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hypersonic
11th June, 2012, 09:24 PM
BOILED RICE
Making boiled rice is as easy as boiling an egg or making a cup of tea. Why pay a bloody fortune for uncle bums rice ? No need to wash the rice or fanny too much with it before cooking.
To make perfect boiled rice just fill a 7 or 8 inch saucepan with 1.5 to 2 litres of water, bring to the boil or use boiling water to save time. The pan should be no more than ? full. Add a ? teaspoon of cooking oil, ? teaspoon of salt (and a teaspoon of turmeric if you want some colour). Add 2 ? teacupfuls of basmati or long grain rice, bring back to the boil and stir with a wooden spatula once only to remove any rice stuck to the base of the pan and boil on a low heat. In 15 minutes the basmati rice will be ready and 20 minutes for the long grain rice. Empty the pan contents into a large colander and pour a kettle full of boiling water freely over the rice in the colander. Leave for 30 seconds for the water to drain and the rice is ready to serve.. Save any rice you dont use and freeze after it has cooled. It can be reused by adding a table spoonful of water and microwaving in dish with a plate on top. Once boiled the rice can be fried with egg, onion or various veg to make egg/savoury rice.

lagerland
14th June, 2012, 12:49 PM
Come on you need to rinse it to get the starch out or it just turns to shit and sticky shit at that................

skegsagypsy
17th June, 2012, 09:15 AM
~~~~ that, Uncle Ben does the job perfectly lol

hypersonic
18th June, 2012, 09:54 AM
Come on you need to rinse it to get the starch out or it just turns to shit and sticky shit at that................

The rice is neither sticky nor shit ~ also note the final rinse with boiling water. If you don't try it, you can't pass judgement on it. I've been making rice like this for 40 years and do you think the chinese and indian cooks use that uncle bins stuff?. Uncle Bins rice is also cooked the same way, all you are doing is re-heating their pre cooked rice !

lagerland
18th June, 2012, 10:39 AM
So what your saying is the final rinse with boiling water gets rid of the starch then.I beg to differ and i wasnt insinuating your rice was shit just stating a fact about the starch,and forty years is good and i wasnt born yesterday either.........................

hypersonic
21st June, 2012, 11:20 AM
lager m8
I know I will never convince you ~ if you don't try it, you will never know. You stay with the uncle ben stuff, but don't discourage other members from trying it. If you need enough rice to feed 4, 6, or 8 persons, economically, then why not try my method on a smaller scale.:giveup:

Donka
5th July, 2012, 12:03 AM
Save any rice you dont use and freeze after it has cooled

Beg to differ here. I always cool any left over rice under a cold running tap asap. The rice is still cooking if not cooled. By cooling asap it stops the rice going soggy and after freezing it will still be fluffy and nice.

lagerland
5th July, 2012, 11:11 AM
lager m8
I know I will never convince you ~ if you don't try it, you will never know. You stay with the uncle ben stuff, but don't discourage other members from trying it. If you need enough rice to feed 4, 6, or 8 persons, economically, then why not try my method on a smaller scale.:giveup:


Stay with uncle bens never used and never will................

neysean
15th July, 2012, 10:16 AM
is this ok for any kind of rice,,,,or just basmati and long grain

alom5
15th July, 2012, 11:12 AM
Here is a easy way to boil all rice...

Get your rice and wash it till all the murky water disappears and you are left with clean water.

The water level should be an inch higher than the rice level.

Put on high heat with lid on till it boils.

Once boiling, reduce heat to low and keep lid on....check to see rice has expanded, lift the lid and increase the heat till the excess water has evaporated.
Once evaporated, put the lid back on and put it to the lowest heat till rice is cooked to how you want and then turn the fire off

And you should have perfect rice :)

Sent from my GT-N7000 using Tapatalk 2

craigyj
19th July, 2012, 11:21 AM
Cookworks rice cooker does the business in our house available at Argooos. It was half price a couple of weeks ago (?15) but is well worth the money and foolproof. It's probably on FleaBay as well.

maxextz
21st July, 2012, 08:01 PM
if you want fried rice that wont stick together,pop it in the fridge or if your in a hurry the freezer.
works great.

ymms
27th July, 2012, 11:32 AM
I have a better recipe????

2 cups of water per each cup of rice in a bowl, some salt, and 20 min in the microwave.
That's all?????

And for sushi rice, just add some vinegar and sugar????

hypersonic
10th August, 2012, 08:55 PM
wow! what a response guys.

If you want to make boiled rice complicated, then wash it, rinse it, do the hokey cokey and stamp your feet. I'm only 75 this year and have been making boiled rice all over the world and in some places where clean water is a luxury for drinking and not for washing rice. Don't knock it if you don't try it. Do it your own way and I will continue to do it mine

If you read the original post it you can use long grain rice but cook it for 4/5 minutes longer.

gazz10
10th August, 2012, 09:09 PM
only took u two months to reply, but have to agree with others,


rice has to be rinsed to much starch, dont over cook it goes to studgy and will end up like lumpy wallpaper paste.



soak,rinse, boil, and to prevent rice sticking a dash of oil, each to there own i use sesame seed oil, gives it nice shine to it.

