In episode four of Stanley Tucci: Searching for Italy, the American actor travels to the county’s north, including the financial and business capital Milan, where he learns how to make cotoletta milanese, risotto milanese, pizzocheri and polenta. He also indulges in the city’s habit of aperitivo, a way to graze with a cocktail before dinner.
In previous episodes, Stanley Tucci explored Rome, where he tried the Eternal City’s four famous pastas of amatriciana, carbonara, cacio e pepe and pasta alla gricia; as well as Emilia-Romagna, where he met up with Massimo Bottura and learned to cook tortellini in brodo.
This time Tucci was in the country’s more prosperous and cosmopolitan north, specifically in Milan. The city is famous for its risotto milanese, a golden-hued rice dish flavoured with saffron. Tucci visits restaurant Ratanà, where chef Cesare Battisti explains the history of risotto Milanese and shows him how to make it.
"The story goes that one day they were pranked by being fed rice as yellow as the windows they made," Battisti tells Tucci.
Why rice, and not pasta? "Because Italy is split in two," chef Battisti explains. "The south is very warm, and wheat grows there, (but) the north is rainy and has got marshes, so rice grows here."
How to Make Risotto Milanese from Searching for Italy
Risotto Milanese is not a difficult dish to make, but it must be made with the highest-quality ingredients. So make sure you use superfine Carnaroli rice to make it. The other ingredients you will need to make it are a white onion, unsalted butter, chicken or vegetable stock, and of course good-quality Parmigiano cheese.