Creamy Barley Risotto (Healthy Whole Grain)

Creamy Barley Risotto (Healthy Whole Grain)

This creamy barley risotto swaps arborio rice for whole-grain pearl barley, giving you a chewy, hearty, high-fiber bowl with earthy mushrooms and spinach. A finishing drizzle of fruity, peppery extra virgin olive oil keeps it lively, and the whole grain makes it a satisfying, wholesome main.

Jump to Recipe
Prep 10 min
Cook 50 min
Total 60 min
Intermediate

Why We Love This Recipe

We love this barley risotto because the whole grain does so much of the good work for you. Pearl barley is a hearty whole grain rich in fiber, including the beta-glucan kind, which makes this bowl more filling and steadier than a refined-rice risotto. Add the earthy mushrooms and a handful of spinach and you have a wholesome, plant-forward plate in the Mediterranean-diet pattern.

Olive oil is the cornerstone fat of that pattern, and it is where Olivea earns its keep. We cook the base in High Phenolic Extra Virgin Olive Oil, then finish each bowl with a raw drizzle of the Ultra High Phenolic. That peppery catch at the back of your throat is the hydroxytyrosol you can taste, the most studied polyphenol in olive oil, and it is highest in a fresh, high-phenolic oil, so a raw finishing drizzle is how the most of it reaches the plate. Olivea is rich in monounsaturated fats, USDA Certified Organic, single-origin from Messinia, Greece, cold-pressed within hours, and developed with Harvard-trained cardiologists. If you want to understand how hydroxytyrosol works, Olivea keeps a research library on it, with more on our science page.

Between the fiber from the barley, iron and folate from the spinach, B vitamins from the mushrooms, and the monounsaturated fats from the olive oil, this is a hearty, nourishing bowl. It is a comforting way to make a whole grain and a fresh, peppery olive oil the center of dinner.

View Nutrition Facts

Recipe Success Tips

Use pearl barley, not hulled.

Pearl barley releases its starch and turns creamy the way risotto should, and it cooks in under an hour. Hulled barley is more intact but takes much longer and stays firmer, so it is not ideal here.

Toast the barley first.

Stir the dry barley in the oil for 2 to 3 minutes until it smells nutty and lightly toasted. This deepens the flavor and helps the grains cook evenly into a creamy risotto.

Brown the mushrooms properly.

Give the mushrooms room in the pan and let them sit before stirring so they brown rather than steam. That golden, caramelized edge is where their deep, savory flavor comes from.

Expect a longer cook than rice.

Barley takes about 40 to 45 minutes to turn tender and creamy, longer than arborio rice. Keep the stock warm and add it gradually, and taste toward the end for that pleasant chewy bite.

Finish raw with a peppery oil.

Cook the base in High Phenolic Extra Virgin Olive Oil, then drizzle the finished bowls with the Ultra High Phenolic right before serving. Using a fresh, high-phenolic oil raw is how its grassy, peppery flavor and polyphenols reach the plate at their best.

Ingredients

4
servings
  • 3 tbsp High Phenolic Extra Virgin Olive Oil
  • 1 1/2 cups pearl barley
  • 8 oz cremini mushrooms, sliced
  • 1 large shallot, finely diced
  • 2 garlic cloves, minced
  • 1 tsp fresh thyme leaves
  • 1/2 cup dry white wine
  • 6 cups warm vegetable stock
  • 3 cups baby spinach
  • 1/2 cup grated parmesan cheese
  • 2 tbsp flat-leaf parsley, chopped
  • to taste sea salt and black pepper
  • 2 tbsp Ultra High Phenolic Extra Virgin Olive Oil, for finishing

Kitchen Tools You'll Need

Wide Heavy Saucepan
Wooden Spoon
Ladle
Chef's Knife
Fine Grater

How to Cook Creamy Barley Risotto (Healthy Whole Grain)

COOK

1
Warm 2 tablespoons High Phenolic Extra Virgin Olive Oil in a wide saucepan over medium-high heat. Add the mushrooms in a single layer and let them sit before stirring, cooking 5 to 6 minutes until deeply golden. Transfer to a plate.
2
Lower the heat to medium and add the remaining 1 tablespoon High Phenolic Extra Virgin Olive Oil. Its smooth, gentle pepper carries the aromatics evenly. Add the shallot and cook until soft, about 3 minutes, then stir in the garlic and thyme for 30 seconds until fragrant.
3
Add the pearl barley and toast for 2 to 3 minutes, stirring, until it smells nutty. Pour in the white wine and let it bubble away almost completely.
4
Add the warm stock one ladle at a time, stirring often and letting each addition absorb before the next. Cook 40 to 45 minutes, until the barley is tender, creamy, and pleasantly chewy.

