The starch is what makes it yum! 2 cups jasmine rice 3.5 cups water 1/2 tbs butter Pinch salt Mix all together, get to slow boil, stir, cover and reduce heat to 1. Set timer for 9ish minutes. Uncover, season to taste.
I found these instructions on the packet of Premium Jasmine Rice I bought years ago which works for me: 1) Rinse rice. 2) For every one measure of rice add 1& half measures of boiling water. 3) Make sure the level of rice is even by gently shaking the pot you are cooking the rice in. 4) Cook on medium heat until holes appear on the surface of the rice. 5) Reduce heat to low. You may give the rice a quick stir if you like. Cover the pot & let steam for about 5minutes. 6) Turn the heat down until just before it is off. 7) Replace the pot lid & let rest for another 5 minutes. 8) Your fluffy white Jasmine rice is done. Enjoy. This method is suitable for cooking all types of rice.
have been eating rice for over 65 years, and taught to cook rice for dinner since I was 6, growing up as a latchkey kid with my single mom to have rice ready when she got home from work. No magic technique, just follow a few simple rules, wash a few times, fill the water to one palm thickness, boil then simmer and turn off the stove at 15 minutes, never lift the lid and wait for mom to get home with meats and vegetables. One big note to self - do not leave the house to play ball with friends until the rice is done and the stove is off or will be greeted by one pissed off mom and lots of scrubbing a burned out pot.
I use aged basmati rice. 1 cup rice, 2 cups water. I wash it and soak it for at least 15 minutes. I bring to a boil about 3 cups of water in a big pot and set the rice container in it. Lid it and cook it on medium low heat for 20 minutes. Perfect every time.
Man, never knew people are so... diverse in their opinion in how to prepare rice. Might as well add my 2 cents in this: in my country (Philippines), we cook rice as follows: 1) Measure rice to be cooked. Good if you have a measuring cup or a pot that has measurements marked inside the pot. You can even eyeball it. You can use any pot: metal, clay, even large bamboo sections can be used. 2) Wash the rice. Rule of thumb, wash it with clean water until the washing is clear. What you do with the rice washings is up to you but from what I read (like those from Maria Y. Oroza, food scientist and inventor of banana ketchup and other food wonders) you can use rice washings for anything from soups and stews to desserts. 3) Add water to the washed rice. This is where debate about water-to-rice ratio is heavy, but in my country how much water to add to the rice for cooking is very much an exercise of trial and error; not all rice are the same, some require more water to cook (or else it becomes a hard puck when cooked, oftentimes a sign of poor quality rice), some require less water (becomes porridge when cooked). This is where the expertise of rice dealers comes into play as they can tell you which rice has what qualities you look for and recommend you this sort of rice variety. Everyone in my country knows not to use sticky glutinous rice beyond being used as desserts (kakanin) as cooking such is far more difficult and inedible. Do we soak the rice for 30 minutes like the Japanese? No, I personally consider it a waste of time that adds nothing to the rice. Do we salt the water before cooking? It never crossed my mind personally, rice is supposed to taste like rice: not tasteless or chemical-y. I mean you can cook the rice in a broth but that is somethibg reserved for special occassions not a regular meal. Note: if you have no measuring cup at hand, I use the method my father showed me when he cooks rice (he never uses a measuring cup when he cooks rice): add enough water to the level of the first joint of your middle finger when you dip it into the pot. Don't dig into the rice level when doing this, only place it on the surface of the rice level. 4) Cook the rice. If you have a rice cooker then good, you can just pop it in there, press the tab and wait until it goes warm (note: the "rice cooker" in this context is not those fancy things the Japanese use but those cheap and simple ones one can buy from PRChina). Just remember to actually press the tab down to "cook" as the "warm" setting just evaporates the water from the pot leaving it undercooked and recooking it makes it edible but tasteless. If cooking in an open flame (be it stove or brazier), I follow some simple rules of thumb: A. Heat pot until it boils the water off. When there is no water in the pot, lower heat down and let it cook via the steam inside the pot. My method of knowing if the rice is cooked is by touch: if rice is sticky it's not cooked, if rice is not sticky it's cooked. However, limit the lifting of the pot to check on the rice because it lets out the steam, making the finished rice drier, harder, and slightly burnt. A pot with a glass lid is optimal in this so you can see the rice being cooked without needing to open it often to check if it's cooked. B. Really keep an eye on the rice cooking process. The average cooming time for rice ia roughly 30 minutes (less than 10 minuties for boiling and the remaining 20 minutes for cooking the rice in lower heat). Rice WILL get burnt if left for too long. Keep an eye on the pot even when it boils because it will spill over.
