My thought, too! 😄😄😄 "Weren't there 10 chickens???" Kenji: "....🤔...." Or the chickens are sensing family in the pan and saying, "We better behave, this guy isn't playing..."
Honestly, as someone from Valencia I am not surprised at all to see that of all the youtube channels yours has the correct info while still keeping to door open to swapping some stuff. I dont even find that traditional paella valenciana is that good, we have plenty of rice dishes that are way better , but its always nice to learn recipes the right way and then modify them to suit your location/taste. As always, great content
@@hughmcgrane8954 Someone already mentioned Arroz al horno, which is traditional from Valencia and, for me, better than paella. You can also try Arroz al Senyoret, Arroz negro, or even stuff like Rice with Cod and Cauliflower, which are from Comunidad Valenciana (Valencia, Alicante and Castellón)
The first time I ever had paella was in a small town called J'avea around 30 years ago where they were cooking paella on outdoor grills along the beach. What do you think of the paella there? Is it the same as Valencia paella?
As an Iranian, I recommend steeping the saffron in the hot liquid before adding to the pan. Saffron is very sensitive and the direct heat from the pan will likely kill a lot of the floral notes.
As a proud valencian and random internet stranger whose opinion holds no value I would say that is a very respectful way to cook a foreign dish. Talk about the traditions but acknowledge that you cannot possibly follow them strictly and build on it. And while the addition of garlic is strange to me, as in my region we do not add it, and the fact that you toasted the rice was reeeeally weird, that paella looks miles ahead of what tourists end up eating here. Pretty cool! :-)
You know what doesn't make things taste any better? Strict adherence to tradition. Thank you for continuing to innovate and showcasing all the great techniques
I'm originally from Valencia, Spain. My family has a great tradition of cooking this dish following on my grandmother's recipe who learnt how to cook it from her mum (we are going back to before the 1900s). I think this is the first time that I do not shudder at watching someone not native from the area cooking it. I'm not only giving a 'thumbs up' but I hope that anyone who would like to learn how to properly cook this main course will do so following this video. Kenji, thanks for properly explain not only how to cook the Paella Valenciana, but also to clarify all the myths around it and the exceptions to the recipe so clearly.
Kenji, thank you for this video! My 19-year-old vegetarian daughter and I watched your video on the basics of stirfry in and in short she thinks you are the greatest thing ever. 🙂 I taught myself to make paella by watching a couple of different UA-cam videos, but at that time I didn’t know about you so I was really excited to find this. At this point your video is mostly confirming a lot of what I have figured out but I love your easy-going and reassuring style. Thank you for everything you do!
I'm from Valencia, and this is the best paella I've ever seen outside of Valencia! You are well informed 😁 In the SF Bay Area I found rabbit at 99 Ranch Market, if anyone wants to cook it also with rabbit meat ;D
Polarica on third street in the city has rabbit as well (and whatever other exotic meat you want). I'd be surprised if Whole Foods or your local butcher couldn't get you a rabbit though.
Pues deberías saber que no se le echa agua fría al arroz, o se echa el arroz en el caldo ha hirviendo (a la valenciana), o se prepara el caldo a parte, se sofríe el arroz y se le echa el caldo justo hirviendo o muy caliente para no romper la cocción (a la alicantina), pero nunca se añade agua fría al arroz. El resto bastante bien, salvo por la decoración final con pimientos y limones. Sobra.
I love so much about this. The explanation of the traditional way to make it, while also explaining how that tradition opens the door to remixes... The unabashed joy in food made well as it comes together... The dedication to keeping your daughter offscreen and safe from internet weirdoes... Leaning into the explanation after that terrible pun... Fantastic work!
I live in the Philippines and we also have a version of Valenciana. The only similarity is the chicken and rice but we use sticky rice and chicken can be swapped for pork. The main flavorings are coconut milk and turmeric powder. It usually has chorizo,pork liver, and lentils. Sometimes they add sodas like Sprite as a secret ingredient.
I was a lab technician for 22 years and was laid off during Covid. I now have three jobs, two of which are in food service, and your videos have really given me new things to try out when I have the time. Thank You😊
Came here to post this exactly. It costs $25 million to produce a milligram of positrons making it the most expensive thing in the world (that we know of)
There’s some fancy antibody medications that are more expensive per unit of weight along with some rare elements. As far as common things go I think saffron is #1 though
Hello from 2022, I loved this video! Particularly enjoyed your comment about "real authentic paella is the one made with ingredients you have access to/can afford". It reminded me of a meme I saw about lockdown during Passover. Something like, "Don't worry if you can't find maror or make charoset this year - substituting crackers and fruit spread while you're confined to your house during a global plague is literally the most authentic experience you could have for this year's Passover!"
Reading your recipes for the last few years vs watching you cook at home has changed my cooking game. Following your recipes can sometimes feel like strict orders but these videos really exemplify the relaxing fun part of cooking while staying true to the spirit of the instructions. Cheers!
As an Asturian Spaniard all I have to say Kenji is it's wonderful how much respect you have for Spanish food. Even Spaniards cannot agree with what should be considered a "traditional" paella so your degree of respect and reverence for the dish is as good as anyone. The Paella looks wonderful and as usual, love your work. Someday after all this COVID business, you should come to visit Xigon, Aviles, Villaviciosa, Ribadesella, Llanes, Cudillero, and all of the other wonderful places along Spain's underrated and underappreciated northern shores.
According to Jeffrey Steingarten, one of the reasons snails were used is because the snails in the area basically lived on rosemary and so were very rosemary-flavoured, and it was a neat way of getting both rosemary flavour and extra protein into your paella.
I mean it just looks like she needed a little time to catch up. You can be dating someone and really into them and not jump to defined relationships right away.
People who have been in toxic relationships, or thought they had met their perfect partner and later found discovered that person was all wrong for them, often need a lot more time to build trust. There's an old saying in America, "Once bitten, twice shy." (Which is not to suggest this is the case with Kenji and his wife; I've never met either of them. I'm merely saying I've known people who have a lot of trouble committing to long-term relationships, because they've been burned multiple times in the past.)
I was born in Valencia and grew up in Alicante. I think this recipe is pretty spot on, especially considering the ingredients available in USA. I am not a fan of "paella mixta", I just think meat and fish/seafood go better in different paellas. In my family we also always roast the rice in the same way you did. For tips: I think paprika for the paella is better non smoked. Also, instead of using chicken tights try using chicken wings (wing and drumlets separated) and pork ribs (in small pieces), my favorite. About the rice, definitely short grain, bomba is probably the best but I had good results with sushi rice too! Again, congratulations on the recipe and you get extra points on trying to pronounce the name correctly :-).
Nice recipe! My wife is from Valencia and I made her watch the video. She was quite amused by it and happy with the result. She didn’t agree much with the fact that you put the rice first but there’s always different ways. I’ve watched her father making it on an open wood fire and it’s a ritual. Nicely done!
Have really loved these videos from this house. Been a long-time fan, but these videos have translated admiration into genuine affection. Understand you want to maintain some privacy, so I'll just say I hope you and your family are doing ok and the move is something you're happy about.
