Paella mixta (chicken and seafood paella)
- Portion size: Serves 4
- Prep time 10 min. Cook time 35 min
- Difficulty: easy
Paella mixta is a classic version of the beloved Spanish rice dish, packed with chicken and seafood. Spanish chef and paella expert Omar Allibhoy shows you how to make a paella mixta that’s guaranteed to kickstart any fiesta.
“This was my grandfather’s favourite paella,” says Omar. “Every year we would get together for his birthday in August as a family and go to a restaurant called Posada de San Miguel in Altea on Spain’s Costa Blanca to eat this dish. It’s where my passion for paella began; as a kid I would ask the chef to watch him in the kitchen, where huge paella pans were enveloped in flames from the burning logs below.”
How to make perfect paella mixta (chicken and seafood paella):
- Rice is the hero: Paella is a rice dish and it’s the rice that’s the star of the show. Make sure you’re using proper paella rice (look for the bomba variety, available in most supermarkets these days) and let it be the hero. Don’t overcrowd the paella with the chicken, seafood and vegetables – just a little is all that’s needed to make it special without detracting from the grains themselves.
- Heat it evenly: You can cook paella over all sorts of heat sources. Burning logs is the most traditional; many paella cooks use special round gas burners. But you can of course cook them on your hob too. The key is to have a heat source that’s as even as possible and that can be easily controlled. If possible, use 2 burners or combine your induction zones so there’s no singular hot spot underneath the pan. Being able to heat right up to the sides of the pan is ideal.
- Stock is key: The vast majority of the flavour of your paella will come from the stock you use, so it’s worth using a good one. The gold standard would be to use a homemade stock. When it comes to meat stocks, a higher amount of collagen in there will give the paella the best texture.
- Try not to stir: Once the rice and stock is added to the pan, you tend to have around 8-10 minutes cooking it at a high heat, then another 8-10 minutes at a very low heat to finish it off. Generally the less you stir a paella the better, but for those final 8-10 minutes it’s very important not to move anything around. This is because you want the rice to settle and form a compact layer that will eventually fry once the stock has been absorbed, creating the famous socarrat (crispy base) that’s so prized. During the first 8-10 minutes of the cooking process, though, if you see any grains of rice stuck to other ingredients, do take care to brush them back into the stock to avoid undercooked grains.
- How to serve: There’s a saying in Spain: “Paella doesn’t wait for everyone; everyone waits for the paella to arrive.” It’s true – paella rice overcooks quickly, so even just five minutes after the paella is cooked the grains will start to curl and change in texture. Cooking paella is such a communal, social thing that it’s best to gather everyone around the pan during the final few minutes of cooking, so you’re ready to dish it out as soon as the rice is at its best.
Keep an eye on our social channels (@deliciousmag) to see chef Omar cooking paella in the sun at delicious. HQ.
Ingredients
- 120ml extra-virgin olive oil
- 8-10 large raw prawns
- 2 chicken legs, each cut into 2-3 pieces
- 300g squid tubes, cut into rings
- 1 long red pepper, cut into strips
- 100g runner beans, cut into 4cm pieces
- 6 garlic cloves, finely grated
- 1 tbsp sweet smoked paprika
- 1 medium tomato, coarsely grated or whizzed into a paste
- 400g paella (bomba) rice
- Pinch saffron threads
- 1.5 litres shellfish stock
- 200g mussels, debearded and scrubbed (optional)
Specialist kit
- Paella pan
Method
- Pour the olive oil into a paella pan over a medium-high heat. Add the prawns and fry on one side for a few minutes, then remove and set aside (they will finish cooking later). Add the chicken pieces and fry until browned all over, then add the squid, pepper and beans with a pinch of salt. Cook for another 5 minutes, stirring regularly, until golden all over. Season with salt.
- Move the solid pieces out to the edges of the paella pan, then add the garlic and paprika to the centre. Fry, stirring, for 20-30 seconds, then add the tomato to stop the garlic burning. Cook for 3-4 minutes until the liquid from the tomato has reduced.
- Add the rice and stir everything together, toasting the rice for a few minutes in the oil.
- Meanwhile, grind the saffron threads to a powder in a pestle and mortar, then mix with a splash of hot water to create a bright red liquid. Pour this into the paella pan along with the stock.
- Give everything a stir, then turn the heat up to high and leave to cook for 10 minutes.
- Add the prawns (pink-side up) and mussels, nestling them into the rice. Lower the heat right down and cook for another 8 minutes until the stock has been fully absorbed and a crispy socarrat has formed on the base. Season to taste, then serve immediately.
Nutrition
- 724kcals Calories
- 44g (7.6g saturated) Fat
- 41g Protein
- 39g (7.2g sugars) Carbs
- 4.2g Fibre
- 3.3g Salt
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