This wild rice and spinach risotto is made with coconut milk for a fun twist on a traditional risotto.
On my first interview for the company I currently work at, I was sent from room to room as I met with 6 of the 8 employees at the time in the ghetto fab office building which was really a condo complex that someone had half-assedly (term of the day) turned into office suites (suite being a very liberal term as there was nothing suite-like about that building).
For the last interview of the day I was sent into the office of one of the people who started the company with the president.
I was prepped on his dedication and involvement from the start as they worked to get the budding start-up company off the ground and running from their car, traveling around New England trying to get clients on board (a speech we get to hear at every.single. company meeting).
So I put my A-game face on, walked into the room ready to impress and B-A-M….was literally smacked in the face with the most intense smell of canned tuna permeating every inch of air in the small 8×8 office.
Apparently, he was training for some athletic event and was eating “protein” snacks throughout the day, tuna being the one he chose 2 minutes before my interview.
Up until last week, I’ve avoided any and all tinned fish because of that memory.
It was the longest 30 minutes of my life as I sat there trying not to gag and simultaneously impress him with my resume full of pointless academic societies and turn my 4 year waitressing job into something that “developed my interpersonal skills” and “taught me how to ‘think on my feet’”.
It’s pretty hard to bs your way through turning waitressing into a job that preps you for the business world under normal circumstances because let’s be honest, all I did was run around like a maniac and pick popcorn shrimp off of appetizer plates before they went out to the tables.
Throw the distraction of a tuna-stenched room on top of things and I’m impressed I somehow ended up with a job offer at all.
There’s all of 5 aisles in the Trader Joe’s I go to and yet, I can literally take an hour in that store as I stare at all the stuff on their shelves.
Last time, it was the tinned fish area that got me. For at least 10 minutes I stood there staring at the canned wild salmon debating in my head between cheap and easy omega-3s and that disgusting canned fishy smell from my interview.
I figured it’s been 8 years since that day and I needed to suck it up. 6oz of smelly fish for a couple bucks trumps the $16.99/lb I pay for it’s fresh, non smelly version which can’t sit on my shelf for months without going bad.
So I used it in the weirdest way I could think of that was as far away as possible from typical tuna (or salmon) salad….risotto…with wild rice, spinach and coconut milk.
If you want a more “normal” approach to canned fish you can try this dijon dill salmon salad, my healthy Waldorf tuna salad or, for the brave, this simple sardine salad.
This dish is definitely not your typical “Italian” version of risotto, but it uses the same method.
The coconut milk kept it nice and creamy mimicking what the parmesan cheese would normally do and went together much better with the salmon than cheese ever would.
Besides the dish being delicious, it more importantly disassociated the smell of canned fish from that interview day.
Too bad I waited 8 years to make it.
Coconut Wild Rice and Spinach Risotto with Salmon
Ingredients
- 15 ounces canned coconut milk
- 1 cup vegetable broth
- 1 cup wild black rice
- 1 medium yellow onion, chopped
- 1 package frozen spinach, 10 oz, thawed and drained
- 6 oz. canned wild salmon, drained (or fresh cooked salmon torn into pieces)
- 1/4 cup basil leaves
- 1 tablespoon extra virgin olive oil
- 1/2 tablespoon butter
- salt & pepper
- 1/2 teaspoon turmeric
Instructions
- Heat a heavy bottomed pot or dutch oven over medium-high heat.
- Add olive oil and butter and melt.
- Add chopped onion and saute for about 5 minutes until softened.
- Add rice and saute for another 2-3 minutes to “toast” the rice.
- Meanwhile, pour coconut milk and vegetable broth into a small sauce pan, stir together and keep warm over low-medium heat.
- Once rice is toasted, turn heat down to medium and ladle in coconut milk mixture until just covering the rice and onions.
- Cook until liquid is absorbed by the rice and starts to diminish.
- Slowly continue ladling in liquid to cook the rice as it absorbs it.
- While rice cooks, combine basil, spinach and 2 tablespoons of the coconut milk mixture in a food processor and pulse until combined. Set aside.
- Once rice is fully cooked and has used up all the coconut milk/vegetable broth mixture add spinach mixture, turmeric and salt & pepper to taste and stir to combine.
- Lastly, stir in salmon and garnish with basil.
Notes
Nutrition
Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.
Gina Matsoukas is an AP syndicated writer. She is the founder, photographer and recipe developer of Running to the Kitchen — a food website focused on providing healthy, wholesome recipes using fresh and seasonal ingredients. Her work has been featured in numerous media outlets both digital and print, including MSN, Huffington post, Buzzfeed, Women’s Health and Food Network.
Thanks was easy and yum!
Just wanted to let you know that I made this (or some version of it based on what I had on-hand) last night and it was amazing!!
I used salmon burger patties (baked then broken apart) in lieu of the canned version (but still from TJ’s) and added broccoli since I had no spinach or basil (I did say it was a version, right?).
The only other thing I tweaked was to add some Sriracha because I tend to add hot sauce to everything.
The result? AMAZING. So so so delicious. Thank you for inspiring me!!
So glad you liked it! I actually thought about using salmon burgers too when I was making this but the canned way seemed easier ;)
You just convinced me to give those fish tins a try!
Looks SOO good!!