La verdad que es mas paella que la que te sirven en cualquier lado de madrid. Aun así, lo del pimiento le ha quitado un poco... pero por lo demas muy bien
@@Gonzaoo22 Lo del pimiento depende. Mi familia es de pimiento rojo y, además de vivir en la Albufera, son de paella todos los domingos, aunque en lugar de ser del piquillo, es pimiento rojo normal crudo y lo ponemos en el sofrito. Pero la paella en Valencia, siempre y cuando uno no ponga marisco, es como el parchís, cada casa tiene sus normas.
Kenji, PLEASE do a parenting video! I’m always so jealous of how your daughter has such a large pallet in terms of foods she eats and how well behaved she is. You are a master of food and Dadding. Please share the love!
Kenji, I love to cook since I was a small kid. And I really love Paella, try to get it every time I go to Spain or if I see one somewhere. For some reason, I've always thought it is really difficult to cook a really good paella and was kind of scared to try it out until I saw this video. You can not imagine how grateful I am for this one! Definitely going to try it out and also some other versions of Paella as well. Thanks a lot for sharing!!! Cheers from Germany and take care!
Chefs in a kitchen: Wear closed toes shoes always and non-slips are a must. Kenji: I think i'll wear sandles and talk about my wok burner that goes up to 300k btus
Kenji. I am a spaniard living in the usa. Good recipe. What i would do to make it simple is to debone the chicken before, make a broth with the bones and fry the chicken really well, in smaller pieces. At the time of adding water, use the broth instead. The recipe is very good. You are great, and I have learnt a lot with your videos and your books
Bye bye, old San Mateo house--it was great fun seeing all the food cooked at this location. Looking forward to lots of tasty food at the new house. Good luck on a safe and easy transition!!
Great video. Valencians will hate me but I love paella with red bell pepper. I think it tastes amazing with the rest of the dish. Also, I like to add the whole garlic cloves with skin and all since the begining and let them cook all the way. They taste amazing. Fun fact: at first paella was made with a rat called "Rata de agua".
My Spanish friend gifted me a paella pan, so I'm obliged to try my hand at making paella. I looked up some recipes she gave this one the sign of approval. Thank you so much for the recipe
looks really great. However when making traditional paella valenciana you would add the water after cooking the meat,vegetables and spices and let it boil for about 20-30 minutes so it basically turns into a very rich stock to which finally add the rice. Really good to hear your sensitive and educated voice on culinary traditions!
Hola Kenji, Muchas gracias. Me encanto la clase y voy hacer esta paella cuando vamos de camping en unas 3 semanas. Soy Colombiana tambien y me encanta tu nombre.
I usually like seeing recipe variations, its better for us home cooks to see that we have options. Also cool to see how the authentic/original recipes are supposed to be.
Thank you for clarifying that joke about grating. I did not understand it initially, but once you explained it I understood it. Thank you for your intervention.
haha, im sure in some region peasants can easily get their hands on saffron. Like Kenji says, all these traditional recipes come from very specific regions, where they use what they have at hand. And then it's more expensive to do abroad. When thinking about my region, Flanders, we have for instance a lot of chicory farmers - Belgian endives it's also called -, and our chicory dish with ham and cheese is very famous and very common. But if you live somewhere with no chicory...
nice job like you i have learned from trial and error and i can make a nice paella usually chicken and artichoke. here are a few tips i use smoke paprika and colorante thats from a spanish buddy of mine makes the paella rice have a beautiful color and one more always fill the water or stock to the rivets in the paella pan these are just things that were passed along to me my wife loves my paella! nice job as always you are a pleasure to watch and listen too glen
Hi, just a few things, not just for you Kenji, but also for the viewers. (I am from Spain, not from Valencia, but I'm a pretty decent Spanish homecook) Before anything. You shouldn't be afraid of people feeling insulted by your methods, I personally think that cooking is a subjective thing that everyone can make it the way it wants and experiment with different methods to their liking. Obviously if you are making a full traditional recipe, you have to follow the guidelines, but all things considered, you can always give it your touch. With that said, feel free to not take any note from what I'm going to say bellow. As you said, the Paella (you are right, it is the correct term for that pan, most people including in Spain don't know this) must be leveled, it isn't a huge deal but it makes it easier for the rice to cook evenly. With that said, I haven't tried, but wouldn't suggest making Paella in a camp fire because it doesn't distribute the heat evenly. Also, when you add the liquid, you only simmer it once just to mix all the ingredients and to level the rice, then you just let it do its thing. I would suggest not using boned chicken, use sliced chicken breast (like the size of your smaller chunks or even a bit smaller) for comfort both while cooking and eating. Toasting the rice before adding the liquid is a common thing in making paellas, I have seen a lot of professional chefs doing it and also it is also my personal favorite method of doing it. Also an important thing is that Paella is made with round rice (Bomba or whatever but it must be chunky), you can obviously make it with other type of rice if you want or don't have the other type, but the "correct" way is with round rice. This is a silly picky thing of mine, but the lemon is put as a side, not on top. Also, in Valencia it is common to put a side of Mayo with the Paella, it sounds a bit weird at first, but trust me, it's delicious. Your paella looks amazing, great video, I hope you keep making Spanish dishes!!! Best regards P.D: Jarred Piquillo Peppers are f***ing amazing.
I have so enjoyed your videos during Covid lockdown. This will be on our dinner table this evening along with a fruited clafoutis. I love cooking and your videos help to make quick work of what is on hand. Everything turns out beautiful and delicious.
Sir! I enjoy every one of your videos. You do an amazing job of navigating the social media juggernaut and do the best you can to not offend people, even those who make a life out of being offended. Your videos are incredibly educational, loose, fun, and most importantly, unpretentious. How you speak is irrelevant. How your setup looks is irrelevant. How you pronounce the terms are irrelevant. What's relevant is that you look to broaden your viewers horizons and show them the beauty of cooking and the food that truly unites us all as humans. Your passion for food, family, education, and life truly shines in your videos and I, for one, and glad I found them. THANK YOU KENJI!!!!
Kenji, thank you so much for this video! your recipe is excellent and the end result looks delicious! I'm even impressed that you know that for an authentic one you need garrofón (not even everyone in Spain knows that). And I agree with you, you should use whatever you have close to you. And that's also why I have problems with recipes that they call for chorizo in paella: it is not as easy to find here in the States, so saying that you "need it" for an authentic paella makes the recipe harder for homecooks and it's not even true (another thing is that you have it or like it and decide to add it, there's no problem with that :)). I actually saw a youtube video from a famous channel calling for a whole chorizo for the paella, and they blended it with an onion and called it sofrito ... Also, since you are in the Bay Area, there's a restaurant in Palo Alto called Telefèric. They are from Barcelona and their lobster paella is really good! Thank you again!
One of my favourites is "Geschnetzeltes Züricher Art" Its with Champignons and a very creamy white sauce with a bit of lemon zest, which Balances the heavy cream used for the sauce . It's one of my favourites although i might be biased because it's native to me :>
I'm Spanish and I'm used to see Spanish recipes butchered, especially by American or British chefs. But I have to say that Kenji's paella, and also his tortilla and gazpacho are spot on. Well done sir 👌
Man, it sucks that you have to apologize in advance every time you make a traditional or regional dish just in case you make it slightly different... I'm from Barcelona, which is pretty close to Valencia, and I think you nailed it!
