Persian Rice - How to Make Perfect Steamed Rice

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  • @foodwishes
    @foodwishes  5 років тому +44

    Check out the recipe: www.allrecipes.com/Recipe/240606/Persian-Rice/

    • @Megaredronin
      @Megaredronin 4 роки тому +1

      omg do you have any idea how beautiful and soothing your voice is? :) thanks always a pleasure viewing and listening to your videos!!

    • @polymatheace
      @polymatheace 4 роки тому +1

      @MrA It doesn't have to be topped off with the barberries. It comes in many forms. But it definitely never has cumin or cumin seeds. Sure someone may have done it once in human history but it's completely wrong and ruins the flavour. Iranian food mostly just uses Saffron as a spice. I don't know why people try so hard to make something simple and good more "exotic". It's ridiculous and almost offensive.

    • @aminrastgar
      @aminrastgar 4 роки тому +1

      I liked your enthusiastic narrative ... 😍
      I'm Persian (Iranian) and thanks for sharing the technique and recipe in your channel :)
      We mostly soak the rice about an hour before boiling it .. it allows the rice grains to absorb water and grow longer and even prettier
      Authentic Persian (Iranian) rice is only harvested in north part of Iran and sold locally except for a few brands that you can find in California Stores that import it directly from Iran, Basmati rice is very similar in shape and size to Persian rice but the Persian rice has an awesome Scent once cooked properly 😍

    • @yasminvillanueva3141
      @yasminvillanueva3141 4 роки тому

      @@aminrastgar hi I always wanted to know how Mediterranean rice was cooked because I love it. So if I soak the rice one hour before does it mean I only cook it for 10-12 minutes and skip the step where I have to steam it for 45 minutes?

    • @LovelySmile
      @LovelySmile 4 роки тому

      Check out this recipe too
      ua-cam.com/users/lovelysmileization

  • @spicyhotsauce13
    @spicyhotsauce13 4 роки тому +117

    My mother (the best Persian cook ever!) always says that the more formal an occasion, the longer should be your cooked rice grains. To end up with extra long rice grains, about two minutes before removing the rice from the boiling water, add a glass of super cold water to shock the rice. I always do it and it has never failed me! Love you, Maman!

    • @TracyD2
      @TracyD2 2 роки тому +2

      Thank you and mama for your tips. I will try them.

    • @msobetchi
      @msobetchi 2 роки тому

      Nice tip, thanks! But what to do after adding that 1 glass of water? To keep boiling? For how long?

    • @spicyhotsauce13
      @spicyhotsauce13 2 роки тому +5

      @@msobetchi Add the ice water to the boiling pot of al dente rice, let it sit for two minutes, then remove it from the heat and drain it. Of course a few more steps need to be taken at this point to complete the process. Enjoy!

    • @wardahhoussin621
      @wardahhoussin621 7 місяців тому

      thanx for sharing love to ur mom 🥰

  • @mehrnazbehzad
    @mehrnazbehzad 10 років тому +639

    finaly!!! thanks chef John !
    3 little tips from a Persian though: that amount of saffron is too little so what you could do is to infuse it as my mom dose! put your grounded saffron in a little tiny glass like a shot with a bit of boiling water and put the glass inside your pot in the center (don't pack your rice of course) as you are steaming the rice the saffron will get infused like a Persian tea ! and right before serving the rice take the saffron out and put a tiny cube of ice in it to shock the color out of the saffron. same amount will give you twice the color and perfume guaranteed.
    As for the rice, when you'r going to cover it, shape your rice like a dome, with a WOODEN spoon so you wouldn't break the grains. and then with the other end of the same spoon make a hole in the center all the way to the bottom of the rice and cover. this way the steam will circulate freely in the pot and it would't over cook.
    last tip! if your doing only a one step steaming rice recipe in order to get the same results as this 2 step method, you can add half a cup of COLD water to the rice just before there is no water left in the pot. the thermal shock would make your rice grow longer and be much more similar to the rice done by 2step method only easier and faster!

    • @aminmoghadam9632
      @aminmoghadam9632 5 років тому +6

      چهار ساله پیش عجب کامنتی گذاشتی 😂

    • @sagek7949
      @sagek7949 5 років тому +7

      Thanks for the tips🙂

    • @mandya6697
      @mandya6697 5 років тому +5

      Tip one would waste the saffron that were stick in the mortar unless the mortar is rinsed out

    • @cheftekard7165
      @cheftekard7165 5 років тому +19

      Great tips. I am Persian and I am a chef as well! Spot on! I think John did very well though. Mobarakh!

    • @rona2524
      @rona2524 5 років тому +1

      hey can I put the saffron-tea cup in a pressure cooker?

  • @farshidtaleb2771
    @farshidtaleb2771 10 років тому +401

    Hi there Chef, Thank you for the recipe. I am from Iran, and we love our rice and take a lot of care about it. I wanted to share another step to complete your recipe and it is the very essential step at the beginning which is soaking the rice with salted water at least for 2 hours before adding it to the boiling water. It is better to soak the rice overnight and also use Iranian organic smoked rice which is much better in terms of taste, texture and smell. I think you can find them in Iranian stores in US. Another substitute for the potatoes in the bottom can be flat bread (It can be pita bread, or tortillas, or any sort of not very thick breads as well) which is more popular in Iran. Some people add sesame seeds to the bottom of potatoes or bread that I personally love because of added flavor and texture.