Yep same here in Indonesia, and i assume all the SEA country too. The prep on this video is kinda overkill and waste of time, since most people couldn't even tell the difference on the finished product. I personally would just use a USD10 rice cooker, wash and rinse the rice twice inside its proprietary bowl, add clean water until it level on my finger joint, press the cook button. Literally easy as 1.2.3.
I concur on this method. Just a small variation for me is after the water has been dried off, I put the lid and set a timer for 8 mins. It's a lot safer not to over do it and undercook it so 8 min.is ideal to me. After that fire off and let it rest for another 8 and it's done. Unlike the Japanese that like to fluff the rice most Asians don't. That includes me..
Dear Chef Sakaeda: Until I saw your video, I never had medium-grain rice turn out other than gloppy/hard-stuck to the pot. Just now, I made a pot of [Goya brand] medium-grain rice, following your directions. The package said not to rinse it because of nutrient loss, so I compromised and rinsed it the way you did, but only twice, and did not do a final rinse in a sieve. Cooked it the way you did. OMG - perfect, mildly-sticky rice, even better than that of any Oriental restaurants! Thank you, thank you!
This guy is definitely a pro and knows what he's saying is true. Great tips he gave. I make rice a lot because my favorite is fried rice. Whatever rice you use the method will vary.
Rice is one of the hardest things to cook well consistently. But generally speaking, his method is pretty foolproof. Add rice and water to a pot, bring to a boil, reduce heat and let simmer with lid on for like 20 min if cooking standard white rice, then take off the heat and let rest for another 15-20 min. The trick really is to know what type of rice you are using, so you can know how much water to add and how long to simmer it for. E.g. brown rice is a completely different method to short grain white rice.
I use the same technique and it's a lifechanger. Ever since I started buying japanese rice or vietnamese jasmin rice and cooking it that way, I haven't had a bad bowl of rice. It's always perfect and commercial rice you have to throw in boiling water is awful in comparison
Simple and perfect method: Wash rice. Cook rice in plenty of water. Drain rice in sieve. Put sieve on pan. Place lid on sieve. Let rice rest for 15 minutes. Stir rice. Result: perfectly dry rice
I've never used a rice cooker. I rinse the rice for a minute or 2 under a cold tap. Pop it in the pan, add hot water from the kettle to about 1cm over the surface of the rice. I put a lid on, put it on a burner on my stove, bring it to the boil, leave it to boil for a minute or so, turn the burner off, leave it 10 minutes. Perfect every time.
Until today, I ate my rice unwashed and undercooked to my preference. But after visiting a Thai restaurant, my view of rice changed! Now that I have seen this excellent guide, it is like coffee with so many variables; I have to purchase a rice cooker...
We had never made short grain rice in our house before and my Mom kinda made it mushy the twice that she tried. I watched this and made it so perfectly that I’m so impressed with myself and typing this while eating that perfect bowl of rice. I put some veggies on top of the rice before covering it to steam, so I added exactly the amount of water as rice. It’s perfect. Thank you!
Would like to see different rice types and how to cook including rinsing those and time cooking. I tend to cook jasmine rice and unfortunately we have hard water it does affect cooking have found a filter to control it but sometimes it is not perfect. So how do you address that?
Rice Type Rice : Water Ratio Simmer time Converted (parboiled) rice 1 : 2.25 20 min White long grain rice 1 : 2.25 18 to 20 min Brown medium grain rice 1 : 2 50 min Brown short grain rice 1 : 2 50 min Black japonica rice 1 : 2 50 min Wild rice 1 : 2 45 to 50 min Brown long grain rice 1 : 1.75 40 to 45 min Jasmine rice 1 : 1.75 15 to 20 min Texmati rice 1 : 1.75 15 to 20 min White medium grain rice 1 : 1.5 15 min Basmati rice 1 : 1.5 15 to 20 min Sushi (calrose) rice 1 : 1.33 18 to 20 min
Loved this. I've started cooking my rice like spaghetti. The only other way the works for me is cooking it in the oven with a 2:1 ratio water to rice. But who wants to turn on the oven frequently? Will try this technique for rinsing the rice; I've been rinsing under running water, but I guess that's not removing the maximum amount of starch. Hope to see more from Chef Sakaeda; he's really good and fun to watch.