If youtube cooking videos have taught me anything, it's that Italians and Spaniards will fight someone to the death for cooking something even slightly differently than how nonna or abuela made it. (Nevermind that everyone's nonna or abuela made it slightly differently...)
@@lindocalrissian0926 These traditionnals recipes have justifications for almost every techniques and ingredients used. I believe people are pretty cool with you being creative with your cooking as long as you understand why things are a certain way and aknowledge the tradition that comes with the recipe. Hence the "apologizing" here, but you can see the comments are quite nice.
I'm from Valencia and I'd say that's pretty good! (sure those beans aren't the ones and you didn't have rabbit), but you didn't offend me, so shoutout to you Kenji, keep it up, would like to see more spanish cuisine ;)
great recipe! I can't eat seafood and while I love chorizo it dominates whatever dish I add it to. thanks for offering a really great paella alternative I can't wait to try
Sohla El-Waylly just dropped a "paella-inspired" (she's clear it's not truly paella) chicken-and-rice video on Food52's channel. Watched them back-to-back
Hi Kenji, I saw a few comments from Spaniards bellow and I couldn't agree more. You did a very decent paella for Spanish standards...it looks really great. I know as much as I try not to sound pedantic, it's going to.... but anyway...If I may suggest a few things I do myself (not saying my paella is the best): I'd tend to cut the meat smaller (like half the size the chunks you have) so that you don't need to turn them while the rice is cooking. Normally one doesn't touch the rice at all after you add the water and spread the rice, so that it doesn't break (it tends to stick more if you touch it while cooking). I'd say that it takes about 16-18 minutes for the rice to cook once you've added the water, strong fire the first 10 minutes, medium-low fire after that.The the last thing: That pan is good for a 2 -max 3 (not too hungry) people. I have a similar one that I use to cook for 2 people...once cooked, the rice layer shouldn't be more than 3/4-1 inch thick because otherwise the rice in the bottom tends to be overcooked. Overall as my Spaniard fellows said before, you cooked the most respectful paella I've seen from foreigners. Great job and thanks for spreading the goodness of the paella!
Kenji making a dad joke and then proceeding to explain the dad joke is one of those things that make me chuckle. It's one of those things that's like a multilayered Kenji-dad thing.
Great video, I really enjoyed how you encouraged people to just use what they have around, Paella recipe is not set in stone, if it works in the dish you should throw it in. You should try making Spanish Migas, another type of "peasant" food that works with almost anything you throw in, chorizo and morcilla are welcome!
Chef Kenji, I have been watching your videos and I enjoy them a lot. You are incredible.Before I discovered your channel, I was interested in preparing a paella.I'm from Cuba, and before coming to Miami,Florida, we had to go to Spain. This happened in 1968.We lived there for two and a half years. We enjoined been there because the Spanish people treated us so nice. The food was delicious and specially the Paellas.I'm 60 years old now and I have a UA-cam channel called Chef Garcia from Hollywood, just because I love to cook.I've only had my channel for a year now and I didn't want to do it because I don't like the way I sound and a co-worker of mine, who I started calling my UA-cam manager told me that with every dish I show on Facebook just to get a like, I should try it on UA-cam, So I did. Then I had the idea of preparing different recipes from different countries, and I thought about Spain, So I started doing my homework on how to prepare different paellas and this was before watching you.I usually dress with the clothes from different countries, depending on what food I choose to prepare.So to make the long story short, the first Chef I looked into was a Chef from Valencia.I just traveled to Spain and Paris two weeks ago and I purchased a red chili they sell for Paellas called Noras.I looked up receta paella valenciana autentica,The Chef's name is Amadeus.He has a restaurant there.So my point is, everything you explained during your paella video is correct,I would like to add, I thought you were Asian, then from Mexico ,just because on one of your recipes, you mentioned you grew up preparing the stuffed chipotles, and then today you say you have Colombian accent.Either way you are great.By the way, I've been watching Food Wishes before as well, and it's funny, you mention he's your neighbor. What a small world.I lived in California for a year, and didn't go to San Francisco. They say it's very nice.I wish you and your family, many blessings. Thank You, and sorry for this long text.Inocencio Garcia.
That paella was great Kenji!! Better than most of spanish paellas. For the ones that want to eat paella here on Spain I have two tips: 1. Only eat paella valenciana in Valencia. Avoid tourist oriented restaurants. 2. Only eat paella or any kind of rice If It is made in the moment for you, not included in a 'menu del dia', made several hours before.
@@PrimatoFortunato I'm not Spanish, but as someone who has cooked a lot while drunk... I think it helps with achieving the crunchy crispy crust at the bottom. Otherwise I mess with the dish a lot, and worry that it's burning. But after a couple beers in me, hey there's that crusty rice! Mmm
@@PrimatoFortunato tío la paella es el típico plato de domingo que se junta la familia y se hace entre tus abuelos y tíos bebiendo vino y cerveza, yo creo que va por ahí
Hi Kenji. Im from Valencia ( Spain ) where This paella comes from, and lot of people here says that ir you want to real paella valenciana you gotta be in Valencia but that is not true. Your paella was actually really really close to the traditional one. Very nice! Hope you enjoyed it 👍
As soon as you mentioned Toro in Boston I let out an audible moan of despair - I haven't gotten to eat there in about two years now and it is absolutely my favorite restaurant in Boston. Now with Covid-19 and the fact that I no longer live in Boston, I see little-to-no hope of eating there again any time soon :'(
Colombian here. Paella is like pizza. Unless you call it valenciana. In which case no matter how you cook it, you are going to make someone, somewhere, very angry. So my solution is to just call it paella. I dont care how you cook it as long as i get me some saffron and some crispy rice. Personally I use chicken stock instead of water. But again its just paella
As a spaniard who does pronounce c and z as th, there's no need to say valenciana with the th, an accent is an accent and there's nothing wrong with different accents. It's what makes languages so interesting and beautiful.
There is people in Spain that does paella much worse, even from Valencia. The rarest thing you can eat in Spain, unfortunately, IS A PALLEA WELL DONE hahah. Although it's a dish that every family has their own recipe... Congrats chef!! Very good job, looks delicious! UP THE SOCARRAT!
Im spanish and this is the best paella I've ever seen a foreigner do. Congratulations. I would even dare to call It paella valenciana because You followed the original recipe the best You could with the ingredients You had
Not bad at all!! I'm from Valencia and it's pretty close to the real deal. Thanks for not using peas and chorizo haha. Some people do fry the rice before, but if they do, they will add stock instead of plain water. If you don't have stock, it's sometimes better to first add the water, let it boil down for about 30min, and then add the rice. Hope it helps :)
As a Spaniard myself, congrats Kenji! Not 100% traditional paella but pretty close to that, plus you show tons of respect. You even got the "socarrat" (which I have to say that it is my favourite part of the paella)
Kenji, if you wanna brew all the flavour out of saffron you must put it in warm water for at least 1 hour, then add the liquid and saffron to the rice as late as possible in the cooking process. Cheers
Do what you can/want with what you have is truly the essence of spanish traditional cooking, i'm curious of what will be your take on other traditional dishes like castillian "olla de pobre" or madrilenian "cocido"
Thank you for showing me such amazing things every time you upload a video! Its my pleasure to be able to watch your vids!! Keep it up, btw my mom loves your videos too
i'm from valencia and i loved the video, i just appreciate so mucj seeing a tipical plate from my land being cooked so far away. did you enjoyed eating it??