    • @Living796
      @Living796 5 років тому +13

      Farshid Taleb great rice tip, thank you. Am going to try that next time.

    • @mz.6109
      @mz.6109 5 років тому +4

      Thank you! i really admire Persian cooking and your culture combined with the food is amazing!

    • @itsbuffy0205
      @itsbuffy0205 5 років тому +6

      I was hoping he would have incorporated tahdig into this recipe. I dated an Armenian for 6 years and grew to love Armenian, Persian and Middle Eastern food in general. Dolma, kabob, doogh, mortadella with small Persian pickles and pickled garlic and the flat bread and many others. Mmmhmm. I'll be making a stop to our local Persian store soon now. :)

    • @Jahstice
      @Jahstice 5 років тому +1

      If you soak it into salt water for 2h or over night, do you then boil the rice still in salt water or in this case unsalted water? It sounds very salty otherwise.

    • @itsbuffy0205
      @itsbuffy0205 5 років тому +2

      @@Jahstice You would cook the rice in plain water.

  • @stacym735
    @stacym735 8 років тому +110

    The version of this rice I was once served (By a mother and grown daughter from Iran) had the thin slices of potatoes and slabs of carrot, not just on the bottom but lining the sides of the pan as well. Then the rice was basically un-molded onto a large platter for the center of the table. Digging in with a large spoon, It had the crispy brown crust on the outside, and perfect, fluffy rice on the inside -- EASILY the best rice I've ever eaten in my life! The whole dinner was like a magic carpet ride, but the rice is what I remember the most clearly.

    • @arashfariman
      @arashfariman 3 роки тому +2

      Well basically rice crust/crisp/bottom layer or Tahdeeg or pot bottom in Persian comes in various types from lettuce, potatoes, saffron rice, flat breads. Depends on ur own choice.

  • @Zellig
    @Zellig 5 років тому +62

    You're one of the best food Narrators out there, you make everything seem very simple.

    • @laurarees1714
      @laurarees1714 5 років тому +1

      Zellig I love happy!

    • @robc4191
      @robc4191 3 роки тому

      He doesnt make it seem simple, he makes his recipes very simple, which is a talent worth a hundred gordon ramseys

  • @foodwishes
    @foodwishes  10 років тому +971

    Thank you to all my Persian friends for the kind words and great tips!

    • @MotoWanderer
      @MotoWanderer 10 років тому +126

      Hi Chef John. I’ve been a long time subscriber and every time you made rice and said this is the best rice, I just rolled my eyes. You nailed it this time and to your credit, there are many many Iranians who can’t do what you just did. Next time try it without potatoes and try the bottom part which is called Tahdig (Literally means bottom of the pot).
      Now just a little trivia about Persian rice. Contrary to many UA-cam videos that you see, long grain rice is not used very often in Iran. Most How-To videos on UA-cam tend to be from the Iranians living in the US and they use Basmati rice because they don’t have an alternative. Some of the best rice in the world are grown in the northern provinces of Iran, Mazandaran, Gilan, and Golestan. Tarom Rice from Rasht (Grown in Fereydoon Kenar mostly) or Dom Siah (Black Tail) in particular is undoubtedly the most aromatic and delicious rice you’ll ever taste and no Basmati can hold a candle to it.
      The method you just cooked your rice is almost universal in Iran but there are many variations as well depending on the provinces and rice used. For example, the Binam rice is a very short grain rice and once cooked, it becomes almost round and but it’s delicious nevertheless. It's mostly used in Northern Iran as it doesn’t sell very well in other parts of the country because of its shape. It is made as Kateh (soft and somewhat moist rice) and it’s not strained. Kateh kabab is a very famous dish from the north which traditionally uses this rice.
      Where the saffron is plentiful like in North and South Western Iran such as Estahban, the locals put a bunch of saffron flowers in the middle of the rice at the second stage and steam it all together.
      Unfortunately many hybrid variety of rice from the Philippines and Pakistan (absolute garbage) are now grown in Iran and they are endangering the many thousand heirloom varieties that have in production for thousands of years.
      Cooking a Persian rice is one thing, how to eat it is another. Here are some dos and don’ts:
      Don’t just use a fork, it’s not spaghetti. Use spoon and a fork and nothing should ever drop. Don’t use olive oil at the bottom; it kills the fragrance of the rice. Traditionally animal fat is used but almost everyone uses vegetable or sunflower oil these days. My favorite is animal fat (rendered sheep fat) or butter. Also, mound the rice in the middle of the pot; you only want the bottom to get hard not the sides.
      One word of caution though, don’t ever garnish a plain Persian rice with Parsley again :P
      What makes me an expert? Fourth generation rice grower and a millionth generation rice eater:)

    • @antonc81
      @antonc81 10 років тому +5

      ***** for persian and indian rice really only long grain will do. Ideally Basmati that's been aged for a year or more (the older the better).