Usually, some people use the finger method to figure out how much water to put in. When you put water to cook the rice, put your finger on top of the rice and pour water in to the first knuckle.
White rice 100: Buy rice cooker Wash rice in rice cooker bowl until clear water Fill water up to water line or until first index finger joint Put rice cooker bowl in rice cooker Turn on rice cooker with rice inside Wait Done
Bon Ami is not a suitable or safe substance for cooking rice. Bon Ami is a powdered cleanser that is typically used for cleaning purposes, such as scrubbing dishes, removing stains, or polishing surfaces. It contains various ingredients, including feldspar and limestone, which are not intended for consumption.
My family is really weird, my mom and grandma added *way* too much water to the rice and only added it when the water was boiling. Like, we're talking about a pretty big pot full of water for a cup of rice, didn't even wash it or anything. Still came out pretty good though. Also, added some onion and garlic in there for the flavour
You can save a lot of time and a dish by just rinsing the rice in the mesh strainer. Just keep swishing it around under the water until the water runs clear and you're done.
there are different types of rice though, so 2 parts water to 1 part rice might work for some rice types but not for others, depending on how sticky you want it
If you've watched this channel for long enough, you'll know he's been on here many times. He will always be back to prepare Japanese style dishes and ingredients.
Why would the ratio water:rice change when you are cooking more rice? Is that because you are looking at volume instead of weight? Can one grain of rice absorb less water when it has a lot of friends? Or does it have to do with a longer cook time and more loss of water vapor when cooking small batches? Wouldn't then the type of pan matter more? So many questions...
The rice and water ratio really varies to the type of rice. And the texture and flavor depends as well if you're a westerner or easterner because of our salivas and palate.
The rice has too much water based on the texture... And the perfect way to make rice is using rice cooker... even for restaurant. The other perfect way is steaming... Once, our rice cooker broke and my mom made it in traditional way: steaming. God gracious, it is the best rice I've ever eaten. The trick is stirring the rice regularly, because you are steaming it, you literally can control the water content in the rice for the perfect texture and because you are stirring it, it produce even results
I agree the rice looked a bit gluggy but he’s in a studio kitchen with unfamiliar tools and probably excess waiting times etc due to filming. Pretty sure dude knows how to cook great rice!
My method. 1 Wash rice 2 Boil and stir 3 (Just before water is absorbed by rice) Drain with lid. First check it your pot/lid can easily pass water without rice falling out.
How i cook rice I have to rinse it twice if I have a cup then I measure of 2 cups rice then 2 and 1/4 cup water. If measuring cup isn't available and I just pour rice in a pot. Again, I'll rinse it twice and use my middle finger to measure the water level (the first line of your mid finger). It's like giving finger but in a good way. ;)
I used to do all this. THEN I discovered that my Instant Pot could be a rice cooker. 1 part rice to 1.1 parts water + a sprinkle of salt, pressure cook for 3 minutes and then allow natural release for 10 minutes. Depressurize. The rice is so good, I didn't know rice could be that good. So much better than pot cooked.
I have always been cooking with a ratio of 2:3 rice to water. That’s even the ratio used by the Japanese made rice cookers - marked at the side of the cooking pot.
A nice rule for how much water is filling the pan with rice, then the water should be the height of your entire finger nail when touching the top of the rice.
Wow what a diversity. In my country the rice shouldn't stick. Each grain should be long and separate. If the grains are sticking together that means the cook has messed up😅
Is it odd if I add a teaspoon or two of apple cider vinegar to my rice with the water? I feel like it seasons it lightly, but I have no idea what it may change in terms of the actual cooking process.
I don’t know about fluffy but all I could see was a bowl of soggy rice. If I am cooking just for myself, I steam one cup of rice with a bit of water instead of boiling.
That's nice. Or, you can dump one cup of rice and two cups of water into a pot, and when it boils, turn heat to simmer. When all water is gone, you have rice. Not perfect, but just fine for most folks.
Forget about the concept of a single standard of 'perfect rice'. Each culinary tradition, even each family has its own twist. For non-East-Asians for whom 'fluffiness' is the most important characteristic, forget about short grain rice and go for jasmine or basmati. My $.02: (1) washing is unimportant; (2) basic rice cookers are cheap -- plenty cost around $20 -- and do an excellent job (the $$$s cost more because they have more features that you might not need).