It is very simple, I will explain it to you: for a Mediterranean culture accustomed to eating well and healthy, when a culture like yours accustomed to eating hot dogs and fast junk food has the gall to criticize good food makes us always defensive to prevent the culinary horrors that you are used to from being seen in the rest of the world as normal. we want our children to eat well and healthy. We love proper food
@@pablocaillaux Obviously you’ve never had hot dogs and French fries in your paella, you should try it it’s amazing. Add some cheese sauce on top too, but only after serving as to preserve the presentation in the paella bowl.
I've heard that in Spain they like to toast the saffron. I've tried it a couple of times and it does really seem to make a bit of a difference, though it's really easy to burn. The method I use is to just take a bit of aluminium foil and fold the saffron inside it and put it on the pan for a few seconds.
Honestly, in most households and restaurants even in the region of Valencia, it is much more common to use a colorant nowadays that is sold in any supermarket for the sole purpose of making paella. I guess because it's both easier and significantly cheaper. It is a bit more difficult to extract the same intense colour from saffron, although indeed drying it in aluminium foil at a low temperature in the oven (60-65 degrees, not toasting) and infusing water/stock with it afterwards seems to be a nice way. I can't say there's a huge difference flavour, although I much prefer the natural choice (saffron) and really enjoy the techniques behind making it with saffron!
@@TheDutchJaguar When I'm making paella but don't feel like buying saffron I just use a bit of turmeric and nutmeg. Turmeric gives the colour and nutmeg has some similar notes as saffron. Of course it's not the same, but it sure is cheaper (and would probably make any Spaniard very mad lol.)
You are missing an important point here Kenji, water is not broth. You can definitely up your paella game if you either replace water by chicken broth, or, like we do in Valencia, you have the chicken and vegetables simmering in water for 30-40 min before adding the rice.
Anyone who’s already commented, shame on you for commenting without watching the video.
Legend
Dude, need to know the difference between the Anova oven and sous vide. Need both? Differences?
J. Kenji López-Alt ew you put to much flavour in that dish
My favorite part is 15:27
What languages do you speak? Are you fluent in Spanish?
"I'm chicken-sitting" he says, as his chicken browns.
"Where are my chickens...? Kenji...? You're looking kind of sus" - Neighbor, ~~Kenji gets Ejected~~
*was
My thought, too! 😄😄😄
"Weren't there 10 chickens???"
Kenji: "....🤔...."
Or the chickens are sensing family in the pan and saying, "We better behave, this guy isn't playing..."
@@kariforuniajin "Wanna try some paella?" 😄🙈
Last outside video is this and all of a sudden he’s on the move..... very suspect timing.
He really just defined what a pun is, his dad jokes are on a whole new level
the explaining of the grate joke got me
It hurt the whole time
@@oskarkrawiec368 i think he might have been explaining for people who are from other countries or something
@@oskarkrawiec368 I'm pretty sure that was the actual joke. He's mocking people who over-explain jokes and ruin them
lmao
Honestly, as someone from Valencia I am not surprised at all to see that of all the youtube channels yours has the correct info while still keeping to door open to swapping some stuff. I dont even find that traditional paella valenciana is that good, we have plenty of rice dishes that are way better , but its always nice to learn recipes the right way and then modify them to suit your location/taste. As always, great content
Arroz al horno > paella valenciana tradicional
Can you recommend some of said rice dishes?
@@hughmcgrane8954 Someone already mentioned Arroz al horno, which is traditional from Valencia and, for me, better than paella. You can also try Arroz al Senyoret, Arroz negro, or even stuff like Rice with Cod and Cauliflower, which are from Comunidad Valenciana (Valencia, Alicante and Castellón)
@@hughmcgrane8954 As you have already been told, "arròs del senyoret" is such a delicious dish!
The first time I ever had paella was in a small town called J'avea around 30 years ago where they were cooking paella on outdoor grills along the beach. What do you think of the paella there? Is it the same as Valencia paella?
As an Iranian, I recommend steeping the saffron in the hot liquid before adding to the pan. Saffron is very sensitive and the direct heat from the pan will likely kill a lot of the floral notes.
I heard that steeping in cold water overnight also works. I want to test it out.
As an Indian, I approve this theory.
As a Czech, I can barely get my hands on saffron
as a Pole, I've never even seen saffron myself.
As a French , married to an Iranian, having a polish father and American kids, I also approve that method!
As a proud valencian and random internet stranger whose opinion holds no value I would say that is a very respectful way to cook a foreign dish. Talk about the traditions but acknowledge that you cannot possibly follow them strictly and build on it. And while the addition of garlic is strange to me, as in my region we do not add it, and the fact that you toasted the rice was reeeeally weird, that paella looks miles ahead of what tourists end up eating here.
Pretty cool! :-)
Totally agree. As a Spanish person I think this is a pretty good dish. Kudos to you sir. Well done!
Im a spanish cook, and in every paella i have seen we toast the rice like that
Indeed, my fellow valencian neighbour.
@@roqueiglesias8063 Im from Poland, im doing rice like that always :)
Me hace gracia que habléis en inglés siendo de epañita todos xdddd
You know what doesn't make things taste any better? Strict adherence to tradition. Thank you for continuing to innovate and showcasing all the great techniques
What's more expensive than saffron? probably HP ink
Scorpion venom, apparently
HA! I need to find a street ink dealer.
I think anti-matter is more expensive per gram, but then I don't keep it around the kitchen for cooking.
There are cancer treatment pharmaceuticals that cost $12,000 to $15,000 per dose. So that's probably got saffron beat in terms of price/ounce.
the most expensive is most prolly high performance racing horse semen,as far as i remember
I'm originally from Valencia, Spain. My family has a great tradition of cooking this dish following on my grandmother's recipe who learnt how to cook it from her mum (we are going back to before the 1900s). I think this is the first time that I do not shudder at watching someone not native from the area cooking it. I'm not only giving a 'thumbs up' but I hope that anyone who would like to learn how to properly cook this main course will do so following this video. Kenji, thanks for properly explain not only how to cook the Paella Valenciana, but also to clarify all the myths around it and the exceptions to the recipe so clearly.
Kenji’s daughter: Dad what are you doing!?
Kenji: nothing…
*Kenji continues cooking snails in paella*
"Sitting chickens."
you call them pets, i call them lifestock
@@dirtmcgirt6531 Ah yes, “lifestock,” the concentrated spiritual essence of Smash players.
You are a brave man. You ventured where other famous chefs have catastrophically failed, and came out triumphant. As a Valencian, I salute you :)
WE MUST.
