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Home Iconic Dishes

Spanish Paella

By Nagi Maehashi
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Published10 Jul '20 Updated23 Jun '25
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Paella! This famous saffron infused rice dish is a traditional Spanish recipe that comes fully loaded with seafood or anything your heart desires! You don’t need a paella pan to cook paella, any skillet or even a large pot will do, and it’s surprisingly straightforward to make.

Terrific festive party food!

Paella ready to be served

Paella recipe

If you’ve always wanted to but been too afraid to try Paella, I can assure you – there is no reason to be scared! If you approach it the right way – and I like to keep my recipes as risk free as possible – you will end up with rice that’s cooked exactly to your taste in a saffron infused, flavour loaded sauce with all your seafood cooked to perfection.

No overcooked seafood, and no mushy rice around here!

The beauty of paella is that it is in fact extremely flexible. Don’t get too hung up about getting the exact seafood I use. Don’t listen to the authors who tell you that you MUST use homemade fish broth or buy extremely expensive seafood stock.

I learnt Paella the Migeul Maestro* and Rick Stein way – as he wrote in his Mediterranean Escapes cookbook, Paella, whether it be for a quick midweek meal or a large festive gathering, is meant to be relaxed and fun, not stressful with strict rules.

So just chill out!! 😉

* Miguel Maestro is Australia’s most well known Spanish Chef.

Close up of Paella fresh off the stove

I say this is a straightforward recipe but I AM going to spend a bit more time on explaining steps and process visuals than I usually do (short recipe video extremely helpful for first timers) because I’m guessing paella is a bit of a special occasion dish for many and I want to ensure you nail it! (And you will, I promise – if you follow my steps!)


Best rice to use for paella

The best rice to use for paella is Spanish rice labelled as:

  • Bomba Rice – or arroz bomba (“arroz” means rice in Spanish);

  • Valencia rice or Arroz de Valencia (pictured below) – the other common name for Bomba Rice; or

  • Calasparra Rice -or  Arroz Calasparra.

Paella rice packets tend to be very helpful providing clues such as pictures of Paella or “perfect for paella!” splashed across it. 🙂

Where to find paella rice – here in Australia, paella rice is sold at most Woolworths and Harris Farms, some Coles, delis, Spanish or Mediterranean delis (some Italian ones too), or gourmet stores. See below for best subs using more common rice.

Paella rice

Paella rice is a short grain variety of rice (ie it is short in length, distinctly different from basmati which is very long). The unique quality of paella rice is that it absorbs more liquid than other types of rice without getting bloated and mushy, making it ideal for a dish like paella where you want the rice to absorb loads of flavour.

Best substitute for paella rice is risotto rice (arborio rice) which has similar characteristics ie. ability to absorb lots of liquid, except risotto goes creamy if you stir it. The next best is medium grain rice – the same rice I use for rice pudding.

I do not recommend using: brown rice, long grain white rice, black rice, wild rice or any other fancy type of rice. And in anticipation of someone asking – NO to quinoa!!! (A million Spaniards almost fainted at the thought).


What goes into Paella

I divide the stuff that goes into Paella into 2 groups:

  1. The Base Ingredients – rice, aromatics (garlic, onion, saffron), stock;

  2. The Add Ins – chicken, seafood, chorizo

1. The Base Ingredients

Ingredients in Paella

  • Paella rice – as discussed above. Buy anything labelled as Bomba, Valencia, de Valencia or Calasparra – or simply “paella rice”!

  • Saffron – a signature part of paella is the warm yellow tinge of the rice and delicate saffron flavour. Saffron is expensive, even more expensive than gold by weight! So if your budget won’t stretch to real saffron threads, use a pinch of saffron powder (it’s artificial but will provide the same colour hit and some flavour – but don’t worry, we have tons of other flavour in this paella!);

  • Stock/broth – just store bought chicken stock is fine here, we are going to get tons of seafood stock from the seafood we use. If you’re in Australia and insist on using fish or seafood stock, get the good stuff from gourmet or fish shops, do not buy supermarket cartons (they are quite nasty). US reads: I can highly recommend clam juice as an option if you want extra seafood flavour;

  • Garlic and onion – essential flavour base;

  • Tomato – fresh tomato is the traditional method but if you can’t get good juicy fresh tomato (as I couldn’t when I filmed the video), use canned instead;

  • Capsicum/bell peppers – also adds to the flavour base, I really recommend using it; and

  • Peas – optional, I like that it adds a splash of colour in an otherwise very red/yellow dish!