    • @Honestandtasty
      @Honestandtasty 10 років тому +13

      Great job! I can't believe how perfect your potato tahdig came out. Lavash bread works great too. My personal fav will always be the classic: rice tahdig. Adding a bit of saffron to the bottom of the pot will give a beautiful tahdig too btw. Where did you learn to cook Persian food? Thank goodness it's catching on because it's only the world's best food. And of course I'm biased but that doesn't matter! ;)

    • @Cyrus5421
      @Cyrus5421 10 років тому +13

      Also instead of potatoes, you can use pita or lavash bread

    • @nameofthepen
      @nameofthepen 10 років тому +13

      ***** - That was an amazing read, Moto W.
      Years ago, I had many, many Persian friends in Houston, TX. I ate wonderful fezenjan and, of course, the Persian rice.
      As they explained it, "Two kinds of rice in one dish. The soft delicate rice, and the crispy delicious rice cover".
      They baked it, and then turned the pot over onto a plate, so the bottom became the top of the mound, and was a crust of lightly-browned rice covering it.
      Truly delicious food. I miss it very much. I miss them very much. ツ

  • @eliallameh2198
    @eliallameh2198 10 років тому +58

    I'm Persian and I have to say this video is awesome. Chief John you made me Love you even more than before! I feel so good when I see American chiefs teach Persian dishes. Persian food is unbelievably super delicious. The only thing I can say about this video is that it may take less than 7 minutes for your rice to cook in the boiling water. Sometimes 6 minutes is enough. If you overcook the rice a little bit, you won't get the perfect rice at the end. As chief John also say "Enjoy"!

    • @eliallameh2198
      @eliallameh2198 10 років тому +5

      Chief John I want to recommend you to make a video for "Tahchin". I am 100% sure everyone would absolutely love it.

    • @dhejdkdkdebjejdjdjs3523
      @dhejdkdkdebjejdjdjs3523 6 років тому +1

      Get a room, ok? TMI for the rest of us normal people.

  • @BillHalliwell
    @BillHalliwell 8 років тому +86

    "Who could be sad looking at this rice." Ah, Chef John, you're a wizard! Love it.
    Great method. Thank you.

  • @mattemen36
    @mattemen36 2 роки тому +3

    I cried and thought of my mother's cooking watching throughout the video. I miss how she would cook something similar back in my childhood days. Love and miss you mommy, thank you Chef John.

  • @ImWayTooCoolForYou7
    @ImWayTooCoolForYou7 5 років тому +124

    I showed this to my Persian Grandma. She approves ❤️

    • @albertbatfinder5240
      @albertbatfinder5240 4 роки тому +5

      Best endorsement ever. So many internet recipes don’t pass the Grandma Test, but I had the feeling this one would. Chef John knows his stuff.

    • @michaelyen1783
      @michaelyen1783 3 роки тому +1

      I would ask my persian grandma but shes not persian

    • @eyb0ss313
      @eyb0ss313 3 роки тому +1

      I would ask my grandma but she's not alive

  • @JustOzzy82
    @JustOzzy82 8 років тому +1174

    I'm so happy my wife is Persian, lol. I'm Puerto Rican so we like to team up and combine our dishes together when we have guest over and they literally go crazy over our food. Everytime there's a fight on Pay Per View or some event or holiday everyone ask us what we're doing and if we plan on cooking. LMAO. Being Hispanic and being married to a middle eastern woman is so awesome. I would have never guess how much middle eastern folks have in common with hispanics. Let's just say food is the best first step in bridging the gap between cultures.

    • @DarkMoonDroid
      @DarkMoonDroid 8 років тому +63

      You need to have a channel. srsly. Do it!

    • @k4ze7
      @k4ze7 8 років тому +27

      make some arroz con gandules with this technique bro!

    • @mogbaba
      @mogbaba 8 років тому +59

      I am now jealous on you. I am Persian and have a Russian wife. Fortunately I can make food.

    • @dovepiranha6543
      @dovepiranha6543 8 років тому +51

      +mogbaba @mogbaba
      your wife reads this comment, next day your are dead! LOL

    • @mogbaba
      @mogbaba 8 років тому +32

      LOL. That was why I use this nickname but I think she has already found it.

  • @naotholomi
    @naotholomi 7 років тому +52

    YES! I dated an Iranian boy for several years and he used to cook the most amazing rice ever. probably the most devastating thing about our breakup was I never learned the recipe .... this just revealed it! Persian rice will be on my plate tomorrow! thank you!!

    • @mehrzadegol
      @mehrzadegol 7 років тому +7

      LOL
      Nothing could be more attractive to Iranian men than a beauty who passes the 'rice' test!

  • @Mimita2683
    @Mimita2683 8 років тому +32

    I've tried several recipes for Persian rice but nothing worked for me until I now 😊. I tried your rice recipe today and the rice turned out fantastic. I'm so thankful you uploaded this video to UA-cam.

  • @PerryPerry93
    @PerryPerry93 5 років тому +189

    I'm a simple persian man,,, i see persian food, i press like

    • @oliverkalamata2753
      @oliverkalamata2753 5 років тому +16

      I'm a simple American man. I see Persion food, I press like.
      😉

    • @epicjsjwj
      @epicjsjwj 5 років тому +1

      @@oliverkalamata2753 rude.

    • @oliverkalamata2753
      @oliverkalamata2753 5 років тому +3

      @@epicjsjwj ???

    • @ray32825
      @ray32825 5 років тому +1

      @@oliverkalamata2753 She must have thought the opposite of what you meant. LOL Check out The Food Ranger's 9 part series on Iran.

    • @PaulJohn01
      @PaulJohn01 4 роки тому +3

      I'm a simple Human Man...I see Persian food, I press like.

  • @mixalispatsourakis899
    @mixalispatsourakis899 6 років тому +60

    Very good recipe!
    To friend Iranian people greetings from Greece!