What?? I’ve always cooked rice with 1:2 ratio even in small 1 cup batches. 1 cup rice 2 cups water. It always turns out undercooked, if I add less water then the boils off too fast and the rice becomes dry and undercooked… I’ve been just accepting having over cooked mushy rice. I think my problem is my pot doesn’t have a lid with a perfect seal. I switched to using a plate with a weight on it but in general the heat to tone ratio feels so random
FYI Rice Type Rice : Water Ratio Simmer time Converted (parboiled) rice 1 : 2.25 20 min White long grain rice 1 : 2.25 18 to 20 min Brown medium grain rice 1 : 2 50 min Brown short grain rice 1 : 2 50 min Black japonica rice 1 : 2 50 min Wild rice 1 : 2 45 to 50 min Brown long grain rice 1 : 1.75 40 to 45 min Jasmine rice 1 : 1.75 15 to 20 min Texmati rice 1 : 1.75 15 to 20 min White medium grain rice 1 : 1.5 15 min Basmati rice 1 : 1.5 15 to 20 min Sushi (calrose) rice 1 : 1.33 18 to 20 min
I think the texture is just fine without rinsing, but it is my understanding that the surface starch naturally contains some amount of arsenic, which you are also rinsing away.
Step 1: take out the rice cooker. Step 2: rinse the rice thoroughly and put the amount of water as suggested on the rice cooker pot markers. Step 3: close the lid and hit "start". Step 4: wait for the rice cooker to tell you and you're done.
Love rice making controversy. Rice cooker vs. pot. Salt vs. unsalt. Let the drama commence
I got my zojirushi cooker and now I don't care anymore haha worth every penny
Washing vs not washing.
Boil the rice in the pot until half cooked then steam them
@@somai2937 Not washing is a sin, the main reason of gluppy, soggy rice mainly is from not washing the starch off from rice
Love this comment, love chaos. Pot and unsalted
Thank you Chef Sakaeda. These are basics that we need to know (but often don't). Everyone with a basic kitchen/little storage thanks you.
The starch is what makes it yum!
2 cups jasmine rice
3.5 cups water
1/2 tbs butter
Pinch salt
Mix all together, get to slow boil, stir, cover and reduce heat to 1. Set timer for 9ish minutes. Uncover, season to taste.
I found these instructions on the packet of Premium Jasmine Rice I bought years ago which works for me: 1) Rinse rice. 2) For every one measure of rice add 1& half measures of boiling water. 3) Make sure the level of rice is even by gently shaking the pot you are cooking the rice in. 4) Cook on medium heat until holes appear on the surface of the rice. 5) Reduce heat to low. You may give the rice a quick stir if you like. Cover the pot & let steam for about 5minutes. 6) Turn the heat down until just before it is off. 7) Replace the pot lid & let rest for another 5 minutes. 8) Your fluffy white Jasmine rice is done. Enjoy.
This method is suitable for cooking all types of rice.
Jasmine rice is super easy to cook. Japanese short grain rice is a lot more temperamental.
have been eating rice for over 65 years, and taught to cook rice for dinner since I was 6, growing up as a latchkey kid with my single mom to have rice ready when she got home from work. No magic technique, just follow a few simple rules, wash a few times, fill the water to one palm thickness, boil then simmer and turn off the stove at 15 minutes, never lift the lid and wait for mom to get home with meats and vegetables. One big note to self - do not leave the house to play ball with friends until the rice is done and the stove is off or will be greeted by one pissed off mom and lots of scrubbing a burned out pot.
When your boiling the rice do you have on it high or medium heat?
@@luzponce9630 He said simmer. So probably and high till starts cooking and then immediately setting it on low and putting lid on.
I tried this recipe. I made a few mistakes but that was the best white rice I've made in a year. THANKS EPICURIOUS!!
I use aged basmati rice. 1 cup rice, 2 cups water. I wash it and soak it for at least 15 minutes.
I bring to a boil about 3 cups of water in a big pot and set the rice container in it. Lid it and cook it on medium low heat for 20 minutes. Perfect every time.
The first two batches I've made had me never wanting to ever cook again but I followed this and I have no problem now, thank you so much!
Man, never knew people are so... diverse in their opinion in how to prepare rice. Might as well add my 2 cents in this: in my country (Philippines), we cook rice as follows:
1) Measure rice to be cooked. Good if you have a measuring cup or a pot that has measurements marked inside the pot. You can even eyeball it. You can use any pot: metal, clay, even large bamboo sections can be used.