2. The Add Ins

And here are the proteins I put in the paella – chicken, chorizo*, calamari, prawns/shrimp, mussels. A very classic, popular combination.

* 45 million Spaniards just threw up their hands in protest at the inclusion of Chorizo, declaring it’s not traditional! But outside of Spain, it’s considered a key ingredient – and it adds a ton of flavour to the dish. 25 million Aussies would throw up their hands in protest if I left it out! So it’s in. 🙂

Ingredients in Paella

Forgot to include calamari in the above photo! if you don’t find rings, buy a squid tube then slice it – as pictured below.

Chorizo and squid calamari for Paella

How to make paella

Here’s how to make paella in 4 simple steps:

  1. sear chorizo and squid first, then remove;

  2. sauté onion and garlic, brown chicken, then cook the rice in the broth with some of the chorizo;

  3. partway through cooking the rice, squidge the prawns/shrimp and mussels in which will leech a STACK of juices into the rice, adding loads of flavour; and

  4. pop squid back on top, then cover and rest for 5 minutes before serving!


Part 1 – sear, make flavour base, add rice and stock

How to make Paella

This part is pretty straightforward. The only key tip here is to only cook the squid/calamari for 90 seconds – squid cooks super fast and goes rubbery quite quickly!

You don’t need a paella pan. Any large skillet will work fine – or even a wide pot. In fact, paella pans require more advanced cooking skills because the everyday paella pans tend to be quite thin which makes the rice very prone to burning unless you have a stove burner made especially for paella (they have wide rings that turn down pretty low).

Note how we return some of the cooked chorizo back in to cook with the rice. It adds great flavour into the dish as well as salt.


Part 2 – cook rice, squidge in seafood

How to make Paella

The rice is cooked uncovered – this is a distinct cooking technique for paella compared to other iconic rice dishes of the world like Jambalaya and Biryani. Initially, we cook the rice for just 10 minutes – at this stage, it will be partially cooked though it will seem to absorb most of the liquid.

But wait! There’s more liquid to come!

We add the prawns and mussels partway through cooking the rice because they cook faster. So the idea here is that the prawns, mussels and rice all finish cooking at the same time. If the seafood was added with the rice, they would overcook. Nobody wants rubbery prawns in their paella!

The prawns and mussels (especially the mussels) leech an astonishing amount of liquid as they cook – around 3/4 of a cup. Not only does this provide the extra liquid required to finish cooking the rice, it’s essentially our very own homemade seafood stock that adds a load of incredible flavour into our paella!


Part 3 – garnish and rest!

How to make Paella

The home stretch! After 8 minutes, the prawns will be perfectly cooked and the mussels will be open so you know they’re cooked.

You will need to taste the rice to ensure it’s perfectly cooked (I know, I know, what an inconvenience! 😉). And it will still be a bit liquidy which is exactly what you want – because now we’re going to cover and rest it off the heat, during which time the excess liquid will be absorbed, leaving you with a bit pot of juicy paella rice, ready for serving!

Pop the cooked squid and reserved garnishing chorizo back on top before you cover it so the heat warms them through.

And just prior to serving, add some wedges of lemon and a sprinkle of parsley for colour!


How to serve paella

It’s entirely up to you whether you take it to the table as it is with the seafood completely covering the rice, or whether you give it a bit of a mix so the seafood gets jumbled through the rice a bit.

