Read The Amazing World of Rice Online
Authors: Marie Simmons
The black bran on black rice turns the water it is cooked in a deep purplish black, or milk a lovely shade of lavender gray. For this pudding, begin with soft-cooked black rice. Not all black rice needs to be soaked before cooking. If you use the Chinese Forbidden Rice from Lotus Foods (which is less sticky than some black rices and available in better supermarkets) or some brands of Thai black rice, it will be tender in 35 minutes and very soft in 50 minutes without soaking. Sticky black rice, found mostly at Asian grocers, may need to be soaked for several hours before cooking. Cooking black rice might seem like a lot of trouble, but this exotic rice, with its haunting aromatic flavor, is worth itâespecially when used to make this irresistibly creamy pudding.
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Makes 4 to 6 servings
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One 14½-ounce can unsweetened coconut milk
¾ cup (approximately) half-and-half or heavy cream
½ cup sugar
½ teaspoon kosher salt
2 cups soft-cooked black rice (see Notes)
2 ripe mangoes
½ cup unsweetened dried coconut, toasted (see Notes)
2 tablespoons brown sesame seeds, optional
NOTES:
To cook black rice, first place it in a large bowl. Add tap water to cover, swish it around, and drain in a strainer. Repeat at least twice. If the rice needs to be soaked before cooking, return the rice to the bowl, cover with cold water, and soak for 4 hours. Drain.
Put the rice either soaked or unsoaked in a large saucepan. Cover with plenty of water and cook, uncovered, until the rice is plump and tender, anywhere from 30 to 50 minutes. Drain and let cool. Alternatively, to steam the rice: Place the soaked rice in a large bowl and add just enough boiling water to cover the rice. Place the bowl in a steaming basket set over gently boiling water. Cover the steamer and cook until the rice is tender and fluffy, 30 to 50 minutes, adding more boiling water to the rice if necessary. (One cup uncooked black rice will yield approximately 4 cups cooked black rice. Use leftovers in salads or stir-fries, or use ½ cup uncooked black rice.)
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CREAMY WHITE RICE PUDDING WITH COCONUT MILK AND MANGO.
Substitute 2 cups cooked Thai jasmine rice for the cooked black rice.
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Toast coconut in a pie pan or small baking sheet in a preheated 350°F oven just until it begins to brown, 3 to 4 minutes, stirring once. Watch carefully: the coconut will toast very quickly. It can also be toasted in a small skillet on top of the stove. Stir constantly over medium-low heat until golden, about 3 minutes.
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C
ooked rice, rice wine, and rice flour
inspire a unique assortment of sweets from cookies to poached fruits. Many are straightforward recipes that are made by stirring rice into a batter or poaching fruit in sweetened and spiced rice wine.
But baking with rice flour presents more of a challenge, because it is gluten-free. Baked goods need gluten to hold moisture and form a crumb that stays together. The following recipes use a combination of rice and wheat flours, resulting in cookies that are tender, crisp, and buttery with a slightly sandy texture. I use both plain rice flour from my Asian market and the boutique rice flours made from ground Bhutanese red rice and black rice in these recipes. The black rice flour gives the cookies an unusual pale lavender color, and the red flour lends a pale pink color. Otherwise, there is no discernible difference among the different rice flours.
Ground walnuts go into the cookie dough and coat the cookies after they are shaped. Handle carefully, as cookies made with rice flour are very tender. These will keep about a week stored in an airtight container.
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Makes 5 to 6 dozen cookies
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½ pound (2 sticks) unsalted butter, softened
½ cup sugar
1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
¼ teaspoon salt
1½ cups all-purpose flour
½ cup white, black, or red rice flour
3 cups walnuts, finely ground in a food processor
2 large egg whites
Delicate and buttery, these cookies are made with wheat flour and white rice flour, or one of the specialty rice flours made from red rice or black rice. Dried unsweetened coconut adds a nice crunch and extra richness.
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Makes 5 to 6 dozen cookies
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½ pound (2 sticks) unsalted butter, softened
½ cup sugar
1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
¼ teaspoon salt
1½ cups all-purpose flour
½ cup white rice, black rice, red rice flour
½ cup unsweetened dried coconut, plus ½ cup for coating
“Belles calas tout chaud”
was once a familiar cry on the back streets of the New Orleans French Quarter. Sold from carts by street vendors,
calas
were a popular breakfast foodâand a practical way to use up leftover cooked rice from the night before. This recipe, from cookbook author and food writer Terry Thompson, is made with a yeast dough and produces a light airy fritter, similar to a doughnut, that is hard to resist. Plan ahead: the rice sponge (see Step 1) needs to stand overnight.
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Makes 20 to 24 fritters
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2 tablespoons granulated sugar
1 package active dry yeast
1½ cups cooked long-grain white rice
3 large eggs, beaten
1½ cups sifted unbleached all-purpose flour
½ teaspoon salt
½ teaspoon pure vanilla extract
¼ teaspoon freshly grated nutmeg
Vegetable oil for deep-frying
Confectioners' sugar or warm honey
In Bologna, Italy,
torta di riso
, or rice torte, is a specialty. This recipe is a favorite inspired by a recipe from Biba Caggiano, a wonderful cook, restaurateur, and cookbook author from Sacramento, California, whose food I greatly admire. The torta has the texture of a cheesecake and the flavors of a pudding. The quality of the candied orange peel is critical to the success of this torte. If you must rely on supermarket candied peel, be sure it is a fresh supply (usually available around the holidays), but I buy it in bulk at Italian, Middle Eastern, or other specialty food shops.
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Makes 10 to 12 servings
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¾ cup uncooked medium-grain white or Arborio rice
4 cups whole milk
1½ cups sugar
1 tablespoon grated orange zest
1 cup finely ground natural (skin-on) almonds
1 tablespoon unsalted butter, melted
5 large eggs
½ cup finely chopped candied orange peel
¼ cup Grand Marnier
¼ teaspoon pure almond extract
Confectioners' sugar
Optional Garnishes
1 pint raspberries or strawberries, hulled and sliced
1 cup heavy cream, stiffly beaten
Minced candied orange peel