
- This orzo dish is like a risotto that didn’t sign up for drama. Less stirring, more scoffing.
Budget Breakdown for 4 Hungry Aussies
| Ingredient | Avg. Supermarket Price (AUS) | Quantity | Est. Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mushrooms (400g) | $6.00/kg | 400g | $2.40 |
| Olive oil | $10.00/L | 1 tbsp | $0.20 |
| Red onion | $2.50/kg | 1 | $0.60 |
| Bacon (lardons/strips) | $12.00/kg | 200g | $2.40 |
| Tomato paste (concentrate) | $1.50/140g | 1 tbsp | $0.30 |
| Mixed herbs (dried) | $1.00/jar | 1 tsp | $0.05 |
| Orzo (risoni pasta) | $3.00/500g | 200g | $1.20 |
| Stock (chicken or veg) | $2.00/L | 750ml | $1.50 |
| Frozen peas | $2.00/kg | 200g | $0.40 |
| Parmesan (optional) | $3.00/100g | 25g | $0.75 |
| Parsley (optional) | $2.50/bunch | handful | $0.50 |
Total Cost: $10.30 ($2.58 per serve)
Nutrition Tip: Each serve packs fibre, protein, and veg – a proper all-rounder.
Recipe: One-Pot Orzo with Peas, Mushrooms and Bacon
Serves: 4 (or 2 footy players and a Labrador)
Ingredients:
- 400–500g mushrooms, sliced
- 1 tbsp olive oil
- 1 red onion, finely chopped
- 200g bacon lardons
- 1 tbsp tomato paste
- 1 tsp dried mixed herbs
- 200g dried orzo (aka risoni)
- 750ml stock (veg or chicken)
- 200g frozen peas
- Freshly ground black pepper
- Optional: parmesan & parsley
Step-by-Step (with Aussie flair):
- Fry the Fun Guys (Mushrooms):
Chuck your mushies in a hot dry pan. Let ’em sweat like they’re at an outback pub quiz, then hit them with half the oil. Fry till golden, then scoop ’em out. - Sizzle That Onion:
Add the rest of the oil and your onion. Turn the heat down low and let it cook gently for 8–10 mins. No need to rush — this ain’t a sausage sizzle. - Add Bacon for the Win:
Tip in the bacon, crank the heat and fry till it’s getting crispy and you’re tempted to steal a bit. Don’t. Be strong. - Everything Back In:
Return the mushrooms to the pan. Stir in tomato paste, herbs, and the orzo. Give it all a good mix. - Liquid Gold:
Pour in the stock and season like you’re on MasterChef. Lid on, simmer for 8 mins. Then check – if it looks like soup, cook another few mins with the lid off. - Peas & Please:
Toss in the peas. Stir till they’re warm and friendly. Optional: top with parmesan and chopped parsley if you’re feeling fancy.
Pro Tips & Swaps
- Vego Version: Skip the bacon, use veggie stock, and replace parmesan with nutritional yeast (or just more herbs).
- No Orzo? Use small pasta shapes or even rice – just adjust the liquid and cook time.
- Speed Demon Tip: Mushrooms + onion can cook together if you’re not a browning perfectionist.
Final Thought From the Frying Pan
This dish is the food equivalent of “Netflix and chill” — low effort, deeply satisfying, and guaranteed to impress. The only thing you’ll burn is your mouth if you don’t let it cool. And hey, frozen peas? Still the MVP of Aussie freezers.