I tend to give it a bit of a mix to loosen the rice a bit, mix the flavour through a bit better and also disperse the seafood through. So I bring it to the table looking like this:

Photo of freshly cooked Paella

How much to make per person

Paella is such a great dish for a gathering because it’s easy to make loads in a giant pan or get multiple pans going at the same time! Use the scaler function on the recipe card to increase servings.

Allow for 1/3 cup / 60g of rice per person, plus around 150g / 5 oz of proteins and seafood. This is slightly on the generous side – but leftovers keep well, and nobody wants to be short!

PAELLA COOKING TIPS

Answering your burning questions about making Paella. 😉

  1. What rice to use for Paella? The best rice for paella is Bomba rice, also labelled as Valencia Rice or Rice de Valencia (Valencia is the region that Paella is said to have originated from). The other common rice is called Calasparra Rice (a region in Spain where it is grown). See above in post for more information.

  2. Best paella pan / skillet – Paella pans are large and shallow so the rice spreads out thinly and cooks evenly without stirring. But you don’t need a paella pan to make paella! Just use a large skillet. The key is to ensure the rice is not stacked up more than about 2 cm / 3/5″ deep (excluding the liquid & seafood added later, but including onion etc mixed throughout rice), to ensure even cooking.

  3. The liquid to rice ratio for paella is usually 1 cup of rice to 3 cups of liquid which is on the softer side than ideal. I use slightly less (2.3 cups liquid per 1 cup rice) because seafood drops a LOT of liquid (especially mussels) and you can always add more water/broth at the end to soften / finish cooking rice but you cannot UNDO overcooked, bloated, mushy rice.

  4. Cook in broth, not water – Fact is, the better the broth, the better the paella. The best is a homemade seafood broth. The 2nd best is a store bought chicken broth dolled up by simmering it for a while with some seafood offcuts, or make seafood paella like I have (so the flavoured seafood juices drop into the rice). The 3rd best is store bought chicken broth. Store bought fish stock doesn’t make the cut in my world – sorry. 🙂 (Unless of course, you get a gourmet homemade one.)

  5. Don’t stir!! Unlike risotto, paella should not be creamy. So once you add the broth, do not stir as this will activate the starch and make it gluey. The best paellas have a golden crust on the bottom, called the soccarat, and it’s the best part of the paella. 🙂

  6. Add seafood partway through cooking – Paella takes 20 to 25 minutes to cook. So squidge the seafood in partway through cooking to avoid overcooking it. Even partially submerged, it is enough heat to cook. The only exception is squid – it needs to be cooked super fast (2 minutes or less) or super long to make it tender (60 minutes). Anything in between is horrid and rubbery. For paella, we take the super fast route – cook it first, remove, add back later.

Spanish Feast - A multi course feast, easy Spanish dinner menu to make in your own home! recipetineats.com

What to serve with Paella

Back in 2016, in my pre recipe video days, I shared this Paella recipe as part of a 3 course Spanish Fiesta! So here are some suggestions to make a full Spanish Feast:

  • Easy Tapas Starters – garlic mushrooms, Spanish potato tortilla, and more! (No recipe video for these, being that they’re old recipes. If you want videos, put in a request in the comments section below!)

  • This paella for the main

  • Spanish CHURROS for dessert! Astonishingly straightforward to make – 20 minutes start to finish – and they also reheat extremely well which makes them great make ahead party food!

So. Much. Food.

So, SO happy! – Nagi x


Watch how to make it

Note: recipe calls for chopped fresh tomatoes if you have find ripe juicy ones which I could not. Canned crushed tomato is the best substitute which is what I’ve used.

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Freshly cooked Paella ready to be served

Spanish Paella

Author: Nagi | RecipeTin Eats
Prep: 15 minutes mins
Cook: 30 minutes mins
Total: 45 minutes mins
Dinner
Spanish
4.95 from 67 votes
Servings5 – 6 people
Tap or hover to scale
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Recipe video above. The most famous Spanish dish of them all! Paella is meant to be a fun relaxed dish, so don't get hung up about having the exact same seafood I've used – see Notes. And don't be scared of making paella – it is actually very forgiving if you have the right liquid/rice ratios and follow the order in which I cook things!
Note on Chorizo – NOT in traditional Spanish Paella recipes however, it's widely used in Spanish restaurants outside of Spain. Australia would faint if I excluded it. So it's in!

