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kayb

kayb

2 hours ago, ElsieD said:

I have tried three times now to cook plain old rice in the IP.   It always comes out too crunchy and too "wet".   Basmati and jasmine rice turn out just fine but not the regular plain old North American variety.   Any suggestions appreciated.   Thanks. 

 

I do 1.75:1 water-to-rice ratio, salt the water, use the "rice" setting, and then generally leave it on "keep warm" for 15-20 minutes or so. I suspect that allows it to steam and take up the additional water. I use whatever generic variety of rice, mostly likely Riceland-produced but the store brand, is the cheapest, and, like you, use it when the taste doesn't matter much. 

 

FWIW, I use about the same method for brown rice, only I extend the "keep warm" time to a minimum of 30 minutes. I've left it as long as an hour, but if I do that purposely, I might go up to 1:1 on the water-rice ratio. I learned early on that when I didn't do the wait time with brown rice, it would be soupy and still crunchy.

kayb

kayb

2 hours ago, ElsieD said:

I have tried three times now to cook plain old rice in the IP.   It always comes out too crunchy and too "wet".   Basmati and jasmine rice turn out just fine but not the regular plain old North American variety.   Any suggestions appreciated.   Thanks. 

 

I do 1.75:1 water-to-rice ratio, salt the water, use the "rice" setting, and then generally leave it on "keep warm" for 15-20 minutes or so. I suspect that allows it to steam and take up the additional water. I use whatever generic variety of rice, mostly likely Riceland-produced but the store brand, is the cheapest, and, like you, use it when the taste doesn't matter much. 

 

FWIW, I use about the same method for brown rice, only I extend the "keep warm" time to a minimum of 30 minutes. I've left it as long as an hour, but if I do that purposely, I might go up to 1:1 on the water-rice ratio.

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