Skip to main content

This pumpkin risotto is the fall comfort food you need in your life

Risotto is a lot easier to make than you think

Pumpkin risotto on the plate - a traditional Italian recipe
Minerva Studio / Adobe Stock

Risotto is one of those dishes that’s gotten a reputation for being something of a diva. This comfortingly creamy and cheesy rice dish is made by lovingly tending to it with warm stock ladled in a bit at a time rather than simply dumping all the ingredients into a pot and calling it a day.

So while it does require a bit more care than a simple white rice or pilaf, it doesn’t deserve the high-maintenance reputation it has. And let’s be honest — even if it were more than a little bit challenging to make, the rewards would be well worth the effort. Risotto is a meal that feels luxurious and rich. Its creamy, velvety texture is absolute heaven on earth. And when this dish is given an earthy autumnal upgrade, it becomes the meal everyone craves at the end of a long, cold fall day.

This pumpkin risotto recipe is one of our favorites of the season. It highlights the subtly sweet flavor of pumpkin with fall spices and savory cheese. This dish is absolutely exquisite — and if you take the time to follow the steps — it’s very easy to make.

Pumpkin risotto
Luca Nebuloni / Wikimedia

Pumpkin risotto recipe

Ingredients

  • 2 tablespoons of bacon fat (or olive oil)
  • 12 ounces pumpkin, peeled, seeded, and cut into 1-inch pieces
  • onion, diced
  • 2-3 cloves garlic, minced
  • 1 1/2 cups arborio rice
  • 1/2 cup dry white wine
  • 1 teaspoon fresh thyme leaves
  • 3 cups vegetable stock, warmed
  • 3/4 cup freshly grated pecorino Romano
  • 1/4 teaspoon nutmeg
  • 2 tablespoons butter
  • Salt and pepper to taste
  • Crushed almonds, toasted (optional garnish)

Method

  1. Heat bacon fat over medium heat, and add onion. Cook until translucent.
  2. Add garlic, pumpkin, thyme, and nutmeg, and cook until the vegetables are completely cooked through and tender.
  3. Mash the vegetables to the consistency of a thick puree.
  4. Add the rice and wine to the mixture and cook for about 2 minutes until the wine has cooked off.
  5. Add just enough stock to cover the rice and continue to cook.
  6. Keep adding stock about 1/2 cup at a time as the liquid reduces, stirring regularly.
  7. Cook until the rice is cooked through and all the stock has been absorbed.
  8. Remove from the heat and stir in the butter and pecorino Romano and stir until the butter is melted. Adjust seasonings accordingly.
  9. Serve immediately with toasted almonds and additional grated pecorino Romano.

Risotto tips and tricks

  • You can’t make risotto with just any old rice. It requires a special short-grain variety that’s capable of absorbing a lot of liquid without becoming mushy. Arborio is most often used, but varieties like Carnaroli or Vialone Nano are delicious as well.
  • Keep the stock warm in a saucepan next to the risotto pan. Adding cold stock will cool everything down and alter the cooking process.
  • Be patient when adding stock to risotto. The beauty of this dish is in its starchy texture, which is only achieved by adding liquid a little bit at a time. Add only 1/2 cup or so at a time for the best possible texture.
  • Don’t use a pan that’s too wide. The risotto should be cozy enough that it’s on top of itself, creating starch with that close contact. Avoid too wide a pan, which will cook the risotto in a shallow, thin layer.
  • To stir or not to stir? This topic is widely debated with risotto. Too much stirring and you run the risk of a gluey dish. Too little and the rice could stick and burn. The trick is to stir regularly, but not constantly, roughly every 10 to 15 seconds, or so.
  • This is a wonderful fall recipe that features pumpkin, but risotto is limitless in its flavor possibilities. Depending on your favorite vegetables, herbs, and spices, you can play around with just about any flavor combination.

Editors' Recommendations

Topics
Lindsay Parrill
Lindsay is a graduate of California Culinary Academy, Le Cordon Bleu, San Francisco, from where she holds a degree in…
Need constipation relief? Add these food and drink items to your diet today
Get your gut health back in order with these easy constipation remedies
High-fiber vegetables

Your bowel habits are probably not everyday dinner table conversation or something you want to bring up with your buddies, and you may even feel embarrassed about bringing them up with your doctor, but constipation is quite a prevalent problem. In fact, this study suggests that the global prevalence of constipation is about 14%.

The good news is that eating certain foods can give you constipation relief by stimulating intestinal peristalsis and bulking up stool. Keep reading for the best foods to help you poop.

Read more
Twice baked sweet potato recipe: The perfect fall side that’s super easy to make
This is one of our favorite sweet potato recipes
Twice baked sweet potatoes

Twice-baked potatoes are one of those indulgently satisfying, comforting, cheesy sides that warm to the absolute core. But when you twice-bake a sweet potato, all of those comforting feelings get a savory autumn upgrade that's unparalleled in both taste and coziness. Twice-baked sweet potatoes are the perfect fall dish. They're simple enough to enjoy as dinner itself, sitting on the sofa under a big quilt, or as an impressive side dish on a holiday as special as Thanksgiving.
Of course, sweet potato recipes are abundant this time of year, but this one, in our opinion, takes the cake. Baking sweet potatoes is exactly like baking regular potatoes. Simply wash, pierce with a fork, rub a little oil for crispy skin, and bake. Once cooked through, that beautifully orange filling is scooped out and mixed with just about anything you like, from cream cheese to butter and herbs to marshmallow fluff. This is a great recipe to experiment with all of your favorite fall flavors.

Twice-baked sweet potato recipe
Ingredients:

Read more
10 wheated whiskey and wheat bourbon bottles to try if you can’t get your hands on any Pappy Van Winkle bourbon
Wheated bourbon is great, and these are some of the best bottles you can get
Pouring a glass of whiskey

Wheat whiskey and wheated bourbon aren’t the same thing. For the uninitiated, the closeness in the name might be very confusing. No matter what kind of whiskey you’re producing, you begin with a mash bill of grains. These might be any combination of corn, rye, wheat, barley, or other grains according to the specific whiskey you’re making.

To be considered a bourbon (among other rules and regulations), the mash bill must consist of at least 51% corn. The rest is up to the distiller. If they’ve crafted a wheated bourbon, this means the secondary grain (after corn) will be wheat. This results in a softer, sweeter, mellower bourbon. This is one of the main reasons Buffalo Trace’s iconic brand Pappy Van Winkle is a wheated bourbon. But it’s not the only one.

Read more