we're getting ahead of ourselves...To start, you must buy many things to make this risotto. Among those many things is sage:Sage is an herb I haven't worked with much. I am told it complements butternut squash incredibly well. This is appropriate, then, because here's a butternut squash:IMG_2.JPGLadies and gentlemen, this is my first butternut squash. Scary, no?Now I watched a Sarah Moulton once where she talked about safely peeling and cutting up a butternut squash. Unfortunately, I forgot everything she taught me. So I began by peeling the squash straight down with a vegetable peeler:IMG_3.JPGThis worked fairly well, though the outsides were still tough and bricky. I eventually cut off the outsides with a knife. But before that, I cut the squash in half and scooped away the seeds:IMG_4.JPGNow Tom has you cut up the squash into half inch squares. This part, I'll concede, was quite difficult. I almost sliced my thumb off twice. But somehow I made it work:IMG_5.JPGThen into a pot with 2 Tbs of butter:IMG_6.JPGSeason with salt and pepper and cook "until brown and slightly softened but still holding their shape, about 12 minutes."Sadly, it began losing its shape 8 minutes in--begining to resemble mashed sweet potatoes, so I took it off the heat.IMG_7.JPGPoured it into a bowl with the chopped sage and stirred it around. This won't get used until later.Tom has you wipe the pot clean and then put it back on the heat. This leaves glorious brown bits on the bottom that white wine will eventually pick up, giving a huge flavor boost to your risotto:IMG_8.JPGBut first mushrooms. Now I cheated here and I regret it. Tom wants you to separate all your wild mushrooms and cook them separately with 2 Tbs of butter each. But it was getting late, Lisa was coming over, and I wanted to have dinner ready. So I threw all the mushrooms in: (Also, I'd done all the mushrooms at once before when I made the Chez Panisse Wild Mushroom risotto, so I figured I'd be ok):IMG_9.JPGUnfortunately, I only used 2 Tbs of butter to start and then, halfway through, as the mushrooms got dryer and dryer I realized it was 2 Tbs for each type of mushroom so I quickly added 6 more Tbs of butter. This made the mushrooms way too buttery:IMG_10.JPGThen I thought about Julia Child and wondered if one could really have too much butter. I yanked a mushroom out and tasted it and it tasted wonderful. Very good, then. I poured the mushrooms into a bowl and tossed with freshly cut thyme. Mushrooms and thyme is a killer combination.Now, we wipe the pot clean again and add 1 large spanish onion diced. That cooks for four minutes (in olive oil and butter) and then we add 2 cups of Arborio rice:IMG_11.JPGThis is a ton of rice for risotto. Since it plumps up with the liquid, this is way more than two people can heathily eat. No matter. Remember our goal: to eat through the week. And to skip past the Republican National Convention. I peered out my window: still Republicans.Lisa arrived just as the vegetable broth on the back of the stove began to simmer. I had added wine to the rice and onions and it was now absorbed. The challenge was now to begin: the 18 minutes of frantic stirring and ladeling simmering broth into the risotto. This was a job for a virile, well-endowed kitchen god. This was a job for Lisa:IMG_12.JPGAfter 18 minutes (the requisite time), there was still broth left but the risotto looked well brothed. I tasted a spoonful and felt the texture was right. The flavor was off, but we hadn't added the mushrooms or squash yet.And that, indeed, is the last step. You add 2 more Tbs of butter, the mushrooms and the squash and you end up with this:IMG_13.JPGSuddenly, I looked out my window and saw a flurry of white men in suits spinning in a tornadoed mass back to middle America. The helicopters fled the skies, the police left the streets and the only noise was the noise of New York applauding. Lisa and I sat down and ate risotto. And it was good.

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