Rice.
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Rice.
...does anyone know how to cook it properly.
I'm a fairly good in the kitchen so the wife says, and i regularly invite friends over for a nosh up, and they've never had food poisoning...yet. I do a mean chicken kiev, chinese stir fry, stroganoff, roast beef 'n' onions.
I also pickle veggies. Cucumbers, onions and eggs (yes pickled eggs) being my favourites. I make olives. From picking them in my garden to the plate. I make my own spices. And have started making wine again.
But im Crap at boiling bloody rice. I've tried all sorts of methods listed all over the net but it allways comes out like a splodgy starchy cementy ball of poo. I've tried long grain, short grain, indian grain, wheat grain and all i get is a bloody migrane (heh! nice pun flabby)
I want fluffy, dry floaty rice. Help!!!
Any ideas kids??
FC
I'm a fairly good in the kitchen so the wife says, and i regularly invite friends over for a nosh up, and they've never had food poisoning...yet. I do a mean chicken kiev, chinese stir fry, stroganoff, roast beef 'n' onions.
I also pickle veggies. Cucumbers, onions and eggs (yes pickled eggs) being my favourites. I make olives. From picking them in my garden to the plate. I make my own spices. And have started making wine again.
But im Crap at boiling bloody rice. I've tried all sorts of methods listed all over the net but it allways comes out like a splodgy starchy cementy ball of poo. I've tried long grain, short grain, indian grain, wheat grain and all i get is a bloody migrane (heh! nice pun flabby)
I want fluffy, dry floaty rice. Help!!!
Any ideas kids??
FC
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1 cup rice
2 1/3 cup cold water
put in pot
heat @ medium to medium-high until water is just boiling. Do not stir. EVER. When water boils lower heat to low, cover tightly. Do not open for 20 minutes minimum.
Vary water amounts to taste. Less water=more sushi-ricelike. DO NOT STIR YOUR FREAKING RICE.
kthxbye
ps: stirring=BAD! DO NOT DO IT!
pps: yes, at times rice will become stuck to your pot. Oh well. You can buy a bamboo rice steamer if you'd like. I've never used one, but I hear they work well. Also, a rice cooker may be just the thing.
2 1/3 cup cold water
put in pot
heat @ medium to medium-high until water is just boiling. Do not stir. EVER. When water boils lower heat to low, cover tightly. Do not open for 20 minutes minimum.
Vary water amounts to taste. Less water=more sushi-ricelike. DO NOT STIR YOUR FREAKING RICE.
kthxbye
ps: stirring=BAD! DO NOT DO IT!
pps: yes, at times rice will become stuck to your pot. Oh well. You can buy a bamboo rice steamer if you'd like. I've never used one, but I hear they work well. Also, a rice cooker may be just the thing.
- Hattrick
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Thank god this wasn't another "ricer" post!
I have in the past had all types of problems getting the perfect cooked rice.
That is until I found this.
It's a no brainer operation, and my rice has always turned out fluffy and good!
I have in the past had all types of problems getting the perfect cooked rice.
That is until I found this.
It's a no brainer operation, and my rice has always turned out fluffy and good!
- WarAdvocat
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- CDN_Merlin
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WA got it right- I'd go with less water, though. General rule of thumb is use double as much water as rice (I actually go slightly under) Make sure the heat is plenty low for the 20 minutes- it should boil, but never boil over. If the rice sticks real bad on the bottom, you probably had the heat too high at some point- bring to a boil under medium heat, not blasting it, and you should be good. Like WA siad, no lifty lid, no stirry. Also, I'd suggest a pinch of salt. (If you have a clear lid, you should see bubble thingys forming inside, but just never enough to start getting out of the lid)
(Note that's for white rice, if you're cooking wild rice do the same deal, just cook for 45 minutes after boil instead of 20)
As for the wetness/dryness, varying the amount of water you start with will change that. Cook with less water for dryer rice; and more water for wetter rice. Also, if you add a little oil in with the water, the rice will tend to stick to itself less. (I wouldn't put more than a couple of tablespoons of oil in.)
I think the indian rice would fall in the wild rice category, thus bumping up to 45 minutes- see what the recommended cooking time is on the back of the packet.
(Note that's for white rice, if you're cooking wild rice do the same deal, just cook for 45 minutes after boil instead of 20)
As for the wetness/dryness, varying the amount of water you start with will change that. Cook with less water for dryer rice; and more water for wetter rice. Also, if you add a little oil in with the water, the rice will tend to stick to itself less. (I wouldn't put more than a couple of tablespoons of oil in.)
I think the indian rice would fall in the wild rice category, thus bumping up to 45 minutes- see what the recommended cooking time is on the back of the packet.