FINISH

5
Stir the mushrooms back in along with the spinach and let it wilt, about 1 minute. Off the heat, stir in the parmesan and parsley, then taste and adjust salt and pepper.
6
Spoon into warm bowls and finish each with a drizzle of Ultra High Phenolic Extra Virgin Olive Oil for a bold, grassy, peppery lift over the earthy mushrooms and barley.

Recipe Notes

This hearty bowl stands on its own or works as a side for roasted chicken or fish. If you are in the mood for the traditional version, our creamy parmesan risotto uses arborio rice, and the golden risotto alla Milanese is another comforting classic.
Add roasted butternut squash in fall, or fold in cannellini beans for extra protein. For another wholesome, high-fiber dinner in the same spirit, try our lemon lentil soup.
Cook the base in the smooth, balanced High Phenolic Extra Virgin Olive Oil, which suits the longer, gentle cooking barley needs. Reserve the bolder Ultra High Phenolic for the raw finishing drizzle, where its peppery character lands directly on the palate.
Barley risotto reheats well and even tastes great the next day, which makes it a strong meal-prep option. Store in an airtight container for up to 4 days and reheat gently with a splash of stock, adding the finishing olive oil drizzle after reheating.
No. Barley contains gluten, so this dish is not gluten-free. For a gluten-free risotto, use arborio rice instead and follow the same method, shortening the cook time to about 20 minutes.

Nutrition Facts per Serving

Nutrition Facts
Serving size 1 generous bowl (about 1 1/2 cups)
Calories 490
% Daily Value*
Total Fat 19g24%
Saturated Fat 4g20%
Trans Fat 0g
Unsaturated Fat 14g
Monounsaturated Fat 12g
Polyunsaturated Fat 1.5g
Cholesterol 10mg3%
Sodium 700mg30%
Total Carbohydrate 68g25%
Dietary Fiber 13g46%
Total Sugars 3g
Includes 0g Added Sugars 0%
Protein 15g30%
Vitamin A 110mcg12%
Vitamin C 8mg9%
Vitamin D 4mcg20%
Calcium 180mg14%
Iron 4mg22%
Potassium 640mg14%
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet.

The Best No-Cook Way to Get Olive Oil Benefits

Cooking with a fresh, high-phenolic olive oil and finishing raw is a delicious way to put olive polyphenols at the center of a wholesome, whole-grain dinner. For an easy daily habit on the days you are not making risotto, the Olivea Hydroxytyrosol Supplement offers a convenient, no-cook dose of olive polyphenols.

Olivea: Suplemento de hidroxitirosol
Olivea: Suplemento de hidroxitirosol
$40.00
Add to Cart

Frequently Asked Questions

It is a risotto-style dish that uses pearl barley in place of arborio rice. The barley releases starch as it cooks, giving you the same creamy texture with a heartier, chewier bite and the nuttiness of a whole grain.
Barley is a whole grain that is high in fiber, so this risotto is filling and wholesome and fits a Mediterranean-diet pattern. The mushrooms and spinach add nutrients, and the extra virgin olive oil contributes monounsaturated fats and polyphenols, especially drizzled on raw at the end.
Use pearl barley, which cooks faster and turns creamy. Hulled barley is more intact and nutritious but takes much longer to cook and stays firmer, so it is less suited to a risotto texture.
No. Barley contains gluten, so it is not gluten-free. If you need a gluten-free version, make the same recipe with arborio rice and shorten the cooking time.
Plan on about 40 to 45 minutes of simmering for the barley to turn tender and creamy, which is longer than rice risotto. Keep your stock warm and add it gradually for the best texture.
Cook the base in a smooth High Phenolic Extra Virgin Olive Oil suited to the longer cook, then finish with a fresh, peppery Ultra High Phenolic drizzle. A high-phenolic oil used raw adds a grassy, peppery flavor that suits the earthy barley and mushrooms.
Yes, it reheats well and often tastes even better the next day, which makes it great for meal prep. Reheat gently with a splash of stock and add a fresh olive oil drizzle afterward.
Yes. Use vegetable stock and skip the parmesan or swap in a plant-based hard cheese. The barley and olive oil still give you a rich, creamy bowl.
It works as a main with a green salad, or as a side alongside roasted chicken, fish, or vegetables. A squeeze of lemon over the top brightens the earthy flavors.

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