JOIN! 12 Weeks for $1

Shrimp Risotto with Tomatoes and Basil

4 Servings

45 minutes

Made This Recipe? Write a Review.
Thank you for submitting your review! A member of our team is confirming the review meets our site's Community Guidelines. It will be posted on the site shortly.

This risotto is loosely based a recipe from “Fish Without a Doubt” by Rick Moonen and Roy Finamore. The starchy, creamy consistency of carnaroli (or Arborio) rice is a perfect backdrop for the briny-sweet flavor of plump, perfectly cooked shrimp; juicy tomatoes; and fresh, fragrant basil. Classic risotto-cooking technique calls for adding hot broth in several additions to the rice as it cooks, as well as for constant stirring. Our simplified method adds the liquid in just two batches, and frequently but vigorous stirring coaxes the starch from the grains, yielding a rich, velvety risotto with minimal effort.

4

Servings

Tip

Don't forget to cover the pot after adding the shrimp; this traps heat in the pot so that the shrimp gently cook through.

45 minutes

Ingredients

  • 2

    8-ounce bottles clam juice

  • 12

    ounces extra-large (21/25 per pound) shrimp, peeled, deveined and patted dry

Directions

Pardon the interruption

You need to be a Milk Street Digital Member to see the full recipe

JOIN MILK STREET DIGITAL & PRINT
12 WEEKS FOR JUST $1

and get access to all of our recipes and articles online, as well as in print.

GET DIGITAL & PRINT
How we use your email.

Your email address is required to identify your subscription. We will use it for customer service as well as other communications from Milk Street. We will not share, or rent your email address.

Reviews
Carla K.
February 8, 2024
Light and tasty
Really good and instructions are easy to follow.
Janet W.
August 12, 2023
Shrimp Risotto
Very tasty! Finished with butter instead of more oil
Mark V.

I’ve made this dish twice, once cutting it in half for two servings instead of 4. It is very easy and very delicious. It’s a bit “lighter” than a risotto with lots of thick or heavy cheesy stick-to-your-ribs qualities, which is what I’m looking for with a seafood risotto in the first place. It’s very easy to add a little extra salt and pepper to taste at the end, which in my view, is a far simpler way to intensify the flavor rather than a typical risotto that requires increasing amounts of cheese.