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- []V[]essenjah
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Lets see here:
1 four cylinder engine.
4 hubcaps with spinners.
1 rear spoiler.
1 underbody kit.
2 green lights on the grill (I call 'em christmas lights).
2 racing stripes.
4 Vtec stickers.
1 set of underglows.
One sticker that states that my car is somehow faster than your car.
And the ability to drive like you're in Utah.
1 four cylinder engine.
4 hubcaps with spinners.
1 rear spoiler.
1 underbody kit.
2 green lights on the grill (I call 'em christmas lights).
2 racing stripes.
4 Vtec stickers.
1 set of underglows.
One sticker that states that my car is somehow faster than your car.
And the ability to drive like you're in Utah.
You could try this.DCrazy wrote:On a side note, anyone know where I can find that orange Mexican/Spanish (which one is it) rice you get at like Chi-Chi's? I can't seem to find it anywhere here. Most of the time I wind up getting Lipton Mexican or Spanish rice (they taste the same to me, and they definitely should not).
My roommates and I do the following (Not perfectly on, but close, and easier than from scratch.): When yah make rice, make extra, so you have leftovers. A couple days later, take the leftover rice and throw it in a saucepan with enough oil to cover the rice, but have no extra. (Here's where you add precooked chicken or whatever if you want meat in it) Then, we grab a can of Ro-Tel Original Diced Tomatoes & Green Chiles and add it to the mix. Fry until it's all hot, add mexican blend cheese on top if you're a cheese fan, and enjoy.
flabby, how have you been cooking it?
describe (also describe the container you use).
i cook rice easily in the microwave.
for 2 cups (or something) of rice i put the rice in a typically sized microwave container, cover the rice with a knuckle (approx 2-3 cm) or so of water ontop of the rice itself. put it in for 14mins or so (COVERED WITH THE LID).
i sometimes have to clean the microwave a bit afterwards, because while cooking the water can boil over, the lid doesn't stop that.
i get "fluffy" rice, as you put it. (careful when opening lid, the steam is ★■◆●ing dangerous).
there's no sitting water left in it.
describe (also describe the container you use).
i cook rice easily in the microwave.
for 2 cups (or something) of rice i put the rice in a typically sized microwave container, cover the rice with a knuckle (approx 2-3 cm) or so of water ontop of the rice itself. put it in for 14mins or so (COVERED WITH THE LID).
i sometimes have to clean the microwave a bit afterwards, because while cooking the water can boil over, the lid doesn't stop that.
i get "fluffy" rice, as you put it. (careful when opening lid, the steam is ★■◆●ing dangerous).
there's no sitting water left in it.
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I've tried in small and big pans. Somone once told me that if you fry the grains a little before adding the water then you get good results. Good results my arse.
I've got a mate who's off to Arizona soon so i'll ask him to purchase one of those rice making fings. I'll keep you posted on the outcome.
It's all go here at the good old DBB no?
I've got a mate who's off to Arizona soon so i'll ask him to purchase one of those rice making fings. I'll keep you posted on the outcome.
It's all go here at the good old DBB no?
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ahh
well i've never cooked rice on a stovetop before.
since i'd have to be experiementing, if i had to use a stovetop i'd feel safest steaming it. do you something like that to put on your stovetop?
in the microwave the rice prettymuch steams. the water evaporates very fast and steams the rice, that's why you need the lid (but it's not pressurised, the lid just sits there) in the microwave, so that the steam can circulate around only inside the container.
edit: this just in
i hear the chinese method (or something) is to first bring the water to the boil (or something), and never lift the lid. hmm, that was too vauge to be of help
well i've never cooked rice on a stovetop before.
since i'd have to be experiementing, if i had to use a stovetop i'd feel safest steaming it. do you something like that to put on your stovetop?
in the microwave the rice prettymuch steams. the water evaporates very fast and steams the rice, that's why you need the lid (but it's not pressurised, the lid just sits there) in the microwave, so that the steam can circulate around only inside the container.
edit: this just in
i hear the chinese method (or something) is to first bring the water to the boil (or something), and never lift the lid. hmm, that was too vauge to be of help
Rice cooker pal. If you like rice that'll get you kick a$$ rice everytime. Well worth the bit of extra space. If you can get your hands on imported Japanese rice* so much the better. Good soy sauce of course, Kikomann at the very least and you will think you've never eaten rice before.
Margo <---first husband third Gen Japanese-American
* back when I was cooking Japanese rice you needed to wash it completely before eating it because of pesticides etc.
Margo <---first husband third Gen Japanese-American
* back when I was cooking Japanese rice you needed to wash it completely before eating it because of pesticides etc.
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