Showing posts with label Rice Dishes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rice Dishes. Show all posts

Saturday, October 17, 2015

Spanish Rice with Chicken Sausage


When the GrandBoys (8 & 9 year-olds) have dinner with us once a week, it's a challenge to come up with tempting, yet nutritious meals. I was a little hesitant to try rice on them and was taken by surprise when they loved it and ask for more. Here the Spanish rice is served with chicken sausage with asiago cheese and spinach.

I made the rice the same way I make pulao/pilaf. The rice is washed until the water runs clear and left to drain in a sieve until it's needed. In order to avoid detection, the onions, peppers, carrots and tomatoes are diced into minute pieces. 



The Spanish flavour is achieved through the use of dry fiesta ranch dip mix.


Wednesday, December 10, 2014

Baked Mushroom Pilaf

Baked Mushroom Pilaf
Did you know you can bake rice from scratch in the oven? It works really well and combined with a couple of cans of soup and mushrooms, it tastes amazing! Oh, I almost forgot to mention that most of the taste comes from the butter which is the fifth ingredient! No need to add salt because the soups have plenty.

Facebook is my #1 go-to source for recipes these days. A couple of days ago, I came across a recipe called Stick of Butter Rice which I vowed to try as soon as possible. It sounded divine. Today was the perfect time to experiment because I have to take something for a Christmas potluck tomorrow. 

Normally I would just point you to the original recipe, but because I used Basmati rice, baking times were a little different and I added fresh shiitake mushrooms. The umami from the mushrooms and butter make this a winner!

Ingredients:
1 cup Basmati rice, rinsed in several changes of water & drained
1 (10 oz.) can Campbell's Cream of French Onion soup
1 (10 oz.) can Campbell's Beef Broth
1 (1/2 cup) stick of butter, sliced
8 oz. shiitake mushrooms, sliced

Directions:
  1. Pre-heat oven to 425*F.
  2. Place drained rice in a 9X9 inch glass baking dish.
  3. Pour both cans of soup over rice.
  4. Layer mushrooms over top and dot with sliced butter.
  5. Cover baking dish with aluminum foil and bake at 452*F for 30 minutes.
  6. Take foil off & bake for another 20 minutes just until edges crisp & brown.
  7. Turn oven off and take baking pan out of oven.
  8. Cover dish with foil and leave at room temperature for 10-20 minutes.
Serve with a salad or raita such as Fuji Apple Raita. It tastes yummy!




Tuesday, October 14, 2014

Spanish Rice with Chicken


Coming up with something new, interesting and tasty for our Tuesdate night with a GrandBoy is always a challenge. Spanish rice with chicken came to mind because the boys seem to enjoy eating at Taco Bell. Served with sliced cucumbers and shredded lettuce, the fried rice can be rolled up in soft, flour tortillas and eaten like a burrito. Hope Kole likes his dinner tonight. 



Tuesday, July 01, 2014

Burmese Ohn Htamin - Cooked in the Microwave Oven

Ohn Htamin
(Rice Cooked in Coconut Milk)
I've blogged before about making Ohn Htamin on the stove top and that recipe is fine if you have ample time on your hands to saute the onions and rice prior to setting it to simmer on the stove top. Here is a quick and easy way to achieve the same results when there's no time to waste. It is almost a guarantee that you will not be disappointed.

Soon after we arrived in Canada in 1977, we bought our first microwave oven. It was an expensive piece of equipment but because it was such a new technology, I was wary of using it to its full potential. Boiling water for tea or coffee, reheating left-over food or thawing a frozen piece of fish or poultry was about the extent of its use in our home.

Three decades later, the microwave oven is proving to be an integral part of my kitchen. I've progressed to making quite a few dishes in the microwave oven and like it because it cuts down dramatically on the cooking time.

This method of preparing Ohn Htamin is the perfect example of how useful an appliance it is!