Ingredients

  • 1 – 2 tbsp olive oil
  • 7 oz / 200g chorizo (2 pieces) , sliced 1/2 cm / 1/5" thick (Note 1)
  • 200g / 6 oz squid (calamari) , cut into 7mm / 1/4" thick rings (Note 2)
  • 1 onion , diced (brown, white, yellow)
  • 3 garlic cloves , minced
  • 1 red capsicum / bell pepper , diced
  • 1 1/2 cups paella rice ("Bomba", "Valencia" or "Calasparra" rice) (Note 3)
  • 2 juicy ripe tomatoes, peeled and diced OR 3/4 cup canned crushed tomato (Note 4)
  • 300g / 10 oz chicken thigh fillets , cut into 1.5" / 3.5cm pieces
  • 3 1/2 cups chicken broth/stock (not low sodium) or homemade seafood broth (Note 5)
  • 1 tsp saffron threads (or 1/4 tsp ground saffron, Note 6)
  • 1 cup frozen peas
  • 12- 16 medium / large prawns , whole (shell on) (Note 7)
  • 12 large mussels , cleaned & check freshness (Note 8)

Garnish

  • Fresh parsley , chopped
  • 2 Lemons , cut into wedges
Prevent screen from sleeping

Instructions

  • Chorizo – Heat 1 tbsp oil in a 30cm / 10" paella pan or large skillet over high heat (Note 9). Add chorizo and cook until browned on each side (~ 3 minutes). Remove with a slotted spoon and set aside.
  • Squid – Add squid and cook for 45 seconds on each side, then remove and set aside.
  • Garlic, onion, capsicum – Add remaining oil (if needed). Add garlic and onion, cook for 2 minutes. Add capsicum, cook for 1 minute.
  • Chicken – Add chicken. Cook for 2 minutes until lightly browned but still raw inside.
  • Add Rice – Add rice and mix until the grains are coated in oil.
  • Cooking broth – Add in most of the chorizo (reserve 1/4 for garnish), chicken stock, fresh or crushed tomato and saffron. Stir.
  • Simmer 1 – Bring it to a simmer then adjust heat so it's simmering fairly gently (not super rapidly, will burn rice). Simmer for 10 minutes – no stirring! At this stage, a bit of rice should be poking through to the surface but there should still be plenty of liquid.
  • Add peas, prawns and mussels – Scatter over peas, squidge the prawns and mussels into the rice (partial submerge is fine).
  • Simmer 2 – Cook for 8 minutes (turn prawns halfway if you think it's necessary) or until prawns are opaque, mussels are open, and most of the liquid has been absorbed but still a bit liquidy. Discard any mussels that do not open. Remove from stove.
  • Check rice – Do a taste test to see if the rice is cooked – it should be firm but cooked. If it is too firm for your taste, no stress, just add a splash of hot water (not too much!) and keep cooking.
  • Rest – Scatter over squid and reserved chorizo (residual heat will warm through), cover with lid then rest for 5 minutes (rice will absorb remainig liquid). Paella rice should now be tender but "juicy", not stodgy and thick (if it is, add splash of water to loosen it).
  • Garnish – scatter with parsley and wedges of lemon. Take to table as is, then mix up rice with seafood before serving!

