Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Apparently you rinse rice properly four times, then for every cup of rice, boil it in a cup and a half of water. When the rice comes to the boil, the water should be level with the rice and you remove it from the heat and leave the lid on, until the rice is soft and the water is all evaporated. I learned this from a lovely Indian friend when I was living in halls as a student.


I havent cooked myself for years (clearly), so I don't know if it still works...;-)

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/9010-sticky-rice/#findComment-272959
Share on other sites

1 part Basmati (or Patna) rice.

2 parts water (by volume).

Salt to taste.

Add a dash of Turmeric powder for yellow rice (optional).


Bring to the boil in a covered saucepan and simmer on medium heat until the rice is slightly wet.

Remove from heat and stand on insulated surface (i.e. a folded tea towel) to steam for approx. 15 minutes or until dry.

While standing, use a fork to fluff the rice initially and occasionally thereafter.


Result: perfect fluffy rice every time.

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/9010-sticky-rice/#findComment-272961
Share on other sites

Declan Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> I always add a bit of olive oil.


It doesn't do any harm - most Pilau rice recipes start off by frying a little onion and garlic before adding the rice and water.


> Hal, hope you

> don't blow a fuse but is there such a thing as

> perfect rice that's 'fluffy'? Is it not overdone

> if it gets to that?


By "fluffy" I mean that the grains are dry and do not stick together. The grains themselves are al dente, i.e. they should have a 'bite'.

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/9010-sticky-rice/#findComment-272974
Share on other sites

Basmati Rice


Rinse well in cold water in a sieve first.


Bring a pan of water to the boil. Add in rice.

Cook for a few minutes - boil another kettle of water whilst this is happening

Put rice through sieve and rinse again with cold water.

Add rice to pan of boiling water you have just boiled in the kettle.

Cook for another few minutes until done.

Drain and rinse again in sieve with cold water and then rinse again with boiling water.


Method passed to me from my mother in law which never fails to give nice (non sticky) rice. She makes it even nicer by adding bits of very finely chopped onion and coriander to the cooking process - I am yet to master this part. It is the nicest basmati rice I have ever had.

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/9010-sticky-rice/#findComment-272987
Share on other sites

For the record: Here's the deal.


1. Boil fourteen pans of water.


2. Place rice in a sieve.


3. Sieve under tap for 9 minutes or until your arm starts to ache slightly - whichever comes first.


4. Place rice into first boiling pan. Boil for one minute. Then sieve and transfer to pan two,three, etc etc.


5. When the rice comes out of the fourteenth pan, sieve again - then transfer to a baking tray.


6. Bake for ten minutes, then sieve.


7. Sieve.


8. Add chopped coriander and one mugful of turmeric. Serve.

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/9010-sticky-rice/#findComment-272997
Share on other sites

Goodliz - some types of rice have a starchy coating and therefore benefit from an intermediate washing stage but Basmati is a polished, long grain rice with very little surface starch - otherwise my method above wouldn't work.


I suspect your mother-in-law's method was intended for another type of rice, of which there are many.

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/9010-sticky-rice/#findComment-273007
Share on other sites

We spaniards fry our rice prior to adding cold water to lock in the starch.


*Bob* all I can say is I'm hoping to god alan dale doesn't see this thread and the two of you start having another bake off!!! It was uncomfortable viewing last time :-/


don't you have a bread maker?

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/9010-sticky-rice/#findComment-273033
Share on other sites

This is my quick and easy way: Pop basmati rice in saucepan. Add cold water so the rice is just covered by the water. Add large knob of butter. Put lid on pan and bring to boil. Stir briefly to stop rice sticking to bottom, replace lid and simmer till the water is completely absorbed (keep an eye on it - it happens quickly). Take off heat and leave it for 5 minutes with lid on. Stir and serve with Lloyd Grossman balti sauce, some panfried chicken and a nan bread. This is my staple diet.
Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/9010-sticky-rice/#findComment-273062
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • The coop of Forest Hill Road is very different- cheerful and helpful staff 
    • Would you expose your young people to 'that man'? That is apparently a real question. 'That man' is in fact a retired Oxford Professor of Moral & Pastoral Theology who wrote a book setting out to provide a moral reckoning on the vexed subject of Britain's Empire and its history. What might formerly have been a purely academic matter has become highly contentious, and according to one Cambridge academic "serious shit" that needed to be CLOSED DOWN. It's all rather amazing, the stuff of satire or nightmare but not of the real world. Anyway, Lord Biggar accepted an invitation to visit Peckham and speak to and with a small audience that was due to include young Black students ... who in the end didn't come on the day! Having set the whole thing up to facilitate this encounter for them, the outcome was a disappointment. The conversation with Lord Biggar and audience was not:   
    • Entertaining a visitor from Philippines, she's been here before but I've promised lunch.  Somewhere a little different maybe, quirky?
    • Surely a very simple: "how much does the council receive from the organisers of the Gala festival for payment for use of Peckham Rye" would smoke out a response. The "commercial sensitivity" could be because the council are giving it away or it could be because Gala don't want others to know how much they are paying - it is really tough to make money from any type of festival these days and Wide Awake in Brockwell, for example, sent out a plea for people to buy tickets via a reduced price "Tell a Friend" special offer because (they said much of it linked to the problems Lambeth were having with the High Court) things were entering "squeaky bum time"  and they were struggling to hit their break-even point. It does make me wonder whether expansion is baked-in to the agreements the council has with the organisers for events like Gala as the organisers have to be able to scale the size of the event each year to try to make money. I do also how much of the "revenue" from these events might be swallowed up by the provision of the "free community" event element of them. The comment piece in the Guardian sums it up quite nicely: The heart of this issue seems to be how cash-strapped councils are becoming increasingly beholden to commercial interests to the detriment of the public. A weekend festival that welcomes 50,000 people can expect to raise about £500,000 for local authorities. Councils argue that this money goes back in the public purse, allowing them to continue funding free community events such as Lambeth’s beloved Country Show, though there doesn’t seem to be much transparency over exactly how much cash is raised or where it is allocated.   The issue for councils may well be that if people found out how much was actually being raised by these events that the community would say the disruption is not worth it and I do wonder how much of the revenue is being swallowed up by the provision of the "free event" using the same infrastructure. Any time a council doesn't want to share something openly very much suggests that it is because they think constituents won't like the answer.  
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...