2) Wash the rice. Rule of thumb, wash it with clean water until the washing is clear. What you do with the rice washings is up to you but from what I read (like those from Maria Y. Oroza, food scientist and inventor of banana ketchup and other food wonders) you can use rice washings for anything from soups and stews to desserts.
3) Add water to the washed rice. This is where debate about water-to-rice ratio is heavy, but in my country how much water to add to the rice for cooking is very much an exercise of trial and error; not all rice are the same, some require more water to cook (or else it becomes a hard puck when cooked, oftentimes a sign of poor quality rice), some require less water (becomes porridge when cooked). This is where the expertise of rice dealers comes into play as they can tell you which rice has what qualities you look for and recommend you this sort of rice variety. Everyone in my country knows not to use sticky glutinous rice beyond being used as desserts (kakanin) as cooking such is far more difficult and inedible. Do we soak the rice for 30 minutes like the Japanese? No, I personally consider it a waste of time that adds nothing to the rice. Do we salt the water before cooking? It never crossed my mind personally, rice is supposed to taste like rice: not tasteless or chemical-y. I mean you can cook the rice in a broth but that is somethibg reserved for special occassions not a regular meal.
Note: if you have no measuring cup at hand, I use the method my father showed me when he cooks rice (he never uses a measuring cup when he cooks rice): add enough water to the level of the first joint of your middle finger when you dip it into the pot. Don't dig into the rice level when doing this, only place it on the surface of the rice level.
4) Cook the rice. If you have a rice cooker then good, you can just pop it in there, press the tab and wait until it goes warm (note: the "rice cooker" in this context is not those fancy things the Japanese use but those cheap and simple ones one can buy from PRChina). Just remember to actually press the tab down to "cook" as the "warm" setting just evaporates the water from the pot leaving it undercooked and recooking it makes it edible but tasteless.
If cooking in an open flame (be it stove or brazier), I follow some simple rules of thumb:
A. Heat pot until it boils the water off. When there is no water in the pot, lower heat down and let it cook via the steam inside the pot. My method of knowing if the rice is cooked is by touch: if rice is sticky it's not cooked, if rice is not sticky it's cooked. However, limit the lifting of the pot to check on the rice because it lets out the steam, making the finished rice drier, harder, and slightly burnt. A pot with a glass lid is optimal in this so you can see the rice being cooked without needing to open it often to check if it's cooked.
B. Really keep an eye on the rice cooking process. The average cooming time for rice ia roughly 30 minutes (less than 10 minuties for boiling and the remaining 20 minutes for cooking the rice in lower heat). Rice WILL get burnt if left for too long. Keep an eye on the pot even when it boils because it will spill over.
Yep same here in Indonesia, and i assume all the SEA country too. The prep on this video is kinda overkill and waste of time, since most people couldn't even tell the difference on the finished product.
I personally would just use a USD10 rice cooker, wash and rinse the rice twice inside its proprietary bowl, add clean water until it level on my finger joint, press the cook button. Literally easy as 1.2.3.
Yeah, and some people still say "washing the rice does nothing". Guess they're from the West.
I concur on this method. Just a small variation for me is after the water has been dried off, I put the lid and set a timer for 8 mins. It's a lot safer not to over do it and undercook it so 8 min.is ideal to me. After that fire off and let it rest for another 8 and it's done. Unlike the Japanese that like to fluff the rice most Asians don't. That includes me..
Ricewater or the „rice washings“ are great plant fertilizer. My basil loves it.
The water varies on how much each rice variety soaks up
Dear Chef Sakaeda: Until I saw your video, I never had medium-grain rice turn out other than gloppy/hard-stuck to the pot. Just now, I made a pot of [Goya brand] medium-grain rice, following your directions. The package said not to rinse it because of nutrient loss, so I compromised and rinsed it the way you did, but only twice, and did not do a final rinse in a sieve. Cooked it the way you did. OMG - perfect, mildly-sticky rice, even better than that of any Oriental restaurants! Thank you, thank you!
This guy is definitely a pro and knows what he's saying is true. Great tips he gave. I make rice a lot because my favorite is fried rice. Whatever rice you use the method will vary.
Rice is one of the hardest things to cook well consistently. But generally speaking, his method is pretty foolproof. Add rice and water to a pot, bring to a boil, reduce heat and let simmer with lid on for like 20 min if cooking standard white rice, then take off the heat and let rest for another 15-20 min. The trick really is to know what type of rice you are using, so you can know how much water to add and how long to simmer it for. E.g. brown rice is a completely different method to short grain white rice.
