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Sonoma County chef tops Bobby Flay in paella smackdown

Published: Thursday, July 31, 2008 at 11:52 a.m.
Last Modified: Thursday, July 31, 2008 at 6:23 p.m.

Paella king Gerard Nebesky of Freestone emerged victorious Wednesday night in his cook-off with celebrity chef Bobby Flay in a “Throwdown with Bobby Flay” on the Food Network.


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A judging panel of Spanish cuisine experts declared Gerard Nebesky's paella the best.
Photos courtesy of Stephen Reynolds

GERARD'S PAELLA
Makes 8 to 10 servings

1 cup olive oil

2-3 heads of garlic, with cloves detached but not skinned

6 red peppers or piquillo peppers, cored, seeded and sliced

5-6 pounds of chicken, preferably legs and thighs with bone in

4 yellow onions, chopped

2 16-ounce cans diced tomatoes

6-7 1/2 cups chicken stock, homemade or canned

20-25 threads of saffron, crushed

2-2 1/2 teaspoons Spanish smoked paprika

4-5 cups uncooked Valencian short-grain rice

2 16-ounce cans garbanzo beans

1 pound green beans, slender asparagus or baby artichoke hearts

20-24 jumbo shrimp (16/20 count)

20-24 Manila clams and/or New Zealand Green Lip mussels

4-5 lemons, cut into wedges, for garnish

Heat the paella pan over medium-high heat, add olive oil and garlic and fry the peppers. (Add more peppers if you want to serve some as an appetizer.) Remove peppers and set aside.

Add chicken parts to the pan, turning to sear all sides. When chicken is golden, add the onions and saute until translucent. Add the tomatoes and the stock and reduce the sofrito base down for about a half hour. Meanwhile, crush the saffron with the smoked paprika in a mortar and pestle and add it to the stock.

After a half hour, stir in the rice and let it simmer for about 20 minutes. Important: Do not stir or cover the rice. As the rice cooks, add the vegetables and the garbanzo beans.

During the final 10 minutes, poke the shrimp and shellfish into the rice mixture so that they will cook.

You will know the dish is done when you can smell the smoky odor of the rice caramelizing on the bottom of the pan, and all the liquid is absorbed by the rice. Finish with squirts of lemon and leave lemon wedges in the paella pan or perched along the rim.

Wine pairing: De La Montanya Tempranillo; Clos du Bois Tempranillo

During the half-hour show that aired at 9 p.m., Nebesky was shown driving his car, diving for his own fish and cooking up paella at Stinson Beach.

The episode heated up when Flay suddenly showed up in San Francisco while Nebesky was giving a cooking class. Flay challenged the chef to a surprise paella cook-off, with hundreds of spectators gathered around.

After tasting Nebesky’s and Flay’s paellas, the judging panel — including Spanish chef Daniel Oliveira of B-44 in San Francisco — declared Nebesky the winner, praising the caramelized crust of his rice, known as the “socarrat” in Spain.

Flay’s paella lost points for being overly spicy. Nebesky concurred with the judges.

“Honestly, I thought it was really good, but it was really spicy,” Nebesky said. “He overpeppered the chicken.”

Nebesky watched the show Wednesday evening at Bistro des Copains restaurant in Occidental while cooking paellas for a gathering of about 150 family, friends and fans. His mother, Rosemary Nebesky of Carson City, Nev., came to cheer him on.

The bon vivant came across well on the TV show, telegraphing his love of cooking with enthusiasm and natural charm.

“I’m really comfortable in that arena, because I like meeting new people and sharing stories,” he said. “So that part I really enjoyed.”


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