  • @123ayob
    @123ayob 10 років тому +128

    my mother is making this almost the exact same way ( since we are afghans) but she puts oil and sugar in a pan, waits until the sugar is getting brown, then she puts that mixture on the rice (before she steams it). that way you get colour and a beautiful caramelized top. sometimes she adds some cinnamon on top. Chef john, if you read this, pls try to make some byriani, thats the most delicious rice based dish ever.
    ( sry for my bad english, im from germany)

    • @slobomotion
      @slobomotion 10 років тому +1

      The Sheba Fehmi channel has a good Bombay Biryani on it. It was a huge success here. I bet Chef John could ace a biryani!

    • @jamatwar
      @jamatwar 10 років тому +3

      yum! byriani :)

    • @slobomotion
      @slobomotion 10 років тому +2

      jamatwar
      I found the methods baffling at first and it was such a challenge to find the spices and all! Wow, is a good one ever good, yes!

    • @Eowyn77
      @Eowyn77 10 років тому +7

      +1 for Biryani!

    • @JChaos1120
      @JChaos1120 10 років тому +3

      Your english is good, don't worry!

  • @Metayounis
    @Metayounis 10 років тому +35

    Oh this rice, i have a love/hate feeling to it, our house sometimes runs out of everything but if you open the fridge you'll find rice every single time, it's just mandatory in every Persian household.

    • @sbatorie
      @sbatorie 10 років тому

      Haha yeah so true! Are you from Iran? I am from Afghanistan :)

    • @Metayounis
      @Metayounis 10 років тому

      I have an Iranian family we don't live there. Salute to you :)

    • @sbatorie
      @sbatorie 10 років тому +12

      Metayounis Salute to you, too! :) I don't live in Afghanistan. Part of my family lived in Iran though for a long time during the taliban war, but now they moved back to Afghanistan. We are all (Iranians, Afghans etc ) sisters and brothers!

    • @mariabardo7347
      @mariabardo7347 10 років тому +9

      I think rice is a mandatory item in Persian, Asian, and Puerto Rican homes. You may run out of everything else but, the rice is always there!

    • @3dclothes889
      @3dclothes889 6 років тому

      So true .

  • @fatima71112
    @fatima71112 10 років тому +449

    Oh my god! Chef John...you've officially proved yourself to me today! I mean you've always been an amazing chef, but you just cooked rice perfectly the way we've grown up doing! And I've never seen any non-Persian make it like this! So all to you! Being Afghan, it's so nice to see the tricks of our mothers and grandmothers finally make it to American cuisine! The only one little difference we have is that we'll always mix the saffron water mixture throughout the whole pot, not just with a little portion of rice for the top. Anyways thanks for making us proud today! Absolutely love your recipes and videos! You are without a doubt the most entertaining man on UA-cam! Love your sarcasm. Good luck to you :)

    • @17025601
      @17025601 10 років тому +16

      Ah. Now I know this is your good recipe. Saffron is very expense, naturally so, therefore mixing into all the rice seems very reasonable. Thank you for the information.

    • @GoogleUser-me8wk
      @GoogleUser-me8wk 7 років тому +4

      GizmoBee1702 price of saffron is equal to price of gold but getting geniune saffron is very difficult

    • @diegosebastianperez6867
      @diegosebastianperez6867 7 років тому +2

      Google User lots of saffron in kashmir.

    • @chefgiovanni
      @chefgiovanni 7 років тому +1

      Almost, but we get it on sale here, about $ 80.00 per ounce tin ; chefdepot.com/saffron.htm

    • @moparonlyken
      @moparonlyken 7 років тому +2

      Its Persian rice . not afgan

  • @cheftekard7165
    @cheftekard7165 5 років тому +10

    Nicely done!! Seems many Persians approve your method. Myself included! That’s a high compliment!

  • @allistrata
    @allistrata 8 років тому +6

    persian food reminds me of my dad. so many happy memories. so much good food connected to them.

  • @polterghost6268
    @polterghost6268 10 років тому +378

    I think this is the first time i've seen a Food Wishes video where the people who grew up with the dish weren't butthurt about it

    • @dimasakbar7668
      @dimasakbar7668 10 років тому +42

      perhaps because the Persian were a bunch of cool chaps? like.... way less "my way > your way" mentality

    • @polterghost6268
      @polterghost6268 10 років тому +6

      Dimas Akbar that's nice.

    • @agentorange4807
      @agentorange4807 10 років тому +13

      It's fucking white rice with saffron how do you fuck that up?

    • @igotes
      @igotes 10 років тому +42

      I think there's something about UA-cam that turns people into hate-filled pompous jerks when they comment.

    • @dimasakbar7668
      @dimasakbar7668 10 років тому +5

      igotes that's the downside of having the veil of "online persona" i guess.

  • @cookieaddictions
    @cookieaddictions 10 років тому +95

    I have so many Persian friends and they always have the best rice...now I know how to make it :)

    • @slobomotion
      @slobomotion 10 років тому +4

      Persian food is wonderful!

    • @dhejdkdkdebjejdjdjs3523
      @dhejdkdkdebjejdjdjs3523 6 років тому +1

      How can you steam rice without water? This video seems weird.

    • @aminkeykha5546
      @aminkeykha5546 5 років тому

      Dhejdkdkd Ebjejdjdjs rice was still wet enough to steam

    • @cognatoralbertl9366
      @cognatoralbertl9366 5 років тому

      I lived and worked in Iran and My Landlord made this dish for me and my wife. It is delish!!!!