I use the same technique and it's a lifechanger. Ever since I started buying japanese rice or vietnamese jasmin rice and cooking it that way, I haven't had a bad bowl of rice. It's always perfect and commercial rice you have to throw in boiling water is awful in comparison
Simple and perfect method: Wash rice. Cook rice in plenty of water. Drain rice in sieve. Put sieve on pan. Place lid on sieve. Let rice rest for 15 minutes. Stir rice. Result: perfectly dry rice
👍
Many in India do this!
I've never used a rice cooker. I rinse the rice for a minute or 2 under a cold tap. Pop it in the pan, add hot water from the kettle to about 1cm over the surface of the rice. I put a lid on, put it on a burner on my stove, bring it to the boil, leave it to boil for a minute or so, turn the burner off, leave it 10 minutes. Perfect every time.
do you stir it? im always worried about burning the bottom of the pan
@@levi9922 not until the 10 minutes has expired.
I love how rice is so wide varied and it all depends on the culture and type of grain. So much rice so little time.😋😋😋😋😋😋😋😋😋
Until today, I ate my rice unwashed and undercooked to my preference. But after visiting a Thai restaurant, my view of rice changed! Now that I have seen this excellent guide, it is like coffee with so many variables; I have to purchase a rice cooker...
We had never made short grain rice in our house before and my Mom kinda made it mushy the twice that she tried. I watched this and made it so perfectly that I’m so impressed with myself and typing this while eating that perfect bowl of rice.
I put some veggies on top of the rice before covering it to steam, so I added exactly the amount of water as rice. It’s perfect.
Thank you!
That motivational speech at the end was essential, thank you chef 🙏 🍚
Would like to see different rice types and how to cook including rinsing those and time cooking. I tend to cook jasmine rice and unfortunately we have hard water it does affect cooking have found a filter to control it but sometimes it is not perfect. So how do you address that?
Rice Type Rice : Water Ratio Simmer time
Converted (parboiled) rice 1 : 2.25 20 min
White long grain rice 1 : 2.25 18 to 20 min
Brown medium grain rice 1 : 2 50 min
Brown short grain rice 1 : 2 50 min
Black japonica rice 1 : 2 50 min
Wild rice 1 : 2 45 to 50 min
Brown long grain rice 1 : 1.75 40 to 45 min
Jasmine rice 1 : 1.75 15 to 20 min
Texmati rice 1 : 1.75 15 to 20 min
White medium grain rice 1 : 1.5 15 min
Basmati rice 1 : 1.5 15 to 20 min
Sushi (calrose) rice 1 : 1.33 18 to 20 min
Loved this. I've started cooking my rice like spaghetti. The only other way the works for me is cooking it in the oven with a 2:1 ratio water to rice. But who wants to turn on the oven frequently? Will try this technique for rinsing the rice; I've been rinsing under running water, but I guess that's not removing the maximum amount of starch.
Hope to see more from Chef Sakaeda; he's really good and fun to watch.
I think that rinsing under running water works too!
Usually, some people use the finger method to figure out how much water to put in. When you put water to cook the rice, put your finger on top of the rice and pour water in to the first knuckle.
White rice 100:
Buy rice cooker
Wash rice in rice cooker bowl until clear water
Fill water up to water line or until first index finger joint
Put rice cooker bowl in rice cooker
Turn on rice cooker with rice inside
Wait
Done
I was just complaining about how I can’t cook rice it always turns out a mess…amazing video !!
Tried several rice recipes, and this one works best for me. Thanks for the in-depth guide!
Bon Ami is not a suitable or safe substance for cooking rice. Bon Ami is a powdered cleanser that is typically used for cleaning purposes, such as scrubbing dishes, removing stains, or polishing surfaces. It contains various ingredients, including feldspar and limestone, which are not intended for consumption.
My family is really weird, my mom and grandma added *way* too much water to the rice and only added it when the water was boiling. Like, we're talking about a pretty big pot full of water for a cup of rice, didn't even wash it or anything. Still came out pretty good though. Also, added some onion and garlic in there for the flavour
Were you cooking rice gruel?
@@ThangCal Nah, we got rid of the water. They were still rice grains, not a paste or anything.
That is basically how the directions on back of rice package say to cook it
thats how you cook pasta
You can save a lot of time and a dish by just rinsing the rice in the mesh strainer. Just keep swishing it around under the water until the water runs clear and you're done.
