Should You Rinse Your Rice Before Cooking? Here's What You Need to Know to Cook Perfect Rice
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Rinsing rice can dramatically affect whether your rice dish will have distinct, individual grains or if it will have a creamier texture.
We review the best saucepans for the job: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y0EHnICJlt4
Here's what you need to know to defrost meat safely and quickly: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4a2hQpj6Dxc
Do you always need to rinse rice? In the test kitchen, we recommend rinsing long-grain white rice when we want separate, distinct grains. That’s because rinsing flushes away excess starch that would otherwise absorb water and swell, causing grains to stick together. To see if this was also true for other types of white rice, we gathered up three of the most common kinds called for in our recipes and cooked them, rinsed and unrinsed, in a few typical applications: We cooked medium-grain, high-starch Arborio rice in risotto, medium-grain rice in rice pudding, and steamed long-grain, low-starch basmati plain. After side-by-side tastings, we confirmed that for steamed rice, where individual grains are the desired result, rinsing improves texture. But for creamy dishes like risotto or rice pudding, rinsing compromises the texture of the finished dish. The bottom line: Unless you want a sticky, creamy texture, rinse your rice.
ABOUT US: Located in Boston’s Seaport District in the historic Innovation and Design Building, America's Test Kitchen features 15,000 square feet of kitchen space including multiple photography and video studios. It is the home of Cook’s Illustrated magazine and Cook’s Country magazine and is the workday destination for more than 60 test cooks, editors, and cookware specialists. Our mission is to test recipes over and over again until we understand how and why they work and until we arrive at the best version.
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Rinsing rice can dramatically affect whether your rice dish will have distinct, individual grains or if it will have a creamier texture.
We review the best saucepans for the job: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y0EHnICJlt4
Here's what you need to know to defrost meat safely and quickly: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4a2hQpj6Dxc
Do you always need to rinse rice? In the test kitchen, we recommend rinsing long-grain white rice when we want separate, distinct grains. That’s because rinsing flushes away excess starch that would otherwise absorb water and swell, causing grains to stick together. To see if this was also true for other types of white rice, we gathered up three of the most common kinds called for in our recipes and cooked them, rinsed and unrinsed, in a few typical applications: We cooked medium-grain, high-starch Arborio rice in risotto, medium-grain rice in rice pudding, and steamed long-grain, low-starch basmati plain. After side-by-side tastings, we confirmed that for steamed rice, where individual grains are the desired result, rinsing improves texture. But for creamy dishes like risotto or rice pudding, rinsing compromises the texture of the finished dish. The bottom line: Unless you want a sticky, creamy texture, rinse your rice.
ABOUT US: Located in Boston’s Seaport District in the historic Innovation and Design Building, America's Test Kitchen features 15,000 square feet of kitchen space including multiple photography and video studios. It is the home of Cook’s Illustrated magazine and Cook’s Country magazine and is the workday destination for more than 60 test cooks, editors, and cookware specialists. Our mission is to test recipes over and over again until we understand how and why they work and until we arrive at the best version.
If you like us, follow us:
http://cooksillustrated.com
http://facebook.com/cooksillustrated
http://twitter.com/testkitchen
http://instagram.com/cooksillustrated
http://pinterest.com/testkitchen
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