  • @gonadsgo
    @gonadsgo 10 років тому +5

    I love that you're featuring Persian food on your channel lately! Makes me miss home and my dad's cooking. By the way, in Persian cuisine, rice isn't a side dish--it's the centerpiece! :) And the way I've always seen rice dished up at home is by uncovering the pot, placing a large serving dish upside down over the pot, and in one motion while holding both tightly together, flipping the pot upside down and the serving dish right side up. Then lay the dish on the table and lift off the pot. Rice plated!

  • @kaysmith3284
    @kaysmith3284 4 роки тому +1

    FINALLY!!! The secret to awesome basmati rice! So excited! My daughter will be so impressed! ♡

  • @niluamali6440
    @niluamali6440 4 роки тому +1

    I know this video came out years ago but it always puts a smile on my face to see people cook Iranian food- it is so beautiful, unique, and puts me right back at home. You did a great job, my mom would be proud :) I hope that you'll make more Iranian food in the near future.

  • @Michmich10
    @Michmich10 10 років тому +5

    It's wonderful to see that someone is sharing my country's incredible food. Nooshejan! (enjoy)

  • @sheriffjohnbird3179
    @sheriffjohnbird3179 5 років тому +3

    Hi Chef John. I have the fortune of being given high quality Iranian saffron from my coworker who just returned from Iran. I was so nervous to use his precious gift so I ran to your channel for help. I am happy to report that this rice along with your turkish chicken kebab recipe was amazing together. Thanks!

  • @HexenStar
    @HexenStar 7 років тому +7

    Excellent recipe! I Thank you so much!
    I quickly realized that this method can be easily adapted for any type of grains,
    which, of course, i did. Tried it with wild rice, mixed rice, wheat, barley/pearl barley
    and buckwheat - as well as the assorted mixes of all of the above. Tried it all several
    times already, always to a perfect result. And for that i have you to thank!
    You have really made a difference in my grain kitchen! And the two-dishes-in-one concept...
    The only difference is that i found (at least for me) that water had to be added in the steaming stage, in about 1:1 ratio to grains. I also fry the potato pieces for a few minutes on each side before proceeding. Finally, easier on the butter slices, yet much more generous on the spices.

  • @pouyapadiav7121
    @pouyapadiav7121 4 роки тому +1

    Cooking rice is our expertise in Iran and you did it right! In fact, you nailed it by adding butter! It makes it so addictive.
    One small trick: before putting potatoes, you can add some small-moderate amount of turmeric to oil to give some yellow color to it. When hot oil took turmeric's color, you can add potato slices there.
    I like your videos and recipes very much. Thanks for sharing them.

  • @mommabear5059
    @mommabear5059 5 років тому +203

    LOL “extremely hot starch on starch action” 😂🤣

    • @roxanardh
      @roxanardh 4 роки тому +3

      Yes the phrase I never knew I needed to hear 😂😂😂

    • @behindenemylines.3103
      @behindenemylines.3103 3 роки тому

      I wonder where he got that from.

  • @KILLUMINATI_MOVEMENT
    @KILLUMINATI_MOVEMENT 9 років тому +5

    When i used to go to my Persian friends house after school back in the good ol days I used to LOVE his mums persian food :) YUMMY :) Good memories :)

  • @AH6man
    @AH6man 10 років тому +44

    Pro tip: let the rice soak for about an hour before cooking it. Its what the kabab house i lived by does.

    • @Lime_A
      @Lime_A 10 років тому +3

      True, everyone in middle east does that. it will taste better

    • @slobomotion
      @slobomotion 10 років тому

      It does help. I love to cook but have a lazy streak. I often do that. :)

    • @stellaisback7378
      @stellaisback7378 9 років тому +4

      It will make the rice turn out longer and will help to get rid of more of the starch. A great (professional) way to make the rice if you have time or a party to cook for. If not, you can just make it like in the video.

  • @katherinebrockhoff8476
    @katherinebrockhoff8476 6 років тому +5

    I was taught this by my Armenian SIL from Iran in early 1980s. You can use a flour tortilla and ghee in bottom. The crunchy tortilla is delicious to snack on if the kids didn’t snag it first. Instead of paper towels, wrap the lid with a clean tea towel - not terrycloth. I can make 6 -8 cups of rice in a tall soup pot and freeze extras in portion sizes to suit us. This works with Jasmine and plain long grain rice too & test the boiling rice by biting a grain of rice...it should still have a core when you drain it. I only add butter or ghee if extra moisture is needed after steaming for 40-45 min. Thank you for sharing this excellent technique!!!!

  • @dawnitalutz1953
    @dawnitalutz1953 3 роки тому +2

    thanks for this. I went to college with a bunch of Iranians and one of them cooked this. I have never forgotten it but of course I didn't pay attention to how he cooked it. Now I know.

  • @CK8smallville
    @CK8smallville 5 років тому +2

    Thanks!! I’ve been looking for this for a while!! I tried this at someone’s house and couldn’t believe rice could be so tasty!!

  • @annalisa14
    @annalisa14 10 років тому +15

    John! Save money by using Turmeric-it's healthier for us ! What happened to the Tadigh? Try circle of potatoes instead of covering the bottom, Then you get the crispy buttered olive oil RICE with crispy potatoe too. The crispy is the "Tadigh" that Persians crave and fight over. Invert the pot onto a serving dish and everything comes out golden brown and crispy on top instantly with no effort. You know,… place plate on top of finished pot and turn over, then lift off! I've been hanging out with Persians since 1969. Love you John, and all you do.

    • @UranijaZeus
      @UranijaZeus 10 років тому +1

      My family made crispy rice like that too!

