Zunu wrote:But you know as well as I do that having 27 years of experience is no guarantee of expertise. I have had the unfortunate experience of managing individuals with 30+ years of experience who were somehow less knowledgeable than rookies.
So you're saying we should be skeptical of appeals to authority and undemonstrated claims of expertise? Hmm?
Zunu wrote:[P]retty sure I've seen you (Celedam) post one of his vidyas here.
I posted his hand-washing and popcorn-making videos…
viewtopic.php?p=250905#p250905viewtopic.php?p=250958#p250958…but no one reacted to them so I stopped.
Zunu wrote:So, I tried it and well, the rice definitely came out flakier than my usual. Not necessarily a good thing because I tend to prefer a little stickiness.
Besides giving it a toasted, nutty flavor, sautéing rice changes the surface of the grain (via the Maillard reaction, which is similar to but distinct from caramelization) and makes it more difficult to access the starch contained within. This can be useful in two different ways.
If you're using short grain rice, you can make a risotto: you cook the rice with lots of liquid (typically broth) over a very long time, and the starch is slowly drawn out and gelatinized in order to form a creamy sauce. If you didn't sauté the rice first, cooking it for that long and in that much liquid would turn it into a mushy porridge.
If you're using long grain rice, you can make a salad or pilaf. (And fried rice is really just a kind of pilaf, if you think about it.) Sautéing the rice first makes it come out even fluffier and more separated than it normally would, which is what you want if you're tossing it with other ingredients.
But as you noted, rice cooked that way can be unappealingly firm or even crunchy, especially if you weren't intending to make a salad or pilaf. The good news is it can be salvaged. The bad news is it takes more liquid and time, and that basically turns it into a risotto.
Brown rice is functionally the same as sautéd white rice — it is hulled but not polished, so it still has its bran coat and that keeps in the starch.
When we think of big bowls of the sticky white rice that is a staple in Asian cuisine (as opposed to corn, wheat, or potatoes), we're thinking of medium grain rice that is simply steamed. Many Western cooks — including 'ol AB there — say you shouldn't stir steamed rice, just fluff it with a fork. But they improperly assume you're making fluffy, Western-style, long grain rice. If you want sticky, Asian-style rice, then go ahead and stir it. Just be careful not to tip over from sticky to gummy.
Anyhow, since we've come back around to Alton Brown's videos, he just posted a new one…