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Category Archives: What’s For Dinner?

Local Gardens and Farms Have Plants

18 Monday Apr 2011

Posted by Bob and Robin in Canyon Bounty Farm, Interesting Information, Local Harvests, Local Markets, Things To Do, What's For Dinner?

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Here is some information on Canyon Bounty Farm that you may enjoy. You can find spring plants here and probably produce. Here is some information directly from their web page. Do check it out and let them know you found the link here. Cheers!

April 2011 Farm News


Greenhouse opens Saturday, April 30*
Open six days a week (Wednesday-Monday)
from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Closed on Tuesdays.

Remember: Cash and checks only.
We’ve been planting and filling up the greenhouses with delicious vegetables, herbs and beautiful flower starts. For a complete list of all the plants we plan to offer, click on the Shopping List/Clipboard on the left.

New this year is our farm’s own little organic seed line. It features dill, garden beans, arugula, lettuce, tomatoes, flowers, cilantro, Bug Bloom Blend and more. Also new are Hot Kaps (see picture). These handy paper cones are used to protect veggies from wind and cold.

*Easter weekend made me push back our opening one week. If you want to stop by earlier (April 25-29) we will be open and available from 9 a.m. – 6 p.m.

Looking forward to seeing you at the greenhouse, getting caught up and hearing about your garden plans for 2011. Don’t forget to bring your Think Boise First coupon (see below). 

——————————

If you go to their web site, there is a coupon there called the Think Boise First Coupon. The coupon book has many specials listed, and some for the Canyon Bounty Farm. “… Check out this fancy coupon book loaded with lots of great deals for local businesses in the Treasure Valley. There are several for Canyon Bounty Farm.” Cheers and try them out and Think Local!

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Spring Garden Salad Suggestion – Bagna Cauda

18 Monday Apr 2011

Posted by Bob and Robin in Recipes, Salads, Spring Vegies, Things To Do, Vegetables, What's For Dinner?

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Now this salad looks like an awesome use of those Spring vegies that have made an appearance in your garden already this year. The recipe and photo comes from Food and Wine. Why not give it a try?

Spring Vegetable Bagna Cauda

Recipe by: Seen Lippert
Source: Food and Wine
Pairing Suggestion: Piedmont, the original home of bagna cauda, is known for its Barolos and Barbarescos, but it also produces refreshing whites with the Arneis variety that pair nicely with the anchovy dip.

Ingredients:
Three 2-ounce cans oil-packed Flat Anchovies, drained and rinsed
10 Garlic cloves, thinly sliced
1½ c Extra-Virgin Olive Oil
4 T cold unsalted Butter
1 T fresh Lemon Juice
1 lbs Asparagus
1 lbs Fava beans or Edamame, shelled (about 4 ounces)
1 bunch Watercress, tough stems discarded
2 med Fennel Bulbs—halved, cored and thinly sliced lengthwise
2 bunches Red Radishes, trimmed
1 lbs Baby Carrots, halved
10 lg hard-cooked Eggs, peeled and quartered

Directions:
In a saucepan, combine the anchovies, garlic and oil. Simmer over moderately low heat until the garlic is very soft but not colored, about 30 minutes. Transfer the mixture to a blender and let cool for 10 minutes. Add the butter and lemon juice and puree until the bagna cauda is smooth.

Meanwhile, bring a large saucepan of water to a boil. Add the asparagus and cook until crisp-tender, about 3 minutes. Using a slotted spoon, transfer the asparagus to a plate and let cool. Add the shelled fava beans to the boiling water and cook for 5 minutes. Drain and let cool under cold running water. Pat dry; if using favas, peel off the beans’ tough outer skins.

Mound the watercress on a large platter. Arrange the fennel, radishes, carrots, eggs, asparagus and fava beans on top in separate piles and drizzle with some of the bagna cauda. Pour the remaining bagna cauda into a small bowl and serve with the vegetable platter.

——————————

So now you are asking yourselves, “What is a bagne cauda?” Here is some information.

Bagna càuda, (from the Piedmontese “hot sauce”, alternatively written bagna caôda or bagnacauda, etymologically related to Italian root bagn-, meaning “wet”) is a warm dip typical of Piedmont, Italy, but with numerous local variations. The dish, which is served and consumed in a manner similar to fondue, is made with garlic, anchovies, olive oil, butter, and in some parts of the region cream. (In the past walnut or hazelnut oil would have been used.) Sometimes, truffles are used in versions around Alba. The dish is eaten by dipping raw, boiled or roasted vegetables, especially cardoon, carrot, peppers, fennel, celery, cauliflower, artichokes, and onions. It is traditionally eaten during the autumn and winter months and must be served hot, as the name suggests.
Originally, in Piedmont, the Bagna càuda was placed in a big pan (peila) in the center of the table for communal sharing. Now, it is usually served in individual pots (the fojòt, a type of fondue pot traditionally made of terra cotta).

Interesting. Cheers and enjoy this salad.

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Capital City Public Market Opens!

16 Saturday Apr 2011

Posted by Bob and Robin in Special Events, Special Information, What's For Dinner?