  • @mihailhidler5400
    @mihailhidler5400 3 роки тому +4

    Most Persian dishes are great

  • @dandantheman7493
    @dandantheman7493 8 років тому +147

    "If you pack the rice, it don't come out nice" I died laughing oh my god too good

  • @rosaargent3535
    @rosaargent3535 6 років тому

    Love this recipe and the delightful sense of humor of the narrator. Well done and thanks for sharing.

  • @LostInWotsoever
    @LostInWotsoever 7 років тому +2

    Dear Chef John, as an Iranian I say bravo!! This is really fantastic. I love your recipe and whenever I get homesick for my mum's rice I cook rice using only your recipe. Thanks so much and bravo for your rice cooking skills :)

  • @ksenos69
    @ksenos69 10 років тому +6

    I think the cooking cultures, to whom I'm closer connected to as Greek are Turks, Persians (actually the whole middle East), Balkans (all of them) and Italians. BUT Persians and Italians are the master of cooking rice (to my taste), giving imaginative flavor to the most dull and still very nutritious product. I'm not nationalizing this, I'm just a neighbor between these countries and their flavors. So, no politics about rice, OK?
    Chef, thanks for bringing that up!
    PS: I had that, made by Persians, but the crust on the bottom was from the rice... A (very buttery) dream!
    So, cheers to all!

    • @TabbyAngel2
      @TabbyAngel2 10 років тому +2

      Persian cuisine shouldn't be classified with the rest of the Middle East dear. Different ethnicities exist there... But you are right, Greeks and Persian cuisine is very alike, and many dishes are alike to those countries you have named.

    • @ksenos69
      @ksenos69 9 років тому +1

      OK TabbyAngel2, I accept and respect the difference. And, as Araz mentions, I enjoy the influences.
      Be Salamati to both! Εις υγείαν!

  • @InesaArutyunyan
    @InesaArutyunyan 5 років тому +13

    You can also use lavash bread as a substitution for potato and or crisp up the bottoms of the rice instead. Also known as tadig! ❤️😌

  • @VaiRostampour
    @VaiRostampour 10 років тому +128

    Fantastic video.
    From a young Persian man who has been brought up on this rice multiple times a week I approve this dish!
    Where did you learn the recipe John?
    This is extremely similar to the way my mum and dad cook rice, all be it a slightly modified version with use of a rice cooker for ease.
    Have you ever tried to cook the ancient Persian dish called Ghormeh Sabzi? It goes wonderfully with this rice.

    • @VoNeruCa
      @VoNeruCa 10 років тому +1

      Is ghormeh really that good? It smells and looks so unappetizing whenever my persian friend's dad makes it. :x

    • @EpicNickbad
      @EpicNickbad 10 років тому +1

      In more traditional gormeh sabzi they put dried limes, which soak up the juices of the meat and sabzi. But they leave a sort of bitter taste in the dish so sometimes its very overwhelming and I can't even eat it, or its more suttle and it tastes very good. So it depends on how much is put in.

    • @shaco6630
      @shaco6630 10 років тому +5

      Also this rice goes great with Zereshk and roasted chicken :D

    • @VaiRostampour
      @VaiRostampour 10 років тому +1

      Avi Amir oh yess I had that last week!

    • @rayangolkar7930
      @rayangolkar7930 8 років тому +1

      +秀樹 Trust me it is, when my friend saw it the first time he laughed about how unappetizing it looks. But when he tasted it he is almost addicted to it!

  • @misottovoce
    @misottovoce 6 років тому +2

    Thank you so much for this! Years ago I enjoyed this wih my Persian friends when I lived in Berlin (large community there). Now I know how they made it! LOVE how you explain things!

  • @Mediatrix_dash
    @Mediatrix_dash 5 років тому +1

    It's June 2019... These kind of videos never gets old.. 👏

  • @MinervaThai
    @MinervaThai 10 років тому +5

    This looks fabulous...must try once I get my hands on some saffron!

  • @royalempresskitchen6114
    @royalempresskitchen6114 7 років тому +4

    I'm so in love with his voice 😍

  • @laura1443
    @laura1443 5 років тому +13

    If you pack the rice, it don't come nice! Love it! 😍

  • @planetx5269
    @planetx5269 5 років тому +1

    I've had Persian rice in the past and and have been wanting it so much!! Now I can have it. I love extra virgin olive oil but yours didn't look like olive oil. On my potatos I'm going to leave the skins on. I enjoyed listening to you and hearing your comments. Thanks

  • @iamnottellingyou7128
    @iamnottellingyou7128 7 років тому +3

    I love the friendly, positive tone of your voice! And of course, I love watching your cooking videos! :)

  • @NarschoolVlog
    @NarschoolVlog 10 років тому +9

    that chicken.. you gotta do that,, i can literally taste the flavours by looking at it.. and boy i tell you.. that looks delicious..

    • @slobomotion
      @slobomotion 10 років тому

      We flip over his duck legs adobo, Filipino style. Yeow! It must be our favorite of his meat recipes.

  • @MIHI_by_Grace
    @MIHI_by_Grace 4 роки тому +3

    He said "I'm just barely exaggerating" 😆😂 I absolutely love him!

  • @elsalisa146
    @elsalisa146 5 років тому +1

    Nice job I have Persian cooks in my family and my Aunts rice is amazing! Thanks for making it look so easy to make the best rice ever.

  • @TheMohadam
    @TheMohadam 4 роки тому

    I like this chef cause it's easy to follow his instructions and short; not long boring lectures.