Recipe Notes:

No salt? You’ll find if you follow the recipe as is, it is well seasoned from the chorizo, full salt chicken stock (not low salt) and the seafood. When you taste at the end, if you want it saltier, add a sprinkle before you mix it all up for serving.
1. Chorizo – make sure you get cured chorizo (ie already cooked) not raw chorizo (ie like raw sausage, won’t slice neatly).
2. Squid / calamari – often sold pre sliced, or buy a tube and slice yourself (as pictured in post).
3. Rice – paella is best made with paella rice. Get anything labelled: “Bomba, Calasparra, Valencia or de Valencia, or paella rice”. Packs often have a photo of paella or “great for paella!” splashed across it. It will probably have the word “Arroz” next to it which means “rice” in Spanish. (Australia – sold at large Woolies, some Coles, all Harris Farms, Spanish / Euro delis, gourmet stores).
Best substitutes for paella rice:
  • risotto rice – but add an extra 1/2 cup of water with stock
  • medium grain rice – reduce water to 2 cups per 1 cup of rice (ie use 3 cups stock for 1.5 cups rice)
  • long grain white rice, sushi rice – will work per medium grain rice, but finished dish mouthfeel quite different to paella (still tasty though!)
Unsure how much liquid to use for your rice? Make this recipe with 3 cups of stock for 1.5 cups rice, that’s a safe amount for any type of white rice. Then if the rice is still too firm at the end, just add boiling water or hot stock 1/2 cup at a time and keep cooking. Drizzle all over the pan and just leave it om the stove.
Do not use: brown rice (takes too long to cook, too firm), basmati (too firm) or jasmine rice (too mushy), sticky rice (texture completely wrong for this dish), wild rice (too firm), black rice (too fancy 😂). Do not ask about quinoa (the answer is NO!😂)
If you DO NOT USE seafood, increase the liquid in this recipe to 3 3/4 cups / 925 ml for the 1 1/2 cups rice (because seafood leeches plenty of liquid), and I highly recommend using an excellent chicken stock (or clam juice / gourmet fish stock if you can) plus sautéing 3 chopped up anchovies (or 2 tsp paste) with the onion (it will dissolve, you won’t taste anchovies – it will help with flavour loss from no seafood).
4. Tomato – diced fresh tomato is traditional, but if you can’t find juicy ones (as I couldn’t when I went to film the video) use canned instead.
5. Stock/broth – The better the stock, the better the paella. A homemade fish stock would be best. However, if you use some seafood, it drops juices while it cooks which adds a significant amount of flavour into store bought chicken broth and this is how I usually make it. You could go one step further and simmer the store bought chicken broth for a bit with seafood off cuts – that will add loads of flavour!
6. Saffron – saffron threads are traditional, but expensive! If you’re on a budget, use imitation saffron powder instead – 1/4 teaspoon is sufficient, it’s potent stuff.
7. Prawns/shrimp – whole fresh or frozen thawed prawns are best here because a) they drop more liquid to add flavour into the rice; b) shell protects to prolong cook time. If you only have pre peeled prawns, squidge them in more towards the end OR cook them after the squid, then remove, then stir them back in at the end.
8. Mussels – magical for paella! They drop loads of liquid which adds so much flavour into paella – about 1/2 cup from just 10 or so mussels. 
If there’s a little raggedy “tuft” hanging from the side of the mussels, pull them out. Also, unless bought vac packed (as is common here in Australia) that says they’re cleaned, give them a good scrub under running water.
CHECK FOR FRESHNESS by smelling each one because one “off” mussel will ruin the whole pan of paella (yes, really).  Fresh mussels smell of the ocean / seawater. You will know if you come across an off one (I don’t need to describe the smell, just trust me, you will know).
Leftover mussels from packets – you will have more than you need, use the rest to make steamed mussels (on theme to serve on side!).
9. Skillet size – to ensure your rice cooks evenly, you need to use a large skillet (or paella pan!) such that the rice is not stacked up more than about 2 cm / 3/5″ deep (before liquids go in). To check before you start cooking: tip rice in, then triple the height to factor in onion, chicken etc. As long as that is 2 cm / 3/5″ or less, then it’s fine.
10. Variations: Make it a plain chicken paella – use 500g/1lb of chicken. Substitute with turkey, lamb, beef or rabbit (very Spanish!), or even leave out proteins and make it a vegetarian or just a seafood one!
Other seafood that is fantastic in paella: Crab, other crustaceans, shell fish, scallops, fish. For things like fish and scallops, brown first, then add back towards the end (the way the squid is done in the recipe).
11. How much to make per person –  Allow for 1/3 cup / 65g of rice per person, plus around 150g / 5 oz of proteins and seafood.
12. FANTASTIC to make on the BBQ! Stick the pan right on the grills, then play with heat strength so you get a nice simmer.
13. Nutrition per serving, assuming 5 servings. 137 of the 692 calories is attributable to the chorizo (loaded up with yummy red spicy oil, totally worth it, flavours the rice!).

