Paella of the Land

- Total Time
- About 1½ hours
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 12bone-in, skin-on chicken thighs
- 1medium-size rabbit, quartered
- Salt and pepper to taste
- 4links fresh chorizo or good-quality dried chorizo, like Palacios
- 8cups chicken broth
- ¾bottle (about 2¾ cups) dry white wine
- 2teaspoons saffron threads, preferably Iranian
- ¼cup olive oil
- 1medium onion, chopped
- 4cloves garlic, chopped
- ¼pound jamón serrano, roughly chopped
- 11-kilogram bag short-grained Spanish rice, preferably bomba or Calasparra
- 4medium-size ripe tomatoes, grated, skin discarded
- 1cup green peas (optional)
- Piquillo pimento, sliced into strips for garnish (optional)
Preparation
- Step 1
Build a medium-hot fire in your grill (when ready, you can hold your hand about 6 inches above the grill for only 2 or 3 seconds).
- Step 2
Season the chicken thighs and rabbit liberally with salt and pepper. Put the thighs, then the rabbit, then the chorizo (if using fresh) on the grill and sear well without cooking through, about 3 to 4 minutes per side for each. (If using dried chorizo, simply slice into chunks and add in step 5.) As each is seared, remove from the grill and set aside. As soon as the chorizo is cool enough, slice it diagonally into bite-size chunks.
- Step 3
Meanwhile, combine the chicken broth, wine and saffron in a medium saucepan, bring just to a simmer, then set on the side of the grill to keep warm.
- Step 4
Place a large paella pan on the grill, add the olive oil and heat until hot but not smoking. Add the onion and cook, stirring frequently, until translucent, about 3 minutes, adjusting the pan on the heat as needed to prevent burning. Add the garlic and cook, stirring, for 1 minute, then add the jamón and cook, stirring, until it is just heated through, about 3 or 4 minutes.
- Step 5
Add the rice and stir until well coated, then add the tomatoes and smooth out the rice to an even thickness. Slowly and without stirring, add enough of the broth mixture to leave just a thin layer of broth above the rice, then tuck the chicken, rabbit and chorizo pieces into the rice. Simmer slowly, moving the pan around on the fire as needed to keep the simmer going; avoid boiling. Gently add small amounts of liquid as needed so it’s not totally dry. When the rice is creamy and just al dente and the chicken, rabbit and chorizo are cooked through (should take 20 to 35 minutes), remove pan from heat and stir in the peas, if using. If using pimento strips, place on top.
Private Notes
Comments
Dear All,
Paella NEVER has chorizo as an ingredient. I come from Spain and grew up having paella of the land with rabbit and chicken prepared by my Valencian grandmother. All the vegetables are fresh. The chicken should be cut in small pieces, about 8 pieces per half chicken.
Correction: July 24, 2013
A recipe last Wednesday for Paella of the Land misstated the amount of saffron needed to equal 2 teaspoons. It is 1 gram, not 1 ounce.
Correction: July 31, 2013
A recipe on July 17 for Paella of the Sea misstated the amount of rice required. It is four cups, not four pounds.
I've lived in Spain for nearly 40 years and do a lot of paellas. Purists throw up their hands in dismay over onion, chorizo, etc., but I find paella works with all sorts of ingredients. I do, however, shy away from chorizo as its strong flavor can overpower things like rabbit or chicken. Bacon is a good substitute for the "jamón" (expensive & hard to find), and in the US Italian "risotto" rice (alborio or carnaroli) is a fair substitute for Spanish short-grained rice.
Just great. Very flexible and delicious
Chorizo. Paella is the name of the pan. As a result, a multiplicity of flavored rices can be cooked in it. All are paella. In Valencia, the Arabs planted rice in a large fresh water lake, the Albufera. Here is where paella originates. It is Arabic in spirit. The flavors are as important as the contrast of textures, crunchy, mellow, and chewy. Chorizo, like paprika, is from Castille. It has a different spirit: wintery, hardy, bold —and pasty, buttery. It is not a summer, textural team player.
I'm just some filthy Canadian, but I've never had a paella that didn't have chorizo in it. I can't imagine it without and was surprised to learn from these comments that chorizo isn't considered a paella ingredient. If I've learned to accept that poutine can contain ingredients beyond fries, curds and gravy and still be considered poutine, then I think we can apply the same flexible thinking to other national dishes. Food is great and not a contest; don't let anyone tell you how to enjoy it.