  • @LAFan
    @LAFan 8 років тому +4

    Persian food is some of the best in the world. Love it! The rice is hands down the best of all cultures and cuisines. Yum!

  • @rdmousavi
    @rdmousavi 9 років тому +28

    bah bah chef. noosheh jaan. enjoy

  • @fritzdiedrichsen8003
    @fritzdiedrichsen8003 10 років тому +7

    This rice looks realy, the real deal :) - I'm married to an Iranian, an she sure knows how to make the best rice in the World - hehe. And your pronunciation of Fesenjan (Fesenjoon) was spot on ;)

  • @lisax.8669
    @lisax.8669 7 років тому +1

    I just made this rice tonight and everyone loved it. Thank you!

  • @myano8016
    @myano8016 4 роки тому +1

    This is the best and simple demonstration, this is how I make mine so I will be sharing your video with my friends who want to make persian rice. Thank you!

  • @mehrzadegol
    @mehrzadegol 8 років тому +8

    Hello Chef, If I may and to follow your good advices, short or long grain rice needs to loose some starch to become light, fluffy and open up like a flower! Try adding a couple of spoon full white vinegar or lemon juice to the boiling water and once the rice is to be drained, add a glass of cold water, bring again to boil and once drained, grains has doubled length and tastes lighter. & FYI there are numerous types of Iranian rice dishes.

    • @abd9050
      @abd9050 7 років тому +2

      Marie PIERRE great idea!

  • @zazaguerilla
    @zazaguerilla 6 років тому +6

    i looooooooove persian food greetings to my fars brothers and sisters

  • @myari8800
    @myari8800 9 років тому +5

    I say hello from IRAN and thanks so much

  • @skinnydee1886
    @skinnydee1886 6 років тому +2

    PERFECTLY DONE!!!!!
    I must give this a try; looks very easy. Thank you for sharing your recipe.

  • @Chopperdog
    @Chopperdog 6 років тому +1

    Thank you, Chef, for teaching us around the world to cook nice food at home.

  • @rmyc
    @rmyc 8 років тому +99

    that doesnt look like olive oil

  • @Dona-fu9zh
    @Dona-fu9zh 4 роки тому +8

    very sage..."if you pack the rice, it don't come nice", no doubt carved into a clay tablet somewhere.

  • @jonkomatsu8192
    @jonkomatsu8192 7 років тому +5

    "Starch in starch action"--hah! This recipe is kooool! Mahalos!

  • @rachaelkennedy7535
    @rachaelkennedy7535 4 роки тому

    Incredible! When I was 12 years old, we lived next door to a young woman who had lived in Iran for a few years. She made this dish for me. I had it exactly once. But never forgot. Excited to relive this dish.

    • @marmary5555
      @marmary5555 2 роки тому

      It's not a "dish".it's just rice using the Persian technique

  • @joselynrosario5265
    @joselynrosario5265 4 роки тому

    I know is not the same culture but I'm so into turkish cooking, simple ingredients but amazing results, I like it! Thank so much for this wonderful persian recipe, it makes me wanna eat rice!

  • @albaPhenom
    @albaPhenom 9 років тому +666

    I didn't know Kermit the Frog was such a good cook

  • @ShebrewQueen
    @ShebrewQueen 5 років тому +28

    The way he talks, though... 😂 Love him, nonetheless.

  • @ktammi
    @ktammi 8 років тому +6

    You have a really happy voice!

  • @neopan81
    @neopan81 7 років тому

    Hey chef, I'm Persian and I have to say you've done a solid job!

  • @mehransrv
    @mehransrv 8 років тому

    I'm Persian and always I made my rice in Persian rice cooker because whenever I tried other way it came out soggy so when I saw this video I said I will give it a try. I just wanted to tell you guys I'm not going back to my rice cooker.anymore. It was so delicious specially when you serve it with kabob digi (another Persian food). Thanks chef John :)

  • @cherylruhr6001
    @cherylruhr6001 8 років тому +152

    I'm just mad about saffron. Saffron's mad about me.

    • @unionrdr
      @unionrdr 8 років тому +12

      +Cheryl Ruhr They call me mellow yellow!

    • @lionharehart
      @lionharehart 8 років тому +6

      +unionrdr. Quite right!!

    • @Kiddoffy
      @Kiddoffy 8 років тому +2

      rare to find a donovan find

    • @unionrdr
      @unionrdr 8 років тому +5

      They call me mellow yellow...quite right!

    • @sajuvn
      @sajuvn 6 років тому

      Did you say cleaning towel ,,😂

  • @philsackett7341
    @philsackett7341 10 років тому +5

    How do you steam without adding liquid to the pan? Is there really enough residual moisture on the rice after draining it to steam it for or 45 minutes, without the rice or potatoes scorching? I have been cooking for a long time. I do not know how to steam something without adding liquid beforehand. Your end product did look very tasty. I don't mean to question your method. I'm just curious how it works in this instance.

  • @sadi500di
    @sadi500di 10 років тому +7

    Please do more persian foods!!!

  • @yootoob4516
    @yootoob4516 7 років тому

    I never knew about this technique and always LOVED the rice at the Middle Eastern restaurant where we eat. The grains are so beautifully separated and plump. I'M EXCITED TO TRY THIS TECHNIQUE!

  • @broccolihart1
    @broccolihart1 6 років тому

    Beautiful !! Chef, in 30 or 40 years, your videos will STILL be relevant.