Monday, November 18, 2013

Spanish Chicken Rice

Spanish Chicken Rice Bowl
Spanish Chicken Rice Skillet
GrandBoy #1 is spending the evening with us today, so this dish was made in his honor. I removed his portion before adding the green onions & chili powder. The fajita chicken strips can be replaced with shredded rotisserie or any form of left-over roasted chicken. The rice was cooked and refrigerated overnight which prevents it from becoming mushy even after all the tossing and turning.

Wednesday, July 03, 2013

Burmese Htamin Let Thoke - Rice & Noodle Hand-Mixed Salad

A rainbow salad of small quantities of left-overs
with rice, noodles, fish & tamarind sauces as
the main ingredients

Sunday, June 09, 2013

Burmese Hsan Pyoke With Meatballs (Congee or Rice Porridge)


Yield: Serves 6   
Prep Time: 5 minutes 
Total Time: 30minutes 

Hsan Pyoke (English translation is Rice Boiled) is a recuperative comfort food for wet/cold weather or when someone is recovering from an illness. I used day-old short-grained, steamed white rice which I've used to make fried rice, as well. This is a quick version of the same soup I made a short while ago, except this time I had all the vegetables on hand, the soup was made in under half an hour, the minced chicken was replaced with meatballs and the soup base was made with a teaspoon of Ajinomoto instead of dried shrimp.

Ingredients
2 cups rice
5 cups water
2 Tbsp. dried shrimp (or scallops), diced
   or 1 tsp. Ajinomoto
10-12 meatballs, quartered
1 heaped Tbsp. ginger, julienned or paste
2 cups diced carrots, celery, onions and peas
Salt to taste

Garnish:
Cilantro, chopped
Deep fried onions & garlic
Coarse Salt*
Lime or lemon juice
                                                                                          
Directions:
  1. Cook rice and water until rice is very soft.
  2. Add dried shrimp or Ajinomoto, salt and vegetables.
  3. Stir well and simmer until vegetables are very soft.
  4. Add meatballs & ginger; simmer uncovered to gruel consistency.
  5. Adjust salt to taste, remove from heat and pour into serving bowls.
  6. Garnish with cilantro, fried onions & garlic, coarse salt, sesame oil & a squeeze of lime.
** Coarse Salt, or Muoi Tom in Vietnamese, is a garnish that contains the following ingredients: Salt, Chilli, Dried Shrimp and Garlic. It tastes great sprinkled on soups, noodles, rice & butter/ghee, lentils or on buttered toast.













Vietnamese Coarse Salt and Ingredients

Thursday, May 30, 2013

Burmese Hsan Pyoke (Congee or Rice Porridge)


Yield: Serves 6   
Prep Time: 5 minutes 
Total Time: 45 minutes + overnight

Hsan Pyoke (translated in English to Rice Boiled) is a recuperative comfort food for wet/cold weather or when someone is recovering from an illness. I used left-over steamed white rice from the Chinese restaurant, which I've used to make fried rice, as well. The package of frozen vegetables contains diced carrots, onions, peas, celery and potatoes.  Cooking rice the night before and leaving overnight at room temperature gives this soup a smooth and creamy texture. The minced chicken in this recipe can be omitted or replaced with flaked catfish, salmon or imitation crab and the chicken stock can be replaced with vegetable stock or plain water.

Monday, February 25, 2013

Burmese Coconut Rice - Ohn Htamin


Rice is an essential part of any Asian or Indian meal. In my home, we're particular about what kind of rice we eat. Basmati rice is our favourite, but if that isn't available, jasmine rice comes in at a close second. Packaged instant rice tastes horrible when one is used to either basmati or jasmine long-grain rice. Some people prefer short-grain sticky rice which I have yet to experiment with, and try to avoid because of its high starch content. So the discussion here focuses on long-grain rice.

The easiest way to prepare long-grain rice is to wash it, let it soak for 10-15 minutes and cook it with double the quantity of water in the rice cooker. No need to worry about it catching and burning at the bottom because most rice cookers turn off automatically when the water is absorbed completely. 