Kenji, thank you for this video! My 19-year-old vegetarian daughter and I watched your video on the basics of stirfry in and in short she thinks you are the greatest thing ever. 🙂 I taught myself to make paella by watching a couple of different UA-cam videos, but at that time I didn’t know about you so I was really excited to find this. At this point your video is mostly confirming a lot of what I have figured out but I love your easy-going and reassuring style. Thank you for everything you do!
I'm from Valencia, and this is the best paella I've ever seen outside of Valencia! You are well informed 😁 In the SF Bay Area I found rabbit at 99 Ranch Market, if anyone wants to cook it also with rabbit meat ;D
Polarica on third street in the city has rabbit as well (and whatever other exotic meat you want). I'd be surprised if Whole Foods or your local butcher couldn't get you a rabbit though.
haven't been to back SF chinatown in years, but you can probably find live rabbit there
Pues deberías saber que no se le echa agua fría al arroz, o se echa el arroz en el caldo ha hirviendo (a la valenciana), o se prepara el caldo a parte, se sofríe el arroz y se le echa el caldo justo hirviendo o muy caliente para no romper la cocción (a la alicantina), pero nunca se añade agua fría al arroz. El resto bastante bien, salvo por la decoración final con pimientos y limones. Sobra.
I'm moving back to the Bay in a month! Glad you found a home there, too, and that you've gotten into my home away from home, 99 Ranch!
I love so much about this. The explanation of the traditional way to make it, while also explaining how that tradition opens the door to remixes... The unabashed joy in food made well as it comes together... The dedication to keeping your daughter offscreen and safe from internet weirdoes... Leaning into the explanation after that terrible pun... Fantastic work!
I live in the Philippines and we also have a version of Valenciana. The only similarity is the chicken and rice but we use sticky rice and chicken can be swapped for pork. The main flavorings are coconut milk and turmeric powder. It usually has chorizo,pork liver, and lentils. Sometimes they add sodas like Sprite as a secret ingredient.
I was a lab technician for 22 years and was laid off during Covid. I now have three jobs, two of which are in food service, and your videos have really given me new things to try out when I have the time. Thank You😊
Kenji flexes like - "My burner is literally 16x more powerful than yours, chump"
You’ve reached the ultimate number of likes. I refuse to contribute another as to not destroy the meme
I'm sorry, but I cannot physically like this...69 noice
@@madisontate2714 Chad.
the sizzling of the pan + kenji's voice explaining a pun is the most therapeutic ASMR ever.
"A pan this size will feed 5 or 6 people."
"I'm just cooking for my daughter and I."
Meal prep!
maybe Steven King wrote his daughter
@@cameron3351 qQq
This would actually feed 3 to 4 people if it was a household kind of serving. He is definitely talking about restaurant-size servings.
Some dishes taste even better when they are leftovers.
Antimatter is more expensive than saffron. I bet antisaffron would be the most expensive thing
Came here to post this exactly. It costs $25 million to produce a milligram of positrons making it the most expensive thing in the world (that we know of)
i mean you cant really put it in a jar
Unless it’s an antijar. You can (and should) put it in a raj. Defunct the noblice.
Antisaffron holy shit my sides. That was a good one.
There’s some fancy antibody medications that are more expensive per unit of weight along with some rare elements. As far as common things go I think saffron is #1 though
Hello from 2022, I loved this video! Particularly enjoyed your comment about "real authentic paella is the one made with ingredients you have access to/can afford". It reminded me of a meme I saw about lockdown during Passover. Something like, "Don't worry if you can't find maror or make charoset this year - substituting crackers and fruit spread while you're confined to your house during a global plague is literally the most authentic experience you could have for this year's Passover!"
Wow, that brought back memories. I was happy to have matza and wine!
Reading your recipes for the last few years vs watching you cook at home has changed my cooking game. Following your recipes can sometimes feel like strict orders but these videos really exemplify the relaxing fun part of cooking while staying true to the spirit of the instructions. Cheers!
As Spanish i really enjoy ur spanish way of cooking, way better than a lot of spanish chefs.
As an Hungarian I also liked it
As an Asturian Spaniard all I have to say Kenji is it's wonderful how much respect you have for Spanish food. Even Spaniards cannot agree with what should be considered a "traditional" paella so your degree of respect and reverence for the dish is as good as anyone. The Paella looks wonderful and as usual, love your work. Someday after all this COVID business, you should come to visit Xigon, Aviles, Villaviciosa, Ribadesella, Llanes, Cudillero, and all of the other wonderful places along Spain's underrated and underappreciated northern shores.
Studied in Oviedo! Bring on the fabada, sidra, and cabrales!
According to Jeffrey Steingarten, one of the reasons snails were used is because the snails in the area basically lived on rosemary and so were very rosemary-flavoured, and it was a neat way of getting both rosemary flavour and extra protein into your paella.
Kenji has hit peak dad status. Made a dad joke and then explains it in detail. He’s evolving.
My uncle is from Valencia and would make this for me on all my birthdays growing up, good times
“When I thought she was my girlfriend and she did not think I was her boyfriend” damn I felt that.
It can also go the other way and it hurts just the same. Nobody needs crappy people breaking hearts on purpose.
U can tell there’s a story there.
I mean it just looks like she needed a little time to catch up. You can be dating someone and really into them and not jump to defined relationships right away.
People who have been in toxic relationships, or thought they had met their perfect partner and later found discovered that person was all wrong for them, often need a lot more time to build trust. There's an old saying in America, "Once bitten, twice shy." (Which is not to suggest this is the case with Kenji and his wife; I've never met either of them. I'm merely saying I've known people who have a lot of trouble committing to long-term relationships, because they've been burned multiple times in the past.)
We need the full story Kenji!
I was born in Valencia and grew up in Alicante. I think this recipe is pretty spot on, especially considering the ingredients available in USA. I am not a fan of "paella mixta", I just think meat and fish/seafood go better in different paellas. In my family we also always roast the rice in the same way you did. For tips: I think paprika for the paella is better non smoked. Also, instead of using chicken tights try using chicken wings (wing and drumlets separated) and pork ribs (in small pieces), my favorite. About the rice, definitely short grain, bomba is probably the best but I had good results with sushi rice too! Again, congratulations on the recipe and you get extra points on trying to pronounce the name correctly :-).
Nice recipe! My wife is from Valencia and I made her watch the video. She was quite amused by it and happy with the result. She didn’t agree much with the fact that you put the rice first but there’s always different ways. I’ve watched her father making it on an open wood fire and it’s a ritual. Nicely done!
Im spanish. This is not only the best paella tutorial out there, its the way this spanish makes his paella.
Mutch love kenji, love your philosophy
Have really loved these videos from this house. Been a long-time fan, but these videos have translated admiration into genuine affection. Understand you want to maintain some privacy, so I'll just say I hope you and your family are doing ok and the move is something you're happy about.
We are fine and the move is a good one.
From Spain: I tried my hardest to feel insulted, but I couldn't.