Interesting, here in Colombia we add oil , scallions, and sometimes garlic. Really gives you an amazing tasting rice. 2parts water to 1 part rice.
there are different types of rice though, so 2 parts water to 1 part rice might work for some rice types but not for others, depending on how sticky you want it
I add a little salt, ghee(clarified butter) and 2 to 3 cloves.
I'll give this a try.
I use aged basmati rice and I too use the 1 rice 2 water ratio.
Very nice video! I hope Chef Sakaeda comes back for more videos.
This was good - I wish he did the finger trick - he's so cool, I hope you guys bring him back.
If you've watched this channel for long enough, you'll know he's been on here many times. He will always be back to prepare Japanese style dishes and ingredients.
Why would the ratio water:rice change when you are cooking more rice? Is that because you are looking at volume instead of weight? Can one grain of rice absorb less water when it has a lot of friends? Or does it have to do with a longer cook time and more loss of water vapor when cooking small batches? Wouldn't then the type of pan matter more? So many questions...
Do You have to add a little bit of oil into the rice water. before cooking?
The rice and water ratio really varies to the type of rice. And the texture and flavor depends as well if you're a westerner or easterner because of our salivas and palate.
can you please elaborate on the ratios for larger quantities? like 10 cups?
The rice has too much water based on the texture...
And the perfect way to make rice is using rice cooker... even for restaurant.
The other perfect way is steaming...
Once, our rice cooker broke and my mom made it in traditional way: steaming.
God gracious, it is the best rice I've ever eaten.
The trick is stirring the rice regularly, because you are steaming it, you literally can control the water content in the rice for the perfect texture and because you are stirring it, it produce even results
I agree the rice looked a bit gluggy but he’s in a studio kitchen with unfamiliar tools and probably excess waiting times etc due to filming. Pretty sure dude knows how to cook great rice!
My method.
1 Wash rice
2 Boil and stir
3 (Just before water is absorbed by rice)
Drain with lid. First check it your pot/lid can easily pass water without rice falling out.
this method works you just lose a lot of flavour when you have to throw out the drained water
Thank you for making the video. Very well made.
How i cook rice I have to rinse it twice if I have a cup then I measure of 2 cups rice then 2 and 1/4 cup water. If measuring cup isn't available and I just pour rice in a pot. Again, I'll rinse it twice and use my middle finger to measure the water level (the first line of your mid finger). It's like giving finger but in a good way. ;)
Awesome wonderful video! Thank you!
I used to do all this. THEN I discovered that my Instant Pot could be a rice cooker. 1 part rice to 1.1 parts water + a sprinkle of salt, pressure cook for 3 minutes and then allow natural release for 10 minutes. Depressurize. The rice is so good, I didn't know rice could be that good. So much better than pot cooked.
Me too!
A day without rice is like a day without sunshine!
I've always used double water to rice, so 2 cups of water for 1 cup of rice. The rice has turned perfect every time.
I usually only make a cup of rice(koshihakari) and only simmer for 5 minutes after bringing to a boil. Perfect everytime.
👍Me too. I let it sit. Perfect every time.
I just leveled up as a home cook watching this. Thank you so much chef sakaeda!
I followed the Chef Ibarra directions to the T, perfect rice😋! Thank you Chef🙏
Whatever method to cook rice if it's come out good is good
I have always been cooking with a ratio of 2:3 rice to water. That’s even the ratio used by the Japanese made rice cookers - marked at the side of the cooking pot.
Perfect way is the rice cooker. Done
A nice rule for how much water is filling the pan with rice, then the water should be the height of your entire finger nail when touching the top of the rice.
You make some of the best challenges videos ❤❤ ❤❤
Wow what a diversity. In my country the rice shouldn't stick. Each grain should be long and separate. If the grains are sticking together that means the cook has messed up😅
Super helpful! Mysteries unmystified. Brown rice please!! That is nearly insurmountable for me.
Very well explained...
thanks Chef, but if I want to make steamed rice in my instant pot what do I have to do?
doesnt seem too sticky still?
So what if I'm cooking just one cup of rice. How much water should I put?
thanks
My problem is the rice sticks to the bottom of the pot.
When I was cooking, I lifted the lid at the exact time you said "do not lift the lid" and I was like "oops".
Nice rice cooking presentation
Is it odd if I add a teaspoon or two of apple cider vinegar to my rice with the water? I feel like it seasons it lightly, but I have no idea what it may change in terms of the actual cooking process.