Nutrition Information:

Serving: 553gCalories: 692cal (35%)Carbohydrates: 55.7g (19%)Protein: 56.3g (113%)Fat: 25.6g (39%)Saturated Fat: 7.3g (46%)Cholesterol: 284mg (95%)Sodium: 1247mg (54%)Potassium: 1055mg (30%)Fiber: 2.3g (10%)Sugar: 4.6g (5%)Vitamin A: 950IU (19%)Vitamin C: 96.5mg (117%)Calcium: 120mg (12%)Iron: 6.8mg (38%)
Keywords: paella recipe, seafood paella, spanish paella
Did you make this recipe?I love hearing how you went with my recipes! Tag me on Instagram at @recipe_tin.

Originally published August 2016, updated July 2020 with a new video, and lots more process steps!

Life of Dozer

Discovered a new way to exercise Dozer – using a drone! It makes me tired just watching him 😂 Also so glad that food doesn’t move…. he’s very difficult to keep up with!

And from the original publication date: At Sydney’s beautiful Bilgola Beach, drooling over this Paella on my computer screen and waiting patiently for me to finish, hoping I’ll let him hit the surf. No such luck Dozer, no dogs allowed on this beach! No swim for you this morning. And no paella either! #HardLifeForDozer

Dozer-working-Bilgola-Beach2

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252 Comments

  1. Laceher says

    August 6, 2020 at 8:37 pm

    5 stars
    Delicious recipe, surprisingly quick and easy. We made one with squid ink sac dissolved in the chicken stock and it got a deeper flavour. Never paying $50 for a pan at restaurants again. Thanks so much for sharing.

    note: i also got some hate from spanish people that it aint a paella – just call it rice with stuff in it. I told them I dont get offended when people throw random things together and call it pho or spring roll, which shut him up haha

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      August 7, 2020 at 10:51 am

      That’s so great to hear Laceher!!! Forget the haters – people don’t blow up as much about pineapple on a pizza!! 😂

      Reply
  2. Coral says

    July 26, 2020 at 10:46 pm

    Hi Nagi, we made the seafood paella following your recipe and it was super delicious and tasty! Given it was our first time making paella, we were a bit anxious as to how it would turn out. We substituted saffron for paprika and used risotto (closest we could find) and it was still amazing. Thanks for sharing the recipe and look forward to cooking more of your dishes 🙂

    Reply
  3. Karen Martin says

    July 21, 2020 at 9:19 am

    5 stars
    I made this for friends the other night. It was delicious. Followed the recipe exactly. My only issue was my pan was probably a little bit small, but not by much. I had to use sushi rice as that’s all I could get, but it turned out brilliantly. Made the churros for dessert too!

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      July 22, 2020 at 12:00 pm

      That’s so great to hear Karen!!! N x

      Reply
  4. Svetlana says

    July 20, 2020 at 10:42 pm

    This was amazing! LOVED the addition of the chorizo. Thank you for making food so deliciously fun!

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      July 21, 2020 at 6:52 am

      You’re so welcome Svetlana, thanks so much! N x

      Reply
  5. Dennette Schott says

    July 16, 2020 at 2:05 am

    Hi,
    Just confirming the only time a lid is place don the pan is duirng the resting period of 5 minutes – just prior to serving.

    Reply
  6. Angelina says

    July 15, 2020 at 12:51 pm

    5 stars
    Can’t wait to try this, Nagi – bc it looks so delicious in the video! I love ordering paella at our favourite Spanish restaurant – they add chorizo to it here in Vancouver, BC!

