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Home Uncategorized

Arroz al horno

by Som Dasgupta
February 9, 2026
in Uncategorized
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If paella is Valencia’s public face, arroz al horno is its quiet family heart. This is a rice dish born in rural kitchens and parish festivals, traditionally cooked in a cassola de fang (clay pot) and finished in a wood-fired oven. Where paella is about open fire, evaporation, and a thin layer of socarrat, arroz al horno is about gentle absorption, heat from all sides, and comforting depth.

Historically, the dish grew out of necessity. On Sundays, many households made a big pot of puchero (a meat-and-chickpea stew). Rather than waste the rich broth and leftover meats, cooks layered them with rice, garlic, tomatoes, and sausage, then slid the pot into the oven. The result was a casserole-like rice — tender, aromatic, and slightly crusted on top — that carried the flavour of the whole week’s cooking.

What distinguishes arroz al horno from other Spanish rices is structure. Ingredients are not stirred once the rice goes in. The dish is built in layers: broth at the bottom, rice in the middle, and roasted elements on top — usually slices of tomato, garlic heads, morcilla or chorizo, and chunks of pork or bacon. As it bakes, the rice absorbs seasoned liquid while the top caramelises gently.

The technique lesson here is simple but powerful: control moisture and let the oven do the work. Too much liquid makes porridge; too little makes dry grains. The right ratio gives plump rice with a light crust around the edges.


Home recipe: Arroz al horno (serves 4–5)

Ingredients

  • 400 g short-grain rice (bomba or calasparra)
  • 1.1–1.2 litres good chicken or puchero broth, hot
  • 300 g pork ribs or belly, cut into pieces
  • 150 g morcilla or chorizo, sliced
  • 1 can (400 g) chickpeas, drained
  • 2 ripe tomatoes, sliced
  • 1 whole head of garlic, halved horizontally
  • 3 tbsp olive oil
  • 1 tsp smoked paprika
  • Salt

Method

  1. Heat the oven to 200°C (fan 180°C).
  2. In a wide ovenproof dish or clay pot, brown the pork gently in olive oil (6–8 mins). Add chickpeas and paprika; stir briefly.
  3. Spread rice evenly over the meat. Pour in hot broth and season lightly. Do not stir again.
  4. Arrange tomato slices and garlic halves on top; tuck in morcilla/chorizo.
  5. Bake 30–35 minutes until the liquid is absorbed and the surface is lightly toasted. Rest 5 minutes before serving.

Serve straight from the pot with a simple green salad and plenty of bread to scrape the edges — the best bites are always the caramelised corners.

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Rice Socarrat

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Shared pans and Spanish communal eating

Som Dasgupta

Som Dasgupta

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Shared pans and Spanish communal eating

Shared pans and Spanish communal eating

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