Entre al vídeo pensando "¡No Kenji, no te metas en este fregao!" Pero la verdad es que no ha estado mal xDD
@@BasterThanLight you didn't have to spit enchantment table on us 😭😭😭
La verdad que es mas paella que la que te sirven en cualquier lado de madrid. Aun así, lo del pimiento le ha quitado un poco... pero por lo demas muy bien
J kenji Lopez ie literally Mr Worldwide. He's a German-Japanese American whose married to a Colombian
@@Gonzaoo22 Lo del pimiento depende. Mi familia es de pimiento rojo y, además de vivir en la Albufera, son de paella todos los domingos, aunque en lugar de ser del piquillo, es pimiento rojo normal crudo y lo ponemos en el sofrito. Pero la paella en Valencia, siempre y cuando uno no ponga marisco, es como el parchís, cada casa tiene sus normas.
If you drink a hoppy beer does that compensate for not having rabbit? (I'm watching! Really!)
Careful with the space dust!
Dad Joke Alert!
LoL
@@ryanshields2195 Meh, the brewery that makes that stuff is owned by inbev so I avoid it
@@TheMrBrandonlewis it's the best thing they own that isn't bourbon county imo
Only if you have some mussels, olives and potato chips to go with that beer. That would be cooking paella like THE PROS do every Sunday in Valencia.
Kenji, PLEASE do a parenting video! I’m always so jealous of how your daughter has such a large pallet in terms of foods she eats and how well behaved she is. You are a master of food and Dadding. Please share the love!
Kenji, I love to cook since I was a small kid. And I really love Paella, try to get it every time I go to Spain or if I see one somewhere. For some reason, I've always thought it is really difficult to cook a really good paella and was kind of scared to try it out until I saw this video. You can not imagine how grateful I am for this one! Definitely going to try it out and also some other versions of Paella as well. Thanks a lot for sharing!!! Cheers from Germany and take care!
Chefs in a kitchen: Wear closed toes shoes always and non-slips are a must.
Kenji: I think i'll wear sandles and talk about my wok burner that goes up to 300k btus
Same 'Rule of Covid' that dictates that blue jeans be called 'hard pants'.
Kenji. I am a spaniard living in the usa. Good recipe. What i would do to make it simple is to debone the chicken before, make a broth with the bones and fry the chicken really well, in smaller pieces. At the time of adding water, use the broth instead. The recipe is very good. You are great, and I have learnt a lot with your videos and your books
Bye bye, old San Mateo house--it was great fun seeing all the food cooked at this location. Looking forward to lots of tasty food at the new house. Good luck on a safe and easy transition!!
Great video.
Valencians will hate me but I love paella with red bell pepper. I think it tastes amazing with the rest of the dish. Also, I like to add the whole garlic cloves with skin and all since the begining and let them cook all the way. They taste amazing.
Fun fact: at first paella was made with a rat called "Rata de agua".
Food falls off the paella pan
Shabu “Ho ho don’t mind if I do”
My Spanish friend gifted me a paella pan, so I'm obliged to try my hand at making paella. I looked up some recipes she gave this one the sign of approval. Thank you so much for the recipe
The first time isn't going to great, but thats fine, it'll just serve as lesson now
I love how he says that his daughter is climbing out of the dog door so casually 😂 sounds like fun
Can’t help but be in a great mode every time I get the notification that Kenji posted something
"I think we've found a pretty happy temperature now."
The Bob Ross of cooking.
Kenji IS super wholesome
looks really great. However when making traditional paella valenciana you would add the water after cooking the meat,vegetables and spices and let it boil for about 20-30 minutes so it basically turns into a very rich stock to which finally add the rice.
Really good to hear your sensitive and educated voice on culinary traditions!
The beat he took between saying the grate pun and explaining it was perfect.
Gotta love Kenji, still cooking with a giant popsicle stick in 2023. Great content, as always! I salute you.
"I'm chicken sitting" as he's cooking chicken
*sweats profusely*
"i actually got these at the latin market idk where they came from"
Hola Kenji, Muchas gracias. Me encanto la clase y voy hacer esta paella cuando vamos de camping en unas 3 semanas. Soy Colombiana tambien y me encanta tu nombre.
Hey good luck making it! What part of Colombia are you from?
Are we gonna ignore the fact that Kenji cooked his way out of the friendzone!!! He's a master
I usually like seeing recipe variations, its better for us home cooks to see that we have options. Also cool to see how the authentic/original recipes are supposed to be.
i'm still amazed at how seamless that hand transition is
Thank you for clarifying that joke about grating. I did not understand it initially, but once you explained it I understood it. Thank you for your intervention.
Kenji: It's a peasant's food, you used what you could get hands on.
Also Kenji: *adds saffron*
haha, im sure in some region peasants can easily get their hands on saffron. Like Kenji says, all these traditional recipes come from very specific regions, where they use what they have at hand. And then it's more expensive to do abroad. When thinking about my region, Flanders, we have for instance a lot of chicory farmers - Belgian endives it's also called -, and our chicory dish with ham and cheese is very famous and very common. But if you live somewhere with no chicory...
safflower is a cheaper sub that works ok
@@inisus In Spain we really use saffron a lot.
nice job like you i have learned from trial and error and i can make a nice paella usually chicken and artichoke. here are a few tips i use smoke paprika and colorante thats from a spanish buddy of mine makes the paella rice have a beautiful color and one more always fill the water or stock to the rivets in the paella pan these are just things that were passed along to me my wife loves my paella! nice job as always you are a pleasure to watch and listen too
glen
Hi, just a few things, not just for you Kenji, but also for the viewers. (I am from Spain, not from Valencia, but I'm a pretty decent Spanish homecook)
Before anything. You shouldn't be afraid of people feeling insulted by your methods, I personally think that cooking is a subjective thing that everyone can make it the way it wants and experiment with different methods to their liking. Obviously if you are making a full traditional recipe, you have to follow the guidelines, but all things considered, you can always give it your touch. With that said, feel free to not take any note from what I'm going to say bellow.
As you said, the Paella (you are right, it is the correct term for that pan, most people including in Spain don't know this) must be leveled, it isn't a huge deal but it makes it easier for the rice to cook evenly. With that said, I haven't tried, but wouldn't suggest making Paella in a camp fire because it doesn't distribute the heat evenly. Also, when you add the liquid, you only simmer it once just to mix all the ingredients and to level the rice, then you just let it do its thing.
I would suggest not using boned chicken, use sliced chicken breast (like the size of your smaller chunks or even a bit smaller) for comfort both while cooking and eating.
Toasting the rice before adding the liquid is a common thing in making paellas, I have seen a lot of professional chefs doing it and also it is also my personal favorite method of doing it. Also an important thing is that Paella is made with round rice (Bomba or whatever but it must be chunky), you can obviously make it with other type of rice if you want or don't have the other type, but the "correct" way is with round rice.
This is a silly picky thing of mine, but the lemon is put as a side, not on top. Also, in Valencia it is common to put a side of Mayo with the Paella, it sounds a bit weird at first, but trust me, it's delicious.
Your paella looks amazing, great video, I hope you keep making Spanish dishes!!!
Best regards
P.D: Jarred Piquillo Peppers are f***ing amazing.
I have so enjoyed your videos during Covid lockdown. This will be on our dinner table this evening along with a fruited clafoutis. I love cooking and your videos help to make quick work of what is on hand. Everything turns out beautiful and delicious.
