(3 ½oz) Parmesan cheese, grated, plus optional extra to serve
Directions
Step 1
Heat 1tbsp oil in a large pan over medium heat and fry chorizo until golden and the oil is red. Empty into a small bowl and set aside. Add remaining oil to pan and gently fry onion for 10min until softened.
Step 2
In a large pan of boiling water, cook kale for 5min until tender. Drain well and set aside.
Step 3
Add rice to onion pan and fry, stirring, for 1min. Add a ladleful of stock and stir frequently until liquid has been absorbed. Keep adding stock, a ladleful at a time, and stirring frequently while rice absorbs liquid. Continue cooking in this way until rice is tender but retains a tiny bite – about 15-17min.
Step 4
Lift chorizo out of bowl and add to pan (leave red oil behind), with the kale and Parmesan. Mix and check seasoning. Take pan off heat, cover and leave for 2min. Divide among 4 warmed bowls and garnish with chorizo oil. Serve with extra Parmesan, if you like.
An experienced and highly skilled team of food writers, stylists and digital content producers, the Good Housekeeping Cookery Team is a close-knit squad of food obsessives. Cookery Editor Emma Franklin is our resident chilli obsessive and barbecue expert, who spends an inordinate amount of time on holidays poking round the local supermarkets seeking out new and exciting foods. Senior Cookery Writer Alice Shields is a former pastry chef and baking fanatic who loves making bread and would have peanut butter with everything if she could. Her favourite carb is pasta, and our vibrant green spaghetti is her weeknight go-to. Lover of all things savoury, Senior Cookery Writer Grace Evans can be found eating crispy corn and nocellara olives at every opportunity, and will take the cheeseboard over dessert any time (though she cannot resist a slice of tres leches cake). With a wealth of professional kitchen know-how, culinary training and years of experience between them, they are all dedicated to ensuring every Good Housekeeping recipe is the best it can be, so you can trust they’ll work (and if they don’t – we’ll have the answer for why*) every time (*90% of the time the answer is: “buy an separate oven thermometer”!).