File under: Cooking Basics
Tired of producing mushy white long grain rice following package directions, I gave up and started using Minute Rice Premium, which turns out beautifully, but is hella expensive. (Note: That’s Minute Rice
Premium; not standard Minute Rice.)
Then I watched an episode of “What’s Eating Dan”—on YouTube— featuring Dan Souza from America’s Test Kitchen, on how to properly cook standard white rice, as well as other varieties.
The key: Use equal parts white rice and water. Then add an additional 1/2 cup water to compensate for evaporation during cooking. Bring to a boil, reduce heat to low, cover the pan, and set the time for 15-20 minutes.
Result: Perfect white rice! No glop; no mush. Individual grains.
I’m planning to make a chicken-rice casserole and a batch of Simple Fried Rice (recipe upthread), plus I wanted to have some cooked rice on hand for lunch or a snack. (Rice, some butter, a little Parmesan, a bit of black pepper or Italian seasoning.)
Stirred 3 cups of long grain rice into 3 cups of water in a 4-quart saucepan, added 1/2 cup water to cover the evaporation factor, and 18 minutes later I had about 9 cups of perfectly cooked rice.
A good electric rice cooker makes perfect rice with no guesswork, but I have no room for a small appliance that may get used once every couple of months. I don’t even have a slow cooker, anymore.
[this post was last edited: 8/22/2020-20:22]