Sir!
I enjoy every one of your videos. You do an amazing job of navigating the social media juggernaut and do the best you can to not offend people, even those who make a life out of being offended.
Your videos are incredibly educational, loose, fun, and most importantly, unpretentious. How you speak is irrelevant. How your setup looks is irrelevant. How you pronounce the terms are irrelevant. What's relevant is that you look to broaden your viewers horizons and show them the beauty of cooking and the food that truly unites us all as humans.
Your passion for food, family, education, and life truly shines in your videos and I, for one, and glad I found them.
THANK YOU KENJI!!!!
Kenji, thank you so much for this video! your recipe is excellent and the end result looks delicious! I'm even impressed that you know that for an authentic one you need garrofón (not even everyone in Spain knows that).
And I agree with you, you should use whatever you have close to you. And that's also why I have problems with recipes that they call for chorizo in paella: it is not as easy to find here in the States, so saying that you "need it" for an authentic paella makes the recipe harder for homecooks and it's not even true (another thing is that you have it or like it and decide to add it, there's no problem with that :)). I actually saw a youtube video from a famous channel calling for a whole chorizo for the paella, and they blended it with an onion and called it sofrito ...
Also, since you are in the Bay Area, there's a restaurant in Palo Alto called Telefèric. They are from Barcelona and their lobster paella is really good!
Thank you again!
I love Kenji. "Two would have been enough, but eh, I cut three." It's good to know how actual chefs cook.
Every culture has "chicken and rice" . Paella is my favorite version
every culture that traditionally has rice has a chicken and rice.
@@tommihommi1 Every culture that traditionally has chicken and rice has a chicken and rice.
One of my favourites is "Geschnetzeltes Züricher Art" Its with Champignons and a very creamy white sauce with a bit of lemon zest, which Balances the heavy cream used for the sauce . It's one of my favourites although i might be biased because it's native to me
:>
@@peniblerpenis Züri Gschnätzeltes is made with Veal, not chicken, and certainly not served with rice. Sure you replied to the right comment?
@@tommihommi1 oh you're right. I'm just so used to eat it with chicken that i totally forgot about that fact.
I'm Spanish and I'm used to see Spanish recipes butchered, especially by American or British chefs. But I have to say that Kenji's paella, and also his tortilla and gazpacho are spot on. Well done sir 👌
As Spaniard I must say that I'm impressed on the fidelity given the available ingredients. Congrats.
Man, it sucks that you have to apologize in advance every time you make a traditional or regional dish just in case you make it slightly different... I'm from Barcelona, which is pretty close to Valencia, and I think you nailed it!
If youtube cooking videos have taught me anything, it's that Italians and Spaniards will fight someone to the death for cooking something even slightly differently than how nonna or abuela made it.
(Nevermind that everyone's nonna or abuela made it slightly differently...)
@@lindocalrissian0926 These traditionnals recipes have justifications for almost every techniques and ingredients used. I believe people are pretty cool with you being creative with your cooking as long as you understand why things are a certain way and aknowledge the tradition that comes with the recipe. Hence the "apologizing" here, but you can see the comments are quite nice.
@@alexcerien2032 You should see the comments he received when he made a Spanish Tortilla out of chips. Spanish people were not very cool about it.
Watch polish or hungarian cooking vids, hundreds of comments about family variants.
I come from a town that touches the Albufera and I have to say that this is the most accurate and respectful take I have seen by far.
I'm from Valencia and I'd say that's pretty good! (sure those beans aren't the ones and you didn't have rabbit), but you didn't offend me, so shoutout to you Kenji, keep it up, would like to see more spanish cuisine ;)
great recipe! I can't eat seafood and while I love chorizo it dominates whatever dish I add it to. thanks for offering a really great paella alternative I can't wait to try
Sohla El-Waylly just dropped a "paella-inspired" (she's clear it's not truly paella) chicken-and-rice video on Food52's channel. Watched them back-to-back
Hi Kenji, I saw a few comments from Spaniards bellow and I couldn't agree more. You did a very decent paella for Spanish standards...it looks really great. I know as much as I try not to sound pedantic, it's going to.... but anyway...If I may suggest a few things I do myself (not saying my paella is the best): I'd tend to cut the meat smaller (like half the size the chunks you have) so that you don't need to turn them while the rice is cooking. Normally one doesn't touch the rice at all after you add the water and spread the rice, so that it doesn't break (it tends to stick more if you touch it while cooking). I'd say that it takes about 16-18 minutes for the rice to cook once you've added the water, strong fire the first 10 minutes, medium-low fire after that.The the last thing: That pan is good for a 2 -max 3 (not too hungry) people. I have a similar one that I use to cook for 2 people...once cooked, the rice layer shouldn't be more than 3/4-1 inch thick because otherwise the rice in the bottom tends to be overcooked. Overall as my Spaniard fellows said before, you cooked the most respectful paella I've seen from foreigners. Great job and thanks for spreading the goodness of the paella!
Kenji making a dad joke and then proceeding to explain the dad joke is one of those things that make me chuckle.
It's one of those things that's like a multilayered Kenji-dad thing.
I love how your daughter shows up peripherally. I think it is really cool.
Great video, I really enjoyed how you encouraged people to just use what they have around, Paella recipe is not set in stone, if it works in the dish you should throw it in. You should try making Spanish Migas, another type of "peasant" food that works with almost anything you throw in, chorizo and morcilla are welcome!
Chef Kenji, I have been watching your videos and I enjoy them a lot. You are incredible.Before I discovered your channel, I was interested in preparing a paella.I'm from Cuba, and before coming to Miami,Florida, we had to go to Spain. This happened in 1968.We lived there for two and a half years. We enjoined been there because the Spanish people treated us so nice. The food was delicious and specially the Paellas.I'm 60 years old now and I have a UA-cam channel called Chef Garcia from Hollywood, just because I love to cook.I've only had my channel for a year now and I didn't want to do it because I don't like the way I sound and a co-worker of mine, who I started calling my UA-cam manager told me that with every dish I show on Facebook just to get a like, I should try it on UA-cam, So I did. Then I had the idea of preparing different recipes from different countries, and I thought about Spain, So I started doing my homework on how to prepare different paellas and this was before watching you.I usually dress with the clothes from different countries, depending on what food I choose to prepare.So to make the long story short, the first Chef I looked into was a Chef from Valencia.I just traveled to Spain and Paris two weeks ago and I purchased a red chili they sell for Paellas called Noras.I looked up receta paella valenciana autentica,The Chef's name is Amadeus.He has a restaurant there.So my point is, everything you explained during your paella video is correct,I would like to add, I thought you were Asian, then from Mexico ,just because on one of your recipes, you mentioned you grew up preparing the stuffed chipotles, and then today you say you have Colombian accent.Either way you are great.By the way, I've been watching Food Wishes before as well, and it's funny, you mention he's your neighbor. What a small world.I lived in California for a year, and didn't go to San Francisco. They say it's very nice.I wish you and your family, many blessings. Thank You, and sorry for this long text.Inocencio Garcia.