pipedope
10th August, 2012, 11:56 PM
Chop 3 green onion stick
In a sauce pan add some olive oil crank it to high fry them a little bit then throw in one cup of rice and keep frying till they are a bit toasted if the rice looks dry add a bit more olive oil.
Then pour in 2 cups water add a bit of salt and bring to a boil while stirring a couple of times.
Once boiling cut the heat cover and leave.
In 20 mins its done and no worries of it burning to the bottom.

hypersonic
11th August, 2012, 11:16 AM
rice has to be rinsed to much starch, dont over cook it goes to studgy and will end up like lumpy wallpaper paste.

soak,rinse, boil, and to prevent rice sticking a dash of oil, each to there own i use sesame seed oil, gives it nice shine to it.[/QUOTE]

If you bother to google "washing rice" you will see the jury is still out on that. If you read my original post, all the starch is rinsed away after cooking with a kettle full of boiling water. I also recommend using oil. The result is not sticky or stodgy as you suggest. As I have said before, don't knock it if you don't try it. All your other comments are negative and can be safely ignored.:fight:

.: JaCkPoT :.
12th August, 2012, 03:34 AM
keep the heat down guys! its only a recipe

steveke50
26th August, 2012, 10:55 PM
You mean: turn off the heat or just turn down a little bit? http://www.digital-kaos.co.uk/forums/images/icons/icon12.gif
and also if I want to eat sticky-rice? What to do then? http://www.digital-kaos.co.uk/forums/images/icons/icon10.gif
BTW. thanks for the OP, I have had hard time to cook rice.

maca
26th August, 2012, 10:56 PM
Get the ****in wife to do it that's what there for ....

hunslet ramone
2nd September, 2012, 07:39 PM
Don't buy the Savoury Rice in packets as there is far too much salt goes into it, especially the Golden Savoury Rice,which is the worst offender and does taste salty.

I should know as i blend the stuff . I do eat the Mushroom Pepper Rice though as it tastes OK , and i don't put any salt in any of my food, as there is so much in processed food, but it's all legal,don't know how.

As for boiling rice quick cook, which takes 10 minutes, standard 20 in boiling water, and Risotto which takes 25 to 30 the longest to cook. good to add little oil as helps to prevent sticking to pan,still you need to keep stirring it.

Obviously do not wash the Savoury rice first ,as would wash out the seasoning.

Add dried peppers , onions , dried mushrooms to plain white rice, which i wash first to make a tasty change, just boil up all together in pan,with a little oil.

mtechno
2nd September, 2012, 10:02 PM
I'm a bit nervous about making a comment, everyone seems to be getting boiled up about a bit of rice,it all started with someone adding a useful post on making rice, then most of you hacked him down & somehow he has to keep standing up to defend himself only to be hacked down again. It isn't how I make rice but I will certainly give it a try. I do agree with most of the posts on here no matter how conflicting they maybe! I really wanted to say I cook a lot of rice & have found it varies tremendously long grain does take longer to cook than basmati & different rices vary on how much starch. I nearly always use basmati as a preference of personal taste even though it is dearer. Soaking rice in water shortens the cooking time if your able to plan ahead. Generally cheaper rices require more washing to remove starch adding a little salt & oil does help keep rice from sticking & if after cooking you sive rice, put it back over saucepan, cover & put but on heat to steam for 5 mins & let it rest in its own heat it then becomes fluffy.
Every rice is unique in how it likes to be cooked, at present I am using brown organic basmati, washing it makes no difference to removing starch, soaking it in water helps reduce cooking time which is almost double that of any other rice, it is 30% more filling than other rices & you physically can not eat as much without feeling bloated. I agree with previous post dont bother with processed rice its full of salt & additives, if you find rice boring just add some stock it transforms the flavour!

sloh88
11th September, 2012, 01:54 AM
Get a rice-cooker it is superb easy.

This is my method for cooking rice.

I normally buy fragrant long grains rices. Wash the rice 2-3 times with clean water until the water is clear. Put the clean rice in the rice cooker and measure the height of the rice with one of your fingers; guestimate says one inch. Then add water till it is the same height of the rice in the cooker.

p/s: If you are using a normal pot; cook the rice with medium fire. Do not cover the pot otherwise the bubbles start to overflow. When the water and rice is bubbling and the water has evaporated till the same level as the rice. Immediately reduced the fire to very small otherwise you will burn your rice. When all the water has almost evaporated in the pot. Switch off the fire and cover the pot with its lid for 10-15 mins or so. Then your rice is cooked.

Hope this help.

hypersonic
21st September, 2012, 02:56 PM
Get a rice-cooker it is superb easy.

This is my method for cooking rice.

I normally buy fragrant long grains rices. Wash the rice 2-3 times with clean water until the water is clear. Put the clean rice in the rice cooker and measure the height of the rice with one of your fingers; guestimate says one inch. Then add water till it is the same height of the rice in the cooker.

