My friend, I'm from Spain and that's not paella. The key to make a paella is to cook the vegetables in the olive oil, leave them in the pot and then sear the meat or shellfish. After that, and without removing any ingredient from the pot, you must cook the rice in the same oil in order to give it flavour and the perfect consistence. In the end, you put the water or broth and let it cook all together without stiring. And that's it! :)
@organicgrains4 жыл бұрын
I knew this comment existed.
@jokinabadsbs4 жыл бұрын
Déjales, tambien piensa que en la otra punta del mundo es difícil encontrar ingredientes de aquí, además no están acostumbrados a los sofritos... Al menos no ha hecho ninguna burrada como poner chorizo o manteca en la paella... Le ha quedado una como te encontrarias en un restaurante de postín de la plaza mayor de Madrid... Al fin y al cabo... Acaso no hacemos nosotros burradas cuando queremos hacer comida japonesa/coreana/china?
@EveryCake4 жыл бұрын
All the were looking so delicious and gorgeous ❤️🥰
Sorry but I don't speak Japanese. Hopefully this will translate well. I love all of your videos but this one was particularly fascinating - I know how it's made in Spain, and in America, but to see the Japanese interpretation was also amazing! All three versions look delicious, except no rabbit please! :-0 One day it would be nice to see all three dishes on the same table as I think all would have their merits. Thank you so much for this video!
@fnjesusfreak4 жыл бұрын
I've never had paella, but I've heard that jambalaya is a Cajun/creole modification of paella, and I have that now and then.
@cleoharper18424 жыл бұрын
@@fnjesusfreak It's similar to jambalaya but think yellow (saffron) rice and cilantro, and paella is also less spicy and more fragrant. I love jambalaya too! Think of paella as jambalaya's softer, sweeter BUT smokier older sister. If I seriously want to abuse a metaphor, I would say Party Kitchen's paella is the youngest, freshest, brightest sister - but all are beautiful.