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      July 15, 2020 at 2:39 pm

      Awesome Angelina, I hope you do try it! N x

      Reply
  7. NGON says

    July 15, 2020 at 1:46 am

    5 stars
    This is so helpful and wonderful to have! I can’t wait to use these tips and hints! Thank you!!

    Reply
  8. Shanelle says

    July 14, 2020 at 10:43 pm

    What a fantastic recipe! I can’t wait to try it. Do you know how long this can store for?

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      July 15, 2020 at 2:51 pm

      Hi Shanelle, I only like to store up to 1 day due to the seafood. N x

      Reply
  9. Christine says

    July 13, 2020 at 2:47 am

    Canned diced tomatoes (in the US at least) have a lot of liquid. Would you drain this before hand or include it?

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      July 13, 2020 at 2:24 pm

      Hi Christine, no you want it a big juicy 🙂 N x

      Reply
  10. R says

    July 12, 2020 at 9:16 pm

    5 stars
    Fabulous. We loved it (me + hubby and our 2 kids). Every recipe of yours if fabulous. Thank you for bringing deliciousness to our table.

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      July 13, 2020 at 2:32 pm

      That’s terrific R! Thanks so much! N x

      Reply
  11. silvia says

    July 12, 2020 at 3:29 pm

    Hi, I’m Italian so I’m not going to say anything about the chorizo. I’m going to say that every time I make and Italian recipe and post it on Fb someone picks at something that is NOT italian in the recipe. I use what I have on hand. I realize you’re a blogger and professional but I think you should do the recipe how you feel it should be done. Sometimes you can’t get the original ingredients here in Australia. I love the recipe and even though I haven’t made it yet, I know enough about cooking to say I think that would taste divine. Also someone mentioned paprika, but I understand there is plenty in chorizo, so there you go…pork and paprika. You have both of the ingredients in there. YUM! Keep up the great job. Love your website. My friend put me on to you. She loves you too. 🙂 Stay safe.

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      July 13, 2020 at 2:44 pm

      Thank you so much Silvia, I truly appreciate the support and kind words ❤️ N x

      Reply
  12. subashini silvadas says

    July 12, 2020 at 1:10 pm

    Made it last night and it was absolutely delicious. Thank you for the recipe Nagi. I was so afraid it won’t turn out well since it’s my first attempt but it did! Super delicious. Highly recommended.
    I swapped clams to mussels as I’m not a big fan of mussels. cooked clams together with rice from the start so it has enough time to cook. Skipped chorizo.

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      July 13, 2020 at 2:50 pm

      I’m so glad you gave it a go and loved it Subashini! N x

      Reply
  13. Adriana says

    July 12, 2020 at 5:01 am

    Hi, sorry for this but I have to tell you: SPANISH paella NEVER, EVER has Chorizo. Is a common mistake of many chefs outside Spain, and for spanish people is painfull to read that. Please stop calle SPANISH paella if you put chorizo.

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      July 13, 2020 at 3:08 pm

      Hi Adriana, yes I talk about the addition of chorizo in the blog post! N x

      Reply
  14. Jeffery Gainer says

    July 11, 2020 at 2:46 pm

    5 stars
    I absolutely love paella! Nagi, I like the idea that you outlined this as a general procedure, not a prescriptive recipe. And you are absolutely right, it’s easy to make if you don’t overthink it too much. Use what is at hand and have fun! Whatever seafood is available will work. What looks good in the market today? Mussels, clams, scallops? I’ve even used lobster, orange roughy and Atlantic cod. Chicken legs, thighs or drumettes are good addition, too. Chopped ham? Sure, toss it in!
    I’ve found a great way to make a seafood-infused broth is to simmer shrimp shells in store-bought chicken broth for about five minutes, then strain out the shells. Then, magically, you have shrimp broth! (I never throw away my shrimp shells. I store them in bags in the freezer until I need a seafood broth.)
    And yes, Nagi, that’s great advice on the mussels. And if there is one that doesn’t open on cooking, throw it out!

