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Rice Dishes

Dinner, Recipes, Rice Dishes, Side Dishes, Veggies

Fried Rice with Bacon

November 16, 2012

Everyone has their own version of fried rice. It’s a versatile dish because you can add numerous ingredients to it and it always turns out tasty. I prefer jasmine rice and lots of vegetables for my recipe. Chinese peas (snow peas), carrots, cabbage, and green peas add a bit of texture to the velvety rice and bits of egg you get in each spoonful.  And let there be bacon.  Smoky, salty, just plain delicious.

This little Japanese omelet pan has made its way to the stove top often.  Because of its shape, the finished eggs are easily sliced into small pieces perfect for fried rice.  It also comes in handy for somen salad.

Chinese peas, green peas, cabbage, bacon, carrots, green onions, Maui onion, diced egg.

Fried Rice with Bacon

4 side dish servings

Ingredients

1 cup uncooked jasmine rice

2 tablespoons finely chopped onion

1/4 cup minced carrot

10 Chinese peas finely chopped

1 cup finely chopped cabbage

1/2 cup green peas

1/4 cup sliced green onions

2 large eggs

4 slices crispy bacon, crumbled

soy sauce

salt and pepper

oil for stir frying

Preparation

Cook jasmine rice in advance (the morning you make the rice is fine).  Fluff the cooked rice, cool and store in a the refrigerator until ready to use.

Heat 2 – 3 teaspoons of oil in your wok or stir fry pan on medium heat.  Add the onions, carrots and Chinese peas and cook for about 1 minute.  Remove ingredients to a bowl and set aside.   Turn the heat up to medium high and add 1 tablespoon of oil to your pan. Once the oil is very hot add the rice.  Stir fry the rice for 30 seconds or so, just to heat slightly.  Add the reserved onions, carrots and Chinese peas back to the pan along with the cabbage, green peas, green onions, diced egg and bacon.  Drizzle soy sauce on to the rice and vegetables and season to taste with salt and pepper. Give the fried rice a quick stir and adjust the seasoning adding more soy sauce to taste.

 

Dinner, Mexican, Recipes, Rice Dishes, Side Dishes

Sopa de Arroz

October 16, 2012

For ages I have searched for a good Mexican rice recipe and I have tried and discarded many.  My search ended with a Saveur magazine recipe.  The staff of Saveur travels to many different countries and seeks out all kinds of wonderful people who share their cuisine with them.  I have to admit that I have found more recipes that I love in Saveur than in any other food magazine.  Saveur articles typically feature extended stories on the cultures and people who share their wonderful recipes.  In this instance the dish was featured in a Quinceaneara feast (all over Latin America a girls 15th birthday is a major celebration).  These are usually rustic dishes that don’t call for ingredients too difficult to find.  So here is a really good Mexican-style rice recipe from Saveur.

Pulse in your food processor.

Cook rice with tomato puree.

Add broth and cook, undisturbed until liquid barely covers the rice.  In this photo the rice is almost at that stage with just  a few more minutes to go.

Sopa de Arroz

Serves 8

Adapted from Saveur magazine

Ingredients

2 cups long grain rice

About 3 small, ripe and juicy tomatoes – skin and seeds removed, coarsely chopped

1/2 cup onion – coarsely chopped

2 small or 1 large garlic clove

3 tablespoons canola oil

3 cups chicken broth

1 teaspoon salt

1 teaspoon mild chili powder – optional (I use Hatch mild chile powder from New Mexico. It doesn’t add any heat to the rice however it does give a nice color).

Preparation

Rinse rice well in a fine mesh colander until water runs clear.  Drain well, set colander on paper towels to absorb excess water.  Set aside

Place tomatoes, onion and garlic in a small food processor. Pulse until ingredients are pureed.  You’ll want about 1 cup of tomato/onion/garlic puree. Set aside.

Heat oil in a large, wide heavy-bottomed pot that has a tight-fitting lid over medium-high heat.  I have a Cuisinart 5.5 quart pot I use.  It’s wide and not too deep.  This is preferable to a narrow, deep pot as the rice has more surface area to cook. Once the oil is hot add the rice and cook, stirring constantly with a wooden spoon until the rice is lightly golden, about 5 minutes or so.  Be sure to keep stirring and don’t leave the rice unattended, it may burn.

Remove the pot from the burner and add the tomato puree mixture.  Turn the heat down to medium low.  Place the rice back on the burner and continue to stir for about 2 minutes.  Add the chicken broth and turn the heat up to high.  Add salt (and chile powder if using).  Give the rice one more stir and once the broth comes to a boil turn the heat down to medium – medium high (the broth should be bubbling).  Cook the rice undisturbed and uncovered for about 7 minutes or until the liquid barely covers the rice and craters appear on the surface.  Reduce the heat to low and cover the pot.  Set your timer for 20 minutes.

Once the rice is done, turn off the heat and leave undisturbed (do not open the lid) for at least 15 minutes.  Take off the lid and fluff the rice with a fork.

If you have leftovers, the rice freezes beautifully.

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