lobster risotto recipe

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Today we’re going to make a famous Italian dish—it’s time for Lobster Risotto.

This one is a classic. It is a very basic, but such a delicious recipe. It smells divine, it looks luxurious, and it is the perfect dinner for two.

Why You’ll Love This

  • It’s All About the Stock: The secret to famous risotto isn’t cream; it’s the stock. We use rich crustacean stock so the rice absorbs all those beautiful shellfish flavors.
  • Perfect Texture: By using Carnaroli rice and finishing with a knob of cold butter, you get that perfect bite with creamy consistency—no heavy cream required.
  • Versatile Base: Once you master this base, you can use the same technique for prawns, langoustines, or any crustaceans you can find.

If you love luxurious seafood dinners like this, also try my Restaurant-Quality Pistachio Salmon & Sweet Potato Mash—same elegant vibe!

What You’ll Need

Special Equipment

  • Wide, heavy-bottomed pan (skillet or Dutch oven)
  • Saucepan (for keeping stock hot)
  • Ladle
  • Sharp knife

The Ingredients

The Seafood:

  • Meat from 1 fully cooked lobster (chopped into chunks, ~200–250 g; tails, claws, knuckles)

The Stock:

  • 600–800 ml (2½–3½ cups) crustacean stock or high-quality fish stock (keep hot)

The Rice:

  • 150 g (~¾ cup) Carnaroli rice (or Arborio/Vialone Nano)

Aromatics:

  • 1 shallot, finely chopped

The Fats:

  • Splash olive oil
  • 30 g cold unsalted butter 

The Liquid:

  • 50 ml (2 oz) dry white wine

Seasoning & Garnish:

  • Sea salt, freshly cracked black pepper
  • 1 tbsp fresh parsley leaves, finely chopped

Let’s Get started!

1. Prep the Stock

Pour your crustacean stock into a saucepan and bring to a gentle simmer. Keep hot throughout cooking.

Why? Adding cold liquid shocks the rice and stops starch release. Hot stock keeps steady temp for creamy texture.

2. Sauté the Base

Place heavy pan over medium heat. Add splash olive oil. Add finely chopped shallot and cook gently until softened but not browned (~3–4 min).

3. Toast the Rice

Add Carnaroli rice. Stir until grains are shiny and coated in oil (~1–2 min). This seals the rice for better texture.

4. Deglaze

Add white wine (50 ml). Stir constantly until fully evaporated and pan is nearly dry (~1 min).

5. The Cooking Phase

Add first ladle of hot stock (~75–100 ml). Stir occasionally until mostly absorbed (~2–3 min).

Repeat: Add ladle, stir occasionally, wait to absorb. Rice should stay lightly covered but not soupy. Takes 18–20 min total.

6. Check Doneness

At 16 min, taste a grain: tender with slight bite (al dente). If undercooked, continue 2–3 min more.

7. The Finish

Turn off heat. Add chopped lobster meatparsley, and cold butter (30 g).

Stir vigorously 1–2 min until butter melts, rice is glossy/creamy, and lobster is warmed through (don’t overheat lobster).

Craving more creamy, romantic dinners? My Marry Me Chicken & Shrimp uses the same stovetop sauce magic!

8. Season and Serve

Taste risotto. Add salt/pepper sparingly (stock may be salty). Serve immediately with extra black pepper.

If you like this recipe Explore more recipes

FAQs

Can I use other seafood besides lobster?

Absolutely! Same stock/base works for prawns, langoustines, scallops, or crab. Add at mantecatura to avoid overcooking.

Do I need to add heavy cream?

No, and please don’t! Authentic risotto gets creaminess from rice starch + mantecatura (butter stir). Cream is unnecessary.

What if I can’t find crustacean stock?

Use high-quality fish stock + splash white wine vinegar or lemon juice for shellfish brightness. Simmer shrimp shells in it first if possible.

How do I store leftovers?

Risotto is best fresh. Cool quickly, store airtight in fridge up to 2 days. Reheat gently with splash hot stock (microwave or stovetop).

My risotto is gluey—what happened?

Over-stirring or washing rice beforehand. Stir occasionally (not constantly), never rinse risotto rice (need starch).

Famous Lobster Risotto

Recipe by Sana ReiCourse: Main CourseCuisine: Italian / SeafoodDifficulty: Intermediate
Servings

4

servings
Prep time

15

minutes
Cooking time

20

minutes
Calories

550

kcal
Total time

40

minutes

Authentic creamy Italian risotto with Carnaroli rice, rich crustacean stock, and tender lobster. No cream needed—just proper technique (Browning, Deglazing, Cooking, mantecatura).

Ingredients

  • Equipment Needed
  • Wide heavy-bottomed pan

  • Saucepan for stock

  • Ladle

  • Ingredients
  • Meat from 1 fully cooked lobster (~200–250 g, chopped into chunks)

  • 150 g (~¾ cup) Carnaroli rice (or Arborio)

  • 600–800 ml crustacean stock (or fish stock), kept hot

  • 1 shallot, finely chopped

  • Splash olive oil (~2 tbsp)

  • 50 ml (2 oz) dry white wine

  • 30 g cold unsalted butter

  • 1 tbsp fresh parsley, chopped

  • Sea salt, black pepper (to taste)

Directions

  • Simmer stock in saucepan; keep hot throughout.
  • Medium heat in wide pan: olive oil + shallot until soft (3 min).
  • Toast rice: Add Carnaroli, stir shiny (1–2 min).
  • Deglaze: Add wine, stir until absorbed (1 min).
  • Cottura: Add hot stock ladle-by-ladle. Stir occasionally until absorbed. Repeat 18–20 min until al dente.
  • Off heat—Mantecatura: Add lobster, parsley, cold butter. Stir vigorously 1–2 min until glossy/creamy.
  • Season lightly (taste first—stock may be salty). Serve immediately.

Notes

  • Rice: Carnaroli best (holds shape). Never rinse risotto rice—need starch for creaminess.

  • Stock: Crustacean ideal. Fish stock + shellfish shells works. Have extra hot water ready.

  • No stirring madness: Occasional stirring (every 2–3 min) is enough.

  • Lobster: Use fully cooked. Warms in mantecatura only—don’t overcook.

  • Storage: Best fresh. Fridge 2 days max; reheat with hot stock splash.
  • Pro Tip: Perfect risotto “waves” when shaken creamy but holds shape.

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