  • @milkalovcevic4724
    @milkalovcevic4724 8 років тому +6

    " how are you going to be sad around this rice?" 😂😂😂😂👍🏻👍🏻

  • @michaelladouceur6832
    @michaelladouceur6832 5 років тому +6

    "For Shah.." That's great

  • @kiantamar
    @kiantamar 8 років тому +4

    Oh God those potatoes!
    Also, use Barberry on top of saffron coloured rice. That's how Iranians do it.

    • @tachyonzx7082
      @tachyonzx7082 8 років тому +1

      I prefer barberry with rice if it has chicken also.

  • @miserimuslovestarvus6587
    @miserimuslovestarvus6587 5 років тому

    Please please more Persian dishes. This is now my favorite rice making technique. I jist love how it tastes and looks and smells. Please more persian recipes

  • @WhoDaresWins-B20
    @WhoDaresWins-B20 3 роки тому

    Chef John. YOU ARE A REAL CHAMP MATE! What I really appreciate about your presentations is that you do not swear or blaspheme like others on UA-cam save a few. Your presentations are always welcome and you have taught me a lot. :))

  • @marmary5555
    @marmary5555 5 років тому +38

    2:07 Iranians rarely use cumin in their rice. Matter of fact, cumin isn't common in Persian cuisine at all. Turmeric and Saffron are

    • @tomburke4652
      @tomburke4652 5 років тому +3

      I was thinking the same :) how they make up BS as they go.

    • @marmary5555
      @marmary5555 5 років тому +7

      @@tomburke4652 yup. it's because of the whole "Middle Eastern" label hysteria where lumping completly different cuisine in the same basket is considered okay.

    • @TheMazyProduction
      @TheMazyProduction 5 років тому +7

      My mom always put cumin seeds in our rice, we are from Mashhad.

    • @sosa3559
      @sosa3559 5 років тому +1

      Tom Burke shut the fuck up “how to make money on posh mark” broke ass nigga

    • @mitraharding5137
      @mitraharding5137 5 років тому +2

      Not true at all. With nearly all mixed rice recipes, referred to as "polo", as in Zereshk polo, or Addas polo, you ass cumin seeds. With Zereshk polo it's an essential ingredient.

  • @bigdaddy8884
    @bigdaddy8884 7 років тому +17

    "Extremely hot starch on starch action"

  • @MSEDzirasa2015
    @MSEDzirasa2015 8 років тому +20

    This starch on starch action is making me drool...

  • @Kachowwow
    @Kachowwow 8 років тому

    I lived with my best friend for a few weeks who is persian. I would eat this rice 24/7. Its still my favorite and a request it every year for my birthday.

  • @916hanave12
    @916hanave12 6 років тому +2

    I'm Arabic and we eat Persian food too I eat this kind of food all the time (aka I eat rice everyday) so it's surprising how a non-Persian man can make such an amazing Persian dish

  • @BeautifulAuthentic
    @BeautifulAuthentic 10 років тому +6

    I wish I could have Christmas dinner at your house 😭😭😭😭

  • @MyDancingKitchen
    @MyDancingKitchen 10 років тому +12

    Close enough! Fes-en-joon

  • @neverbeforeseenvideos2249
    @neverbeforeseenvideos2249 8 років тому +49

    you have a funny tone of voice when you end your phrases, lmao. thanks for tips.

    • @melaniedavenport
      @melaniedavenport 6 років тому +5

      I know! His voice goes up and down, up and down! Recipe is great though!

    • @donnawatkins4796
      @donnawatkins4796 5 років тому +4

      And it's irritating! He needs to take some elocution lessons.

    • @briantw
      @briantw 4 роки тому

      I had to read the comments just to see if anyone would comment in his weird tonality.

  • @Abcded11
    @Abcded11 6 років тому

    chef john is the Buddha of cooking...I bow my head...you are turely a master....

  • @Living796
    @Living796 5 років тому +1

    Have tried so many of your recipes, and ALL of them come out great. Thank you!

    • @gregoryescobedo70
      @gregoryescobedo70 5 років тому

      I have tried mostly his potatoe recipe's. They are all spot on!

  • @googlymoogly64
    @googlymoogly64 8 років тому +6

    How do you say "extremely hot starch on starch action" in Farsi?

  • @TameTusker
    @TameTusker 9 років тому +4

    Would some oil in water used to boil the rice help to keep the grains apart ( in the cooked rice?) Jus' an idea...that is how biryani is made ..parboiled rice with meat layered..influence of Persian cooking on Indian food!!:)

    • @TameTusker
      @TameTusker 8 років тому +1

      ***** i thought a film of oil over the boiled grains kept them apart. Thanks for the info..I did not know that washing excess starch off the grains helps in keeping the grains apart! Thanks!:):)

    • @TameTusker
      @TameTusker 8 років тому

      ***** Thank you for your tips!:)

  • @lemonpeachpie
    @lemonpeachpie 9 років тому +4

    "how you gonna be sad around this rice?"

  • @alexanderleal8770
    @alexanderleal8770 4 роки тому

    Our neighbors in los Ángeles thought us how to make Persian rice rice, different varieties, and now that I decide in Miami, I still make it. Your video is very good. Like another commenter said, rinse the rice with cold water, and saffron let it soak with warm water. Thank you.

  • @amesadamson
    @amesadamson 5 років тому

    Chef John, I watched this last night and made this tonight. It was SO easy and so delicious and I have added to my list of very special simple exquisite dishes. Thank you!