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[email protected] 20-08-2014 06:16 AM

Cheesy rice
 
I usually soak basmati rice for a half hour before cooking it.

The other day I took some calrose rice by mistake and started soaking it
before I realized it wasn't basmati.

I figured I would just use it the next time I made an Asian dish, and put
it in a jar with a lid. Then I forgot about it for several days.

Well, today I noticed it. Opening the lid I got some nice fermentation
smells. I drained the rice, added water, and cooked it.

It was foul, like a mixture of rice and some funky parmesan.

Julie Bove[_2_] 20-08-2014 06:38 AM

Cheesy rice
 

> wrote in message
...
>I usually soak basmati rice for a half hour before cooking it.
>
> The other day I took some calrose rice by mistake and started soaking it
> before I realized it wasn't basmati.
>
> I figured I would just use it the next time I made an Asian dish, and put
> it in a jar with a lid. Then I forgot about it for several days.
>
> Well, today I noticed it. Opening the lid I got some nice fermentation
> smells. I drained the rice, added water, and cooked it.
>
> It was foul, like a mixture of rice and some funky parmesan.


Ew.


jmcquown[_2_] 20-08-2014 11:13 PM

Cheesy rice
 
On 8/20/2014 1:16 AM, wrote:
> I usually soak basmati rice for a half hour before cooking it.
>
> The other day I took some calrose rice by mistake and started soaking it
> before I realized it wasn't basmati.
>
> I figured I would just use it the next time I made an Asian dish, and put
> it in a jar with a lid. Then I forgot about it for several days.
>
> Well, today I noticed it. Opening the lid I got some nice fermentation
> smells. I drained the rice, added water, and cooked it.
>
> It was foul, like a mixture of rice and some funky parmesan.
>

Next time how about you pay attention to what you're doing? Read the
whatever the heck calrose label says and follow directions.

Jill

Pico Rico[_2_] 20-08-2014 11:18 PM

Cheesy rice
 

> wrote in message
...
>I usually soak basmati rice for a half hour before cooking it.
>
> The other day I took some calrose rice by mistake and started soaking it
> before I realized it wasn't basmati.
>
> I figured I would just use it the next time I made an Asian dish, and put
> it in a jar with a lid. Then I forgot about it for several days.
>
> Well, today I noticed it. Opening the lid I got some nice fermentation
> smells. I drained the rice, added water, and cooked it.
>
> It was foul, like a mixture of rice and some funky parmesan.


I am sure that is some sort of a delicacy someplace.



[email protected] 21-08-2014 02:11 AM

Cheesy rice
 
On Wednesday, August 20, 2014 3:17:26 PM UTC-7, Sqwertz wrote:
> On Wed, 20 Aug 2014 18:13:17 -0400, jmcquown wrote:


> >> It was foul, like a mixture of rice and some funky parmesan.

>


> > Next time how about you pay attention to what you're doing? Read the
> > whatever the heck calrose label says and follow directions.


I have made both literally hundreds of times and no longer need to read
directions. I just grabbed the wrong container.

> Basmati is really thin and skinny and Calrose is short and stubby. I
> don't see how anybody could mix them up.


I wasn't thinking and just grabbed the wrong container, scooped some rice,
threw it in the pot, measured out the water, and threw it in. Then I said, "Oh."

> Should have just kept cooking the Calrose and then frozen it - or
> something. Sealing up soaking wet rice would ruin it within 12 hours.
>


I could have, once the basmati was cooked. But then dinner was ready, and
I just put the other rice out of my mind.

Michel Boucher[_3_] 21-08-2014 03:10 PM

Cheesy rice
 
wrote in
:

> The other day I took some calrose rice by mistake and started
> soaking it before I realized it wasn't basmati.


Don't you hate it when that happens? Which is why I keep my rice
in different containers. The basmati is in a 5kg red zipper bag,
the short grain white is in a large plastic container (this is the
one we make most often) and the 17kg bag of brown organic short
grain Lundberg is in the freezer.

I far preferred Maruku brand (they're all from California but that
one was the best in my Tiger brand rice cooker) but I can't find it
here anymore so now I buy Italian rice, the kind used for risotto,
which is indistinguishable from white short grain for sushi.

--

Socialism never took root in America because the
poor there see themselves not as an exploited
proletariat but as temporarily embarassed
millionaires. - John Steinbeck


Oregonian Haruspex 22-08-2014 02:45 AM

Cheesy rice
 
On 2014-08-20 05:16:26 +0000, said:

> I usually soak basmati rice for a half hour before cooking it.
>
> The other day I took some calrose rice by mistake and started soaking it
> before I realized it wasn't basmati.
>
> I figured I would just use it the next time I made an Asian dish, and put
> it in a jar with a lid. Then I forgot about it for several days.
>
> Well, today I noticed it. Opening the lid I got some nice fermentation
> smells. I drained the rice, added water, and cooked it.
>
> It was foul, like a mixture of rice and some funky parmesan.


If you get some koji (aspergillus) you can turn leftovers into koji
rice which can be eaten, made into a refreshing drink, fermented into
sake, or mixed with other ingredients to make miso.



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