Cooking rice on the stove top is really easy to do, but I would suggest setting a timer as a reminder to turn off the stove so the rice doesn't burn. I've blogged about making perfect basmati rice on the stove top and in the microwave oven and my methods have been successful every time.

Now, to get back to this delicious recipe for Ohn Htamin, it forms the base for a festive Burmese meal because it goes so well with any sipyan or Burmese curry. The memories of our childhood in Burma come rushing back at the thought of this meal! The perfect condiment for Ohn Htamin is dry balachaung, also an essential part of the Burmese table. 

Friday, September 07, 2012

Recipes I Must Try

Here is a list of recipes that I found on other blogs that I must try out in my kitchen.
Sources:

Blog Hop
Rice Dishes
  1. Baby Potato Biryani
  2. Cauliflower Biryani 
  3. Chettinad Mushroom Biryani
  4. Easy Fish Biryani
  5. Malabar Coconut Rice
  6. Masala Congee 
Appetizers
  1. Sago Potato Rolls
Vegetable Dishes
  1. Bean Sprouts with Tofu
  2. Brinjal Theyal
  3. Cabbage Carrot Thoran
  4. Carrot Thoran
  5. Cauliflower Thoran
  6. Chayote Thoran - Chayote/Darjeeling Squash cooked with Thoran Mix.
  7. Mixed Vegetable Thoran
  8. Quick Cauliflower Sabzi
  9. Spinach Thoran
  10. Spinach Stir Fried with Garlic
  11. Thoran Mix - a shredded unsweetened coconut mix used to cook vegetables and dal.
  12. Winged Beans with Eggs
  13. Winged Beans Thoran
Main Dishes
  1. Chicken Fry
  2. Dry Chicken Curry (Kethal Chicken)
  3. Fish Curry
  4. Fish Fry
  5. Ground Chicken and Eggs
  6. Hot and Spicy Chili Crab
  7. Lentils (Toor Dal) with Mutton and Brinjal
  8. Malai Kofta Curry
  9. Mutton Curry
  10. Mutton Fry
  11. Paneer Malai Kofta
  12. Pork in Coconut Milk - Slow Cooked
  13. Prawn & Potato Fry
  14. Puliya Mulaku Fish Curry
  15. Singapore Style Pepper Chicken
  16. South Indian Mutton Curry
  17. Special Chili Chicken
Lentils
Sauces and Accompaniments
Noodles
  1. Aam Doi - Baked Mango Flavoured Yogurt - Tried and truly delicious!
  2. Black Glutinous Rice in Coconut Milk
  3. Gulab Jamun - Pantua
  4. Mango Burfi
  5. Mango Fudge - Mango Burfi
  6. Pati Shapta - Crepes with Coconut Filling
  7. Shahi Tukda 

Friday, March 30, 2012

Quick & Easy Fried Rice With Bacon And Peas


Fried Rice with Bacon & Peas
Left over white/steamed rice, unless cooked at home, usually turns hard and inedible the next day.  I usually freeze the left over rice in Ziploc bags until I'm ready to turn it into fried rice.

Ingredients:

2 cups cold cooked white rice (preferably short-grain sticky rice)
1 Tbsp. dark roasted sesame oil
2 tsp. dark soy sauce
3 Tbsp. light soy sauce
4-5 slices bacon
2 Tbsp. vegetable oil
1 large yellow onion, chopped
4-5 cloves garlic, chopped
1 Tbsp. butter
1 large egg, beaten with salt & pepper
1 cup peas
2-3 stalks green onion, chopped

Method:
  1. Remove all lumps from the rice with your fingers.
  2. Pour sesame oil and soy sauces on rice and mix until rice is coated well.  Set aside. 
  3. Fry bacon until crispy.  Remove bacon, crumble and set aside.
  4. In the same pan, heat vegetable oil and saute onion and garlic until translucent.
  5. Add rice and crumbled bacon to pan and toss.
  6. Make a well in the center of the rice and melt butter in well.
  7. Add beaten egg.  When it begins to set, combine it with the rice.
  8. Stir frozen peas into rice and garnish with green onions.
  9. Serve immediately.