There’s no great skill needed to cook rice properly – other than choosing the right rice for the job in the first place
I never understood why people are intimidated by cooking rice – until I started reading up on it. The more you read, the more you learn how many varieties there are (more than 40, 000!), not to mention all the categories and sub-categories within them. The way to cook rice, then, varies according to texture, size, shape, colour and purpose. The fact that many people swear by a rice cooker suddenly makes a lot of sense.
To hugely simplify a complicated (paddy) field, I usually reach for long- or short-grained rice. Long-grained rice (of which basmati is one) has less starch than short-grained (sushi and paella rice being two), so will be quite light and fluffy once cooked, with each grain distinct.
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The difference between brown and white basmati rice, meanwhile, is that the brown still has its outer hull and bran. The result is therefore chewier and nuttier than the hulled, white sort; and, because there’s more for the water to get through to cook the rice, it takes longer. But what brown rice requires in patience is more than made up for by the fact you don’t have to get the amount of water exactly right: you cook brown rice much as you do pasta – ie, in lots of boiling water.
When it comes to the short-grained rice in today’s saffron and broad bean dish, it’s worth investing in proper paella rice: look for the words “bomba” or “calasparra” on the packet, because they have the texture you’re after – firm yet giving, unlike risotto and other short-grain rice.
This is by no means a traditional paella in terms of ingredients – there’s no chicken, rabbit or snails; no seafood, either – but the cooking method is. The key to a paella is to simmer the rice uncovered and, crucially, to resist the urge to stir it, so it absorbs all the liquid. If the base develops a nice, crisp bottom, all the better: that’s the bit prized by aficionados. This serves four as a side dish or, with a salad, light meal; or bulk it out with grilled seafood or chorizo, as a nod to tradition.
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Bring a small saucepan of salted water to a boil, blanch the beans for a minute, then drain, refresh and remove and discard the papery skins.
Heat the oil in a large saute pan (or paella pan) on a medium-high flame. Fry the onion for seven to eight minutes, stirring occasionally, until soft and caramelised, then add the garlic and fry for a minute. Add the paprika, saffron, thyme and rice, stir for a minute, to coat all the rice, then add the sherry and reduce for 30 seconds. Stir in the stock, 150ml water, the tomatoes, lemon skin, a teaspoon of salt and plenty of pepper, bring to a boil, then turn down the heat to medium. Simmer for 20-25 minutes – don’t stir! – until the liquid is absorbed and the rice cooked. Lift out and discard the lemon strips, spoon the broad beans on top of the rice, scatter on the parsley, drizzle with lemon juice and serve at once.
Put the cardamom, bay, butter and half a teaspoon of salt in a small saucepan. Add 550ml water and bring to a boil. Tip the water over the rice in the tray, and cover tightly with aluminum foil, to seal. Bake for 25 minutes, then set aside, still covered, for 10 minutes. Take off the foil and stir the rice with a fork.
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While the rice is cooking, heat the oil in a frying pan on a medium-high flame. Fry the onion for six minutes, stirring a few times, until golden brown, then add the ginger and fry for two minutes. Add the cinnamon and honey, turn the heat to medium-low and cook gently, stirring often, for five minutes, until the onions go dark caramel in colour. Stir in the nuts, spoon on to the rice and serve.
This is delicious straight out of the pan, but it’s also good at room temperature, making it a great dish for the lunchbox. Serves four.
Bring a medium saucepan of salted water to a boil. Add the rice and mint sprigs, and cook for 20-25 minutes, until the rice is soft but still has some bite. Drain and set aside: discard the mint sprigs, but don’t worry about any leaves that have fallen off.
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In a large saute pan for which you have a lid, heat the oil on a medium-high flame, then fry the garlic for a minute, until light golden brown. Add the chard and a quarter-teaspoon of salt, stir-fry for five minutes, until the stalks are almost soft, then add the spinach. Cover the pan, leave for three minutes, stirring a few times, until the spinach has wilted, then stir in the rice, feta and chopped mint, and serve.
Yotam Ottolenghi’s kombu and ginger sticky rice: serve it with an Asian-style veg, seafood or chicken stir-fry. Photograph: Louise Hagger/The Guardian. Food styling: Emily Kydd. Prop styling: Jennifer Kay
This was inspired by a clay pot dish I had at the brilliant Fat Rice in Chicago. You want the rice to stick to the bottom, and crisp up slightly, but you don’t need a clay pot: a cast-iron casserole with a thick, heavy base works well, too; just don’t use a nonstick pan. Serve it with Asian-style stir-fried chicken, seafood or vegetables, although I’d happily eat it on its own with some chilli sauce. You can buy dried kombu, or edible kelp, at large supermarkets, as well as healthfood and Japanese shops, and online. If you can’t get hold of any, wakame or dulse make decent substitutes. Serves six.
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Pour 530ml water into a medium-sized round cast-iron casserole for which you have a lid. Add the kombu, mushrooms and sliced ginger, and bring to a boil. Turn down the heat to low, cover and simmer for 15 minutes. Take off the heat and set aside, still covered, for 30 minutes.
Use a slotted spoon to lift out the mushrooms, kombu and ginger. Finely slice the mushrooms and return to the water. Cut the kombu in half, then cut each half into 2mm-wide strips and return to the water. Discard the ginger.
Add the sake, two tablespoons of soy, the mirin, sesame oil, rice and half a teaspoon of salt to the water, and bring back to a boil. Turn the heat to medium-low, stir, cover and simmer for 25 minutes, until the rice is cooked, all the liquid has been absorbed and a golden brown crust has formed on the bottom of the pan: don’t worry if some of the rice is a bit burnt. Turn off the heat and leave to rest, covered, for five minutes.
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In the meantime, heat the groundnut oil in a small frying pan on a medium-high flame, then stir-fry the julienned ginger and chilli for two minutes. Add the sesame seeds, cook for a minute, stirring often, until the seeds are golden, then take off the heat and stir in the spring onion and remaining tablespoon of soy. Spoon over the rice and serve.I do try and sneak in a vegetarian dinner at least one night of the week. Sometimes it goes unnoticed and other times I get a remark along the lines of 'Where's the meat?!' or 'Whats all this green stuff on my plate?' or I find him simply grilling a bit of fish or chicken on the BBQ (with enough garlic to kill a vampire) and get the polite question if I would like some too. Most of the time when the name of the dish has vegetable or vegetarian in the name then it definitely gets a reaction, just like last nights dinner.
Multi-vegetable Paella from Yotam Ottolenghi's cookbook PLENTY. But this time it wasn't just him...throughout the entire meal we both kept imagining how good it would be with chicken and fish and calamari and prawns and mussels and baby clams and chorizo throughout it.
The Multi-vegetable Paella had a variety of vegetables in it but I couldn't help myself and did a little fridge empty in there. This dish would be great to do that with at the end of the week before the next grocery shop or have it as a store cupboard staple because there was a fair bit of frozen or jarred vegetables in it. And yet again this week, somehow I messed up the meal planning and there was no red capsicum in the fridge when I came to make this on Monday night but what I did have was left over jarred peppers in the fridge fromJamie's sausage fusilli I madethe other weekend. YAY! I added some leftover baby spinach and a couple of carrots which are always floating around in the bottom of the fridge.
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I actually own a paella pan and love any excuse to use it but after I had climbed on top of the
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