Ok, here's how I was taught to make risotto.
Finely chop a small onion and crush a clove of garlic. Heat up your chicken stock and keep it simmering in a small pan. You need a good stock for this, NOT a stock cube. If you use a stock cube, it gets too salty by reduction by the time the risotto os cooked. Fry onion and garlic gently in a large knob of butter in a saute pan until the onion is soft, but not coloured. Add the risotto rice and stir gently to coat with butter. Don't allow it to fry, or colour or you'll never get it to cook properly as a coating will form on the outside of the grain. Once the rice is nicely coated in butter, chuck in a small glass of white wine and stir the rice over a medium heat until the wine has all evaporated. This gives you a good wine flavour, and burns off the alcohol. Then you addd the hot stock, a ladleful at a time, keeping the temperature under the rice at a gently simmer. Stir constantly, always in the same direction, and gently, until the stock has been absorbed. Add another ladlful only when the previous one has been absorbed. It takes between 12 and 15 minutes for a risotto to cook to the al dente stage, when the rice should still have a little bite and be surrounded by creamy liquid (but not too sloppy). Stir in some freshly grated parmesan, a further nut of butter and season to taste. Serve immediately. You can flavour it with what you like, but this one goes particularly well with a properly made ragu, served as they do in Emilia Romagna or around Bologna. Or just serve it plain. Whatever, it's delicious.