p/s: If you are using a normal pot; cook the rice with medium fire. Do not cover the pot otherwise the bubbles start to overflow. When the water and rice is bubbling and the water has evaporated till the same level as the rice. Immediately reduced the fire to very small otherwise you will burn your rice. When all the water has almost evaporated in the pot. Switch off the fire and cover the pot with its lid for 10-15 mins or so. Then your rice is cooked.

Hope this help.

Sounds a bit complicated to me, and you have another device to clutter up your kitchen as you won't be using it every day. All you need to boil rice is a large saucepan.

passer
23rd September, 2012, 08:47 PM
Sounds a bit complicated to me, and you have another device to clutter up your kitchen as you won't be using it every day. All you need to boil rice is a large saucepan.

Rice cooker is a good investment, IMHO :) but everyone to their own preferences.

Even so, I prefer to rinse before cooking my rice, since I always cooked it Asian style (which requires washing, especially for Japanese recipes). Somehow it is a habit for me, since I grew up seeing everyone washed the rice before cooking them. lol

hypersonic
24th September, 2012, 02:35 PM
I have Never washed rice before boiling myself, however, it doesn't do any harm to rinse it before if that is your routine. I also think it is more important to rinse with boiling water after cooking. Just keep it simple. Cooking rice is not rocket science!
There are lots of useful comments on this thread and everyone has their own preferred method of cooking rice.

fcukbcfc
29th November, 2012, 06:54 AM
always rinse with boiling water after and leave covered for 5 mins works all the time.

Consa
10th January, 2013, 07:48 PM
what he said

firemouth
14th January, 2013, 10:15 AM
BOILED RICE
Making boiled rice is as easy as boiling an egg or making a cup of tea. Why pay a bloody fortune for uncle bums rice ? No need to wash the rice or fanny too much with it before cooking.
To make perfect boiled rice just fill a 7 or 8 inch saucepan with 1.5 to 2 litres of water, bring to the boil or use boiling water to save time. The pan should be no more than ? full. Add a ? teaspoon of cooking oil, ? teaspoon of salt (and a teaspoon of turmeric if you want some colour). Add 2 ? teacupfuls of basmati or long grain rice, bring back to the boil and stir with a wooden spatula once only to remove any rice stuck to the base of the pan and boil on a low heat. In 15 minutes the basmati rice will be ready and 20 minutes for the long grain rice. Empty the pan contents into a large colander and pour a kettle full of boiling water freely over the rice in the colander. Leave for 30 seconds for the water to drain and the rice is ready to serve.. Save any rice you dont use and freeze after it has cooled. It can be reused by adding a table spoonful of water and microwaving in dish with a plate on top. Once boiled the rice can be fried with egg, onion or various veg to make egg/savoury rice.

I use an old Chinese way.
add the amount of "washed" rice you need, to a pan.
cover the rice with one inch of lightly salted water.
bring to the boil and simmer till you see pock marks on the top.
cover and switch off heat.
20 min later perfect separated boiled rice.

sticky boiled rice is the same but unwashed with an inch and a 1/4 covering.
I find neither version results in rice stuck to the pan bottom.

oli66
29th September, 2013, 11:28 AM
ive been trying to do rice for ages ,even in steamer goes hard ,so was watching gmtv the other month and he was doing rice thought id give it a go
2 cups of water to 1 cup of rice
boil water in pan pref with glass lid so you can see when water boiling stick in your rice turn heat down to simmer then put lid on and just leave it for 12 minutes dont lift lid,or stir it just leave it rice was the best ive had in ages

jcgrumbles
2nd October, 2013, 10:44 AM
I normally use the two to one method but I add some star anise,cloves and a tiny bit cinnamon stick just so I can sit back and watch the family crack all their teeth(hey,mine are plastic I can chew through anything)...

chasw66
10th June, 2014, 03:53 PM
I am 73 tears old and will try your method Hypersonic I am a great beleaver in never to old to learn It sounds interesting and the Termeric is new to me sounds good
chasw66 the 66 is the age when I started into computers

hypersonic
16th June, 2014, 07:44 PM
Good on you chas ~ I'm 77 this year and still making great boiled rice. You can rinse the rice before cooking or add spice if you want ~ it's up to you ~ if you read the whoole thread you have lots of + an minus comments ~ just remember it's 15 mins for basmati and 20 mins for long grain rice, then rinse with boiling water. ~ carry on cooking !

DeeGeeTal
13th July, 2017, 05:06 AM
If you're bored with plain rice, you can add chicken, Chinese rice wine or medium-dry sherry, sesame oil, and ginger to make rice porridge. Top with scallions for extra flavour.

jezabelly
26th August, 2018, 07:46 PM
Good thread !
Shame you banned the author.
Still, there are thousands of views, so boiled rice must be a popular foodie thread subject.

have fun
10th November, 2018, 04:57 AM
if you use a rice cooker and let it boil dry you can make fried rice with it straight away pritty much egg acts as a oily sponge to "wet" the wok so you dont need to put too much coconut oil in the rice directly. i go a bit of chicken stock or french lake salt (like a multi vitamin pill) in the rice water

veraP
25th November, 2019, 09:56 AM
Cooking basmathi rice is a bit harder than cooking other type or rice types ..Make sure to strain water when the grain can be smashed in your finger tips and leave it cook in steam to avoid stickiness