Anonymous wrote:Be careful where your rice is grown. Rice grown in the American south has significantly more arsenic than rice grown in other Regions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Everyone should try Carolina Gold Rice.
https://ansonmills.com/products/23
Is this the brand that OP used?
Anonymous wrote:Everyone should try Carolina Gold Rice.
https://ansonmills.com/products/23
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I grew up on a farm in the midwest. I'd never made rice and only rice we had in our house was Uncle Ben's. And then, I went to Thailand for 3 years on an agriculture development project. Wow! I don't know why I didn't realize there were so many different kinds of rice - there were so many different types or corn, potatoes and tomatoes, after all. I'll never go back to Uncle Ben's!
But, getting back to the OP. It's not so much the brand of rice as what kind of rice. Long grain vs short grain; brown vs white; high gluten ("sticky") vs lower gluten; parboiled/converted vs not; etc. My go to rice for everyday stuff is white jasmine rice - a long grain, white, regular gluten, not parboiled/converted rice. It's what you find in many of the Asian restaurants and certainly all the Thai restaurants. Brand doesn't really matter. I get mine from Costco. I prefer more newly harvested rice but there's nothing wrong with older rice.
Oh - you have GOT to wash your rice before cooking! Do NOT skip that step! I put it in a strainer/sieve, run water through it until the water runs clear.
Midwesterner here and same thoughts on rice! We never ate it, unless Mom made some American variation of moo goo gai Pan in the electric skillet.
Anonymous wrote:Organic Brown Jasmati will legit change your life. [/quote
+1
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I grew up on a farm in the midwest. I'd never made rice and only rice we had in our house was Uncle Ben's. And then, I went to Thailand for 3 years on an agriculture development project. Wow! I don't know why I didn't realize there were so many different kinds of rice - there were so many different types or corn, potatoes and tomatoes, after all. I'll never go back to Uncle Ben's!
But, getting back to the OP. It's not so much the brand of rice as what kind of rice. Long grain vs short grain; brown vs white; high gluten ("sticky") vs lower gluten; parboiled/converted vs not; etc. My go to rice for everyday stuff is white jasmine rice - a long grain, white, regular gluten, not parboiled/converted rice. It's what you find in many of the Asian restaurants and certainly all the Thai restaurants. Brand doesn't really matter. I get mine from Costco. I prefer more newly harvested rice but there's nothing wrong with older rice.
Oh - you have GOT to wash your rice before cooking! Do NOT skip that step! I put it in a strainer/sieve, run water through it until the water runs clear.
Midwesterner here and same thoughts on rice! We never ate it, unless Mom made some American variation of moo goo gai Pan in the electric skillet.
Anonymous wrote:I grew up on a farm in the midwest. I'd never made rice and only rice we had in our house was Uncle Ben's. And then, I went to Thailand for 3 years on an agriculture development project. Wow! I don't know why I didn't realize there were so many different kinds of rice - there were so many different types or corn, potatoes and tomatoes, after all. I'll never go back to Uncle Ben's!
But, getting back to the OP. It's not so much the brand of rice as what kind of rice. Long grain vs short grain; brown vs white; high gluten ("sticky") vs lower gluten; parboiled/converted vs not; etc. My go to rice for everyday stuff is white jasmine rice - a long grain, white, regular gluten, not parboiled/converted rice. It's what you find in many of the Asian restaurants and certainly all the Thai restaurants. Brand doesn't really matter. I get mine from Costco. I prefer more newly harvested rice but there's nothing wrong with older rice.
Oh - you have GOT to wash your rice before cooking! Do NOT skip that step! I put it in a strainer/sieve, run water through it until the water runs clear.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As long as we're making anonymous confessions of things that we didn't know, here is one of mine. I didn't know that there are different types of avocados. I've been eating Hass avocados my entire life and just had a Hall recently. Halls are like 3x the size of a Hass avocado.
Yes but they have different uses and water content. A hall avocado is grown in a humid climate -- Florida, Puerto Rico, Cuba, DR, etc, Hass avocados are grown in a drier atmosphere -- California, Mexico
I hate guac made with a Hall. Hass is the way to go. The oil makes them easier to blend and smash.
Hall for me are better sliced, and ate plain. Or with a bit of your favorite seasoning sprinkled on top.
https://www.foodrepublic.com/2012/10/18/know-your-avocado-varieties-and-when-theyre-in-season/
Sorry to derail the rice thead.
I like the costco basmati rice too.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My husband and I are from different Asian countries, so we have dozens of different sorts of rice in our pantry, that all have their specific uses.
Yes, you need to try a variety and find the sort you like best!
Personally, I've gone off rice a bit. I ate SO MUCH rice growing up! The two I really like these days is a good Basmati and a different grain altogether, "wild rice" (actually a grass, and native to the US!).
What brand of Basmati do you recommend?
Indian here. Whatever you can find. I usually get the one from Costco.