Paella valenciana Paella valenciana is the traditional paella of the
Valencia region, believed to be the original recipe, and consists of Valencian rice,
olive oil, rabbit, chicken, duck, snails, saffron or a substitute, tomato, ferradura or flat green bean,
lima beans, salt and water. The dish is sometimes seasoned with whole
rosemary branches. Traditionally, the yellow color comes from
saffron, but
turmeric,
paprika,
Calendula or artificial colorants can be used as substitutes.
Artichoke hearts and stems may be used as seasonal ingredients. Most paella cooks use
bomba rice, but a cultivar known as
senia is also used in the Valencia region. Originally, paella made in Valencia was a lunchtime meal for farmers and farm laborers. Workers would gather what was available to them around the rice fields. This often included tomatoes, onions, and snails. Rabbit or duck was a common addition, or chicken less often. On special occasions, 18th-century Valencians used
calderos to cook the rice in the open air of their orchards near lake
Albufera.
Water vole meat was one of the main ingredients of early paellas, along with
eel and
butter beans. Novelist
Vicente Blasco Ibáñez described the Valencia custom of eating
water voles in '''' (1902), a realistic novel about life among the fishermen and peasants near lake Albufera. Living standards rose with the sociological changes of the late 19th century in Spain, giving rise to gatherings and outings in the countryside. This led to a change in paella's ingredients, as well, using instead rabbit, chicken, duck, and sometimes snails. The dish became so popular that in 1840, a local Spanish newspaper first used the word
paella to refer to the recipe rather than the pan, according to food historian
Lynne Olver. Another important rule, according to Valencians, is that fresh rosemary should not be added to
paella valenciana made with rosemary-eating snails.
Seafood and mixed paella Paella de marisco (seafood
paella) replaces meat with
seafood and omits beans and green vegetables, while
paella mixta (mixed
paella) combines meat from
livestock,
seafood,
vegetables, and sometimes
beans, with the traditional rice. On the
Mediterranean coast, Valencian fishermen used seafood instead of meat and beans to make paella. In this recipe, the seafood is served in the shell. Spaniards living outside of Valencia combined seafood with meat from land animals to form mixed paella. This
paella is sometimes called
preparación barroca (baroque preparation) due to the variety of ingredients and its final presentation. In 1959,
Ernest Hemingway wrote about paella after a visit to Valencia; this helped popularize paella worldwide. As other cultures set out to make paella, the dish invariably acquired regional influences. Consequently,
paella recipes went from being relatively simple to including a wide variety of seafood, meat, sausage (including
chorizo), vegetables and many different seasonings. Throughout non-Valencia Spain, some restaurants providing this mixed version refer to it as
Paella valenciana. However, Valencians insist that only the original two Valencia recipes are authentic. Other
Valencian recipes with similar preparations are
arròs a banda and
arròs del senyoret. The Philippine version uses
glutinous rice; otherwise, the ingredients are the same. In the Philippines,
arroz a la valenciana refers to chicken, and
longganisa (
chorizo) versions.
Arroz con cosas Some non-Spanish chefs include
chorizo in their paellas and other ingredients, which Valencians assert do not belong in
paella of any type. The alternative name proposed for these dishes, although pejorative, is ('rice with things'). Famous cases are
Jamie Oliver's
paella recipe (which included chorizo) and
Gordon Ramsay's. The author
Josep Pla once noted: "The abuses committed in the name of Paella Valenciana are excessive – an absolute scandal." However, in an article for
El País, Spanish food writer Ana Vega 'Biscayenne', citing historical references, showed that traditional Valencian paella did indeed include chorizo, exclaiming, "Ah Jamie, we'll have to invite you to the
Falles." ==Basic cooking methods==