FWIW, I have a cheapie rice cooker, and I LOVE LOVE LOVE it.
why no salt and papper? Is it going to have any taste like this?
I don’t know about fluffy but all I could see was a bowl of soggy rice.
If I am cooking just for myself, I steam one cup of rice with a bit of water instead of boiling.
Thks & ?Do you ever use vinegar?
Fascinating. Thank you. But, no salt?
Great, excellent recipe will have your rice done in an hour.
I'm not sure I've ever intentionally tried any rice other than long grain rice...I blame my parents lol
How long do u simmer for 3 cups?
And can be cooked either dry or damp.. dry for fried rice.. damp for eat with curry or some sort..
Most knowledgeable and best Rice cooking instructions ever. Thanks 😊
Good journey and good food and good job and nice cooking
No seasoning?
Uncle Roger: Haiyaa, no need for pot. Just use rice cooker
i love my zojirushi induction rice cooker. takes longer than stovetop cooking, but its set and forget.
That's nice. Or, you can dump one cup of rice and two cups of water into a pot, and when it boils, turn heat to simmer. When all water is gone, you have rice. Not perfect, but just fine for most folks.
It looks to me that the rice is too wet on your video clip. Which I think is a discrepancy in between what you say and what the results are.
3mins in and I'm more confused about rice cooking than before I hit play. 🤦🏾♀️
Ye
Forget about the concept of a single standard of 'perfect rice'. Each culinary tradition, even each family has its own twist. For non-East-Asians for whom 'fluffiness' is the most important characteristic, forget about short grain rice and go for jasmine or basmati. My $.02: (1) washing is unimportant; (2) basic rice cookers are cheap -- plenty cost around $20 -- and do an excellent job (the $$$s cost more because they have more features that you might not need).
Video title should specify Japanese or short grain white rice which would be stickier than many are used to.
My favorite food
I wanted to see the bottom to see how much was stuck.
What?? I’ve always cooked rice with 1:2 ratio even in small 1 cup batches. 1 cup rice 2 cups water. It always turns out undercooked, if I add less water then the boils off too fast and the rice becomes dry and undercooked… I’ve been just accepting having over cooked mushy rice. I think my problem is my pot doesn’t have a lid with a perfect seal. I switched to using a plate with a weight on it but in general the heat to tone ratio feels so random
FYI
Rice Type Rice : Water Ratio Simmer time
Converted (parboiled) rice 1 : 2.25 20 min
White long grain rice 1 : 2.25 18 to 20 min
Brown medium grain rice 1 : 2 50 min
Brown short grain rice 1 : 2 50 min
Black japonica rice 1 : 2 50 min
Wild rice 1 : 2 45 to 50 min
Brown long grain rice 1 : 1.75 40 to 45 min
Jasmine rice 1 : 1.75 15 to 20 min
Texmati rice 1 : 1.75 15 to 20 min
White medium grain rice 1 : 1.5 15 min
Basmati rice 1 : 1.5 15 to 20 min
Sushi (calrose) rice 1 : 1.33 18 to 20 min
Comes out perfect every time. We don't rinse the starch away.
I think the texture is just fine without rinsing, but it is my understanding that the surface starch naturally contains some amount of arsenic, which you are also rinsing away.
When i cookiny rice i always use the finger method
Fun fact: A lot of young asian people can't cook rice without a rice cooker.
I, born in SE Asia in 1995, is affronted with this comment...
"Just get rice cooker" - Uncle Roger
Thanks for the tips. I've been buying the cheapest bag of rice at Sam's Club, I think that is my problem.
Lol😅 Don't not open the lid
Me: Opens the lid 🤪 🤣 😋
NO SALT?
Easiest way to make perfect rice. Rice cooker.
Never Mess Up White R@ce Again | Chud 101
oh well, I always have it stuck to the bottom of the casserole :-(
Why does my rice stay semi cooked on the surface and cooked at the bottom😢
Where rice cooker?
It's much easier to put the rice in a wire mesh strainer and rinse until water drains clear. I use the sink sprayer.
Step 1: take out the rice cooker.
Step 2: rinse the rice thoroughly and put the amount of water as suggested on the rice cooker pot markers.
Step 3: close the lid and hit "start".
Step 4: wait for the rice cooker to tell you and you're done.
Chef the rice is cooked without cooking oil?
For fresh Asian rice, yep!
@@heyitsmebee what about Basmati rice? Can be cooked that way