I thought he was cooking his neighbors chicken until he clarified lol
That paella was great Kenji!! Better than most of spanish paellas. For the ones that want to eat paella here on Spain I have two tips:
1. Only eat paella valenciana in Valencia. Avoid tourist oriented restaurants.
2. Only eat paella or any kind of rice If It is made in the moment for you, not included in a 'menu del dia', made several hours before.
The most important ingredient for Paella is a drunk chef. Seriously, it's true. Have you achieved the status of drunkenness to make a Paella?
I thought that was required for slicing a roasted turkey in front of everyone...
I’m Spanish and have no clue what you are talking about... is “Spaniards are drunks” a thing in India?
@@PrimatoFortunato I'm not Spanish, but as someone who has cooked a lot while drunk... I think it helps with achieving the crunchy crispy crust at the bottom. Otherwise I mess with the dish a lot, and worry that it's burning. But after a couple beers in me, hey there's that crusty rice! Mmm
@@PrimatoFortunato tío la paella es el típico plato de domingo que se junta la familia y se hace entre tus abuelos y tíos bebiendo vino y cerveza, yo creo que va por ahí
@@jesus_plaza3 has gando
Hi Kenji. Im from Valencia ( Spain ) where This paella comes from, and lot of people here says that ir you want to real paella valenciana you gotta be in Valencia but that is not true.
Your paella was actually really really close to the traditional one.
Very nice! Hope you enjoyed it 👍
As soon as you mentioned Toro in Boston I let out an audible moan of despair - I haven't gotten to eat there in about two years now and it is absolutely my favorite restaurant in Boston. Now with Covid-19 and the fact that I no longer live in Boston, I see little-to-no hope of eating there again any time soon :'(
Greetings from Colombia J.Kenji. Here we call the fava beans, HABAS. Great recipe.
Colombian here. Paella is like pizza. Unless you call it valenciana. In which case no matter how you cook it, you are going to make someone, somewhere, very angry. So my solution is to just call it paella. I dont care how you cook it as long as i get me some saffron and some crispy rice. Personally I use chicken stock instead of water. But again its just paella
As a spaniard who does pronounce c and z as th, there's no need to say valenciana with the th, an accent is an accent and there's nothing wrong with different accents. It's what makes languages so interesting and beautiful.
There is people in Spain that does paella much worse, even from Valencia. The rarest thing you can eat in Spain, unfortunately, IS A PALLEA WELL DONE hahah. Although it's a dish that every family has their own recipe... Congrats chef!! Very good job, looks delicious! UP THE SOCARRAT!
Im spanish and this is the best paella I've ever seen a foreigner do. Congratulations. I would even dare to call It paella valenciana because You followed the original recipe the best You could with the ingredients You had
Kenji: baby-sits chickens
Also Kenji: makes paella
You are the worst chicken sitter of all time. 😁
That camping story lol “when she didn’t think i was her bf and i thought i was” lmao MOOD
Not bad at all!! I'm from Valencia and it's pretty close to the real deal. Thanks for not using peas and chorizo haha.
Some people do fry the rice before, but if they do, they will add stock instead of plain water.
If you don't have stock, it's sometimes better to first add the water, let it boil down for about 30min, and then add the rice.
Hope it helps :)
As a Spaniard myself, congrats Kenji! Not 100% traditional paella but pretty close to that, plus you show tons of respect. You even got the "socarrat" (which I have to say that it is my favourite part of the paella)
Kenji, if you wanna brew all the flavour out of saffron you must put it in warm water for at least 1 hour, then add the liquid and saffron to the rice as late as possible in the cooking process.
Cheers
Do what you can/want with what you have is truly the essence of spanish traditional cooking, i'm curious of what will be your take on other traditional dishes like castillian "olla de pobre" or madrilenian "cocido"
Paella is the ultimate labor of love, loved This recipe!
I’ve had the paella at Toro in NYC about 6 years ago, it was amazing.
Paella on the campfire is the secret to getting out of the friend zone? Best cooking video ever.
Ayyy Kenji is enjoying a space dust, cheers from Seattle
He does have good taste in beer.
Thank you for showing me such amazing things every time you upload a video! Its my pleasure to be able to watch your vids!! Keep it up, btw my mom loves your videos too
"Daddy, all my snails have gone missing. Have the escaped?"
"Yup. Probably. Oh well, nevermind. Eat up."
i'm from valencia and i loved the video, i just appreciate so mucj seeing a tipical plate from my land being cooked so far away. did you enjoyed eating it??
Si! Lo disfruté mucho.
@@JKenjiLopezAlt Nuestro placer
@Mister X disfruté = "I enjoyed." He enjoyed it a lot.
@Mister X He has a Cuban or Colombian (shame on me I can't remember) wife, so I'm pretty sure he probably knows a good bit of Spanish.
@@matthewconnolly4342 Colombian if I remember correctly
Please call out Reddit more often. It will agitate the “arroz con cosas” people that have to criticize every paella.
Vast majority of us (Spaniards/people living in Spain) just honestly say it as a joke. Very few people actually take it seriously.
It is very simple, I will explain it to you: for a Mediterranean culture accustomed to eating well and healthy, when a culture like yours accustomed to eating hot dogs and fast junk food has the gall to criticize good food makes us always defensive to prevent the culinary horrors that you are used to from being seen in the rest of the world as normal. we want our children to eat well and healthy. We love proper food
@@marimarianations9355 I’m sure that’s the case but judging by Pablo’s reply here there is plenty of snobbery.
@@pablocaillaux Obviously you’ve never had hot dogs and French fries in your paella, you should try it it’s amazing. Add some cheese sauce on top too, but only after serving as to preserve the presentation in the paella bowl.
@@jduncan4388 Hahaha
I love it when you explained your pun. it is like the least pun-ish thing to do but still very enjoyable
I've heard that in Spain they like to toast the saffron. I've tried it a couple of times and it does really seem to make a bit of a difference, though it's really easy to burn. The method I use is to just take a bit of aluminium foil and fold the saffron inside it and put it on the pan for a few seconds.
Honestly, in most households and restaurants even in the region of Valencia, it is much more common to use a colorant nowadays that is sold in any supermarket for the sole purpose of making paella. I guess because it's both easier and significantly cheaper. It is a bit more difficult to extract the same intense colour from saffron, although indeed drying it in aluminium foil at a low temperature in the oven (60-65 degrees, not toasting) and infusing water/stock with it afterwards seems to be a nice way.
I can't say there's a huge difference flavour, although I much prefer the natural choice (saffron) and really enjoy the techniques behind making it with saffron!
@@TheDutchJaguar When I'm making paella but don't feel like buying saffron I just use a bit of turmeric and nutmeg. Turmeric gives the colour and nutmeg has some similar notes as saffron. Of course it's not the same, but it sure is cheaper (and would probably make any Spaniard very mad lol.)
No don't toast saffron. It's too delicate. Best way to use it is to crush it in a pestle and add it to hot liquid.
You are missing an important point here Kenji, water is not broth. You can definitely up your paella game if you either replace water by chicken broth, or, like we do in Valencia, you have the chicken and vegetables simmering in water for 30-40 min before adding the rice.