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      July 11, 2020 at 5:51 pm

      Yes definitely Jeffery!!! Love that idea of the seafood broth!

      Reply
  15. Edward Ranney Carta says

    July 11, 2020 at 7:22 am

    I’m one of the the 45 million Spaniards that just cried in horror “do not add chorizo”. It’s the wrong flavour for paella. Susbtitute for pork chops (2,5 cms) at the chorizo stage. Serve the chorizo as a tapa while waiting for the paella. Also, we put a lot of extra virging olive oil, I mean a lot.

    Reply
  16. AliceK says

    July 11, 2020 at 7:14 am

    Hi, Nagi,
    What exactly do you mean when you say to “squidge” the seafood? That is not a term I have ever heard in the US. (Actually, the first time you used it in this post, it was “quidge”, which I looked up and it was kind of nasty, so I wasn’t sure what you meant to say here.)

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      July 12, 2020 at 7:11 am

      Ba ha – I never even thought of some people not knowing what that meant!! It’s an affectionate term for pushing something into something soft 🙂 I will update the recipe!! N xx

      Reply
  17. Mike says

    July 11, 2020 at 3:21 am

    Nagi, Nagi, Nagi. Have you been drinking. I have lived in Spain for 42 years and eaten Paella in Valencia, the origin of the dish made only with chicken or rabbit, in Andalusia who introduced shellfish to the dish, In Madrid, Barcelona, Sevilla, Granada, Córdoba, Malaga, need I go on, but never, never, never is Chorizo used in Paella. Love some of your recipes but you really should change the name of this one to, “Rice with added things you may enjoy”.

    Reply
    • Jack says

      July 12, 2020 at 10:12 am

      5 stars
      We love Chorizo. We don’t like mike.

      Reply
      • Loub says

        July 13, 2020 at 1:11 am

        That is mean , everyone has the right to right his opinion!!!!

        Reply
    • Nagi says

      July 11, 2020 at 6:14 pm

      Hi Mike, I do mention this in the post – * 45 million Spaniards just threw up their hands in protest at the inclusion of Chorizo, declaring it’s not traditional! But outside of Spain, it’s considered a key ingredient – and it adds a ton of flavour to the dish. So I’d never consider leaving it out! N x

      Reply
  18. Leslene says

    July 11, 2020 at 2:15 am

    Delicious

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      July 11, 2020 at 6:11 pm

      Thanks so much Leslie 🙂 N x

      Reply
  19. MaryJo says

    July 10, 2020 at 11:41 pm

    We haven’t cooked this so I won’t rate it with stars, but I’m drooling all over my keyboard and I just know that it will be amazing!

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      July 11, 2020 at 6:24 pm

      I hope you try it MaryJo!!! N x

      Reply
  20. Kayel Bowman says

    July 10, 2020 at 11:18 pm

    Prawns with eyes. Unless it brings some kind of great flavor, I just can’t. I still love watching you cook, though. Maybe I’m a little ocd, but sometimes when you add an ingredient, and leave some in your container, it rankles me a bit. 😉

    Reply
    • Jeffery Gainer says

      July 11, 2020 at 2:59 pm

      When I lived in Louisiana, we bought fresh, whole shrimp which had been netted earlier in the morning. Whole shrimp, heads, eyes, tails, etc. Sometimes they cost as much as $4.20 per pound! Fantastic shrimp–I stored the heads and shells in the freezer to make shrimp bisque–I miss them.

      Reply
      • Nagi says

        July 14, 2020 at 7:43 pm

        Great idea Jeffery!! N x

        Reply
    • Nagi says

      July 11, 2020 at 7:10 am

      Hi Kayel! Rest assured every single grain of spice and every piece of chopped onion makes its way into the pot – just off camera!! I used to frantically scrape away at the little bowls on camera but it makes the video less “neat” 🙂 You would laugh at the number of times I’ve gone to tip in a little bowl of spices only to find the humidity made them clump up and stick to the dish so when I tip it in, nothing comes out!! N x

      Reply
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