Smoky, golden rice cooked with spicy chorizo, peppers, and tomatoes in a single pan. A deeply flavourful, fuss-free dinner ready in 35 minutes — inspired by the flavours of arroz a la española.

Spanish rice with chorizo is a deeply satisfying one-pan meal inspired by the home-cooked rice dishes of Spain — particularly the arroz a banda and arroz al horno traditions of Valencia and Murcia. Smoky cured chorizo renders its brilliant orange, paprika-laced fat into the pan, which then flavours the onions, peppers, tomatoes, and rice as they cook. The entire dish is made in a single pan and requires minimal active cooking.
This recipe costs around £5 for two generous portions, uses one pan, and delivers an extraordinary depth of flavour from the chorizo fat. The smoky paprika, sweet peppers, sharp tomato, and savoury rice create a complete, satisfying meal that tastes as though it came from a Spanish tapas kitchen rather than a 35-minute weeknight cook.
Spanish rice with chorizo works as a complete weeknight dinner, a sharing dish at a casual dinner party, or a weekend lunch. It reheats well the following day and is excellent cold as a rice salad with a drizzle of olive oil and squeeze of lemon.
Fry the chorizo first and keep all its fat. Toast the rice in the fat before adding liquid. Never stir after the lid goes on. Rest for 5 minutes before serving. Add the chorizo back at the end to keep it crispy.
The flavour engine of the dish — the orange fat that renders from cured chorizo as it fries carries concentrated smoked paprika, garlic, and pork flavour that infuses every grain of rice. Choose a good quality Spanish cured chorizo for the best result.
The spice that defines Spanish cooking — made from peppers dried and smoked over oak, it adds a characteristic sweet-smoky depth that is entirely different from regular paprika. Combined with the chorizo's own paprika content, it gives the rice its distinctive flavour and deep red-orange colour.
A pinch of saffron threads soaked in a tablespoon of warm water and stirred in with the stock adds the golden colour and faintly floral, honeyed fragrance associated with Spanish rice dishes. Turmeric is a budget substitute providing the colour without the flavour.
The liquid that the rice absorbs as it cooks — using a flavourful stock rather than water adds a savoury depth to every grain. Homemade stock produces the best result, but a good-quality low-salt stock cube dissolved in water works well.
Merguez sausage can replace chorizo for a North African-spiced version. Smoked sausage or kielbasa works as a widely available supermarket substitute. Vegetable stock replaces chicken stock for a non-meat base. Arborio or risotto rice can replace long-grain rice — reduce the stock slightly and expect a creamier result. Canned cherry tomatoes produce a slightly sweeter sauce than standard chopped tomatoes.
Heat 1 tablespoon of olive oil in a large, wide frying pan or shallow casserole dish over medium-high heat. Add the chorizo slices and cook for 3–4 minutes, turning once, until they are crispy and have released their deep orange fat into the pan. Remove the chorizo with a slotted spoon and set aside on a plate, leaving all the flavoured fat in the pan.
Add another tablespoon of olive oil to the chorizo fat in the pan. Add the diced onion and red pepper and cook over medium heat for 6–7 minutes until softened and slightly caramelised. Add the garlic, smoked paprika, sweet paprika, and turmeric. Stir and cook for 1 minute until fragrant.
Add the rice to the pan and stir to coat every grain in the flavoured oil. Cook for 1–2 minutes, stirring constantly, until the rice turns slightly translucent at the edges. This toasting step prevents the rice from becoming mushy and adds a subtle nutty flavour.
Pour in the chopped tomatoes and chicken stock. Season with 1 teaspoon salt and 1/2 teaspoon black pepper. Stir well and bring to a boil. Reduce heat to medium-low, cover with a lid, and cook for 15–18 minutes without stirring until the rice has absorbed the liquid and is just tender. Check at 15 minutes — the rice should be tender with just a little liquid remaining.
Return the crisped chorizo to the pan, nestling it into the rice. Replace the lid and remove from heat. Rest for 5 minutes — the steam trapped under the lid finishes cooking the rice and the chorizo warms through. Scatter with parsley and serve with lemon wedges.
Techniques that separate good from great
Spanish chorizo releases a brilliantly flavoured orange fat loaded with smoked paprika, garlic, and pork flavour as it cooks. This fat is more flavourful than any combination of oil and spices you could add separately. After frying the chorizo, everything else in the pan — onions, garlic, rice, tomatoes — cooks in this fat, absorbing its character completely.
Coating each rice grain in oil and toasting briefly until the edges turn translucent — the same technique used in risotto, pilaf, and paella — creates a barrier on the surface of each grain that prevents them from absorbing liquid too rapidly. This results in grains that cook more evenly and remain separate rather than merging into a starchy mass.
Once the liquid is added and the lid goes on, the rice cooks in a closed, pressurised steam environment. Lifting the lid releases steam, drops the temperature, and disrupts the cooking. Resist the urge to check until the minimum cooking time has elapsed. The rice announces when it is nearly done by the sound changing from active simmering to a dry, crackling sound.
If chorizo is added to the broth and cooked alongside the rice for 18 minutes, it becomes soft and chewy. Frying it crisp at the start, then returning it at the very end to warm through in the residual heat, gives you the best of both worlds — the flavour deeply embedded in the rice from the rendered fat, and crispy, textured pieces of chorizo throughout.
Different ways to make this dish your own
Add 2 diced boneless chicken thighs to the pan after frying the chorizo, browning them for 4–5 minutes before adding the vegetables. The chicken cooks through during the rice simmering stage, creating a more substantial one-pan meal.
Add raw king prawns, mussels, or calamari rings in the last 5 minutes of cooking. Cover to steam open any mussels and cook prawns until pink. A coastal Spanish-inspired variation requiring no extra work.
Replace chorizo with 100g of diced smoked tofu or 1 extra red pepper. Increase smoked paprika to 2 teaspoons and add a pinch of smoked salt for depth. An entirely plant-based version with assertive Spanish flavour.
Transfer the par-cooked rice (after step 3) to a baking dish, add the stock, return the chorizo to the top, and bake covered at 190°C for 20 minutes. Uncover for the last 5 minutes to crisp the top.
Perfect pairings to complete the meal
A squeeze of lemon over the finished rice is essential — the acidity cuts through the richness of the chorizo fat and brightens every flavour in the dish.
A crisp green salad dressed with sherry vinegar and olive oil is the classic Spanish accompaniment — its acidity and freshness provide an ideal contrast to the warm, rich rice.
Good bread for mopping up the flavoured oil and tomato-tinged juices from the bottom of the pan — the best part of the dish.
A spoonful of alioli alongside provides a creamy, garlicky richness that complements the smoky, paprika-spiced rice beautifully.
Keep it fresh and plan ahead
Store in an airtight container for up to 3 days. The flavour deepens overnight as the paprika and chorizo continue to season the rice.
Freezes well for up to 2 months in an airtight container. Thaw overnight and reheat with a splash of water to restore moisture.
The dish can be made completely ahead and reheated. Add a splash of chicken stock when reheating to restore moisture and prevent the rice from drying out.
Reheat in a covered pan over low heat with 2–3 tablespoons of water, stirring occasionally, until piping hot throughout. Alternatively, reheat in the microwave covered with a damp paper towel to retain moisture.
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