≈ 1 Comment


Yea! It really must be Spring! Supposed to rain tomorrow, but I’m going any way to the Capital City Public Market in downtown Boise. I also heard where they want to expand to a building in the area and have specific booths for the vendors, education programs and cooking programs. That sounds great, but expensive. I hope they get the backing needed. In the meantime: See you at the Market!! Here is the link to the Capital City Public Market. Check it out.
From their web site we learn,

Welcome to the Capital City Public Market of Boise, Idaho. The Market is an on-going, centrally located gathering place where local farmers and producers can sell their products to community residents and visitors. The Market upholds the age-old tradition of allowing the consumer to meet the producer while encouraging the production and consumption of agricultural products in the Treasure Valley. Maintaining a diverse mix of products offered for sale at the Market will provide direct marketing opportunities for growers, specialty food vendors, and artisan vendors alike. The Market is more than just a place of business, it is a mutually beneficial and sustainable community activity.

As a bit of history of the Market also from their web site,

The Saturday market that is now known as the Capital City Public Market has lead a long and eventful life. The Market first started in 1994 when The S-16 Corporation united with Karen Ellis to start an open air market. Karen had been enamored by the vitality of Seattle’s Pike Street Market and had been researching the public market for some time. Under Karen’s supervision and with the help of the S-16 Corp. the Saturday Market was an instant success. Unfortunately for The Market, Karen had more interest in the project than her partners, and she was forced to move the market to a dirt lot on the corner of 8th & Main, what we now know as “The Hole” in 1996. During this move The Market and all of its 12 vendors became the member-owned, state non-profit organization that it is today.

In two years The Market became such a success that downtown businesses started to lobby the Capital City Development Corporation to allow The Market to shutdown and occupy 8th Street between Bannock and Idaho, where it flourished for two more years before expanding across the street to occupy two city blocks in 2000 with a vendor count of about 25.

In 2003, The Market made another big move across yet-another busy street and began to occupy The Grove. The addition of roughly two city blocks and the ambiance of The Grove allowed The Market to create an art-centric block where artists and performers could flourish in a nourishing environment. At this time The Market partnered with The Brick Oven Bistro, Boise Blue Art Supply, and Boise City Arts Commission to create the Emerging Artist program, as well as Arts for Kids.

In 2010, The Market moved one block north to occupy 8th Street from Bannock to Jefferson. While this block was very successful another move was needed. With the Market being in an urban area, pedestrian traffic has always been a safety concern. With help from the Boise City Police Department, ACHD, and ValleyRide the Market was able to relinquish the newly created north block and move those vendors onto Idaho Street which runs east and west. The new “T” layout has proved to be VERY successful for all involved. It has created a new feeling at the Market which is loved by customers and vendors alike.

In the following years The Market remained in its location, and has been able to grow steadily and mature into a market consisting of up to 150+ vendors a day in the peak of the season, and now consumes 6 blocks of Downtown Boise.

It takes a lot of hard work to achieve what has been done here. Tell the organizers “Thank-You” when you see them. It will be appreciated.

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Sushi Joy – Chinese and Japanese Cuisine, Boise

15 Friday Apr 2011

Posted by Bob and Robin in Chinese Food, Japanese Food, Photos, Photos By: Bob Young, Restaurant Reviews, Sushi Joy, What's For Dinner?

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We are always so extremely happy to write about new restaurants in Boise that are outstanding. We have found one! Sushi Joy – Chinese and Japanese Cuisine, 2275 W Main Street, Boise. (208) 433-8888. Every bit of a 5-Star rating and it is so well deserved. Everything that Robin and I had was outstanding! You can find a complete review at Sushi Joy Review which is located on our Restaurant Review page on our web page. We really encourage you to go and to take some friends with you. The Japanese food is scrumptious. In all fairness, we have not tried their Chinese food but will do so on our return visit. We had some really great sake with our dinners. The only drawback was that our green tea came in a ceramic cup with no handles. The cup was too hot to pick up and we had to ask for a little ice to cool it down. Please do visit them. Cheers! Just look at these photos.

Tiger prepares a Sashimi dish.

Sake
We had this Ozeki Sake Dry which is very dry and delicious. We also had a more traditional sake Ozeki Classic Junmai which also hit the spot. Both went very well with our meals.

Green Tea

(SU) Green Salad
Ozeki Classic Junmai Sake
I’d go back just for the salad. They make their own awesome dressing.

(A11) Soft Shelled Crab
soft shelled crab deep fried tempura flour, ponzo sauce for dipping
It has been so long since I have had Soft Shelled Crab. What a delight!! This is delicious.

(SA2) Sashimi Morawase Deluxe
the Chef’s choice of 18 pieces
This was an awesome dish. The diakon radish and mint leaves really added to it. The white fish is a white tuna. Delicious!

Cooked Sushi Combination
Kanikama unagi, shrimp, crab sticks
Another awesome dish!

Banana Boat Ice Cream
green tea ice cream, lichee ice cream, tempura fried banana

So there you go. A great meal. Let me add that although some of you may object to tempura fried anything, this tempura is light and not greasy. It does not lay in your stomach like a brick! It’s all in knowing how to prepare it. Try Sushi Joy …. I think you will be pleased. Total bill for the two of us – $64.70 plus tip. Plenty of food for the two of us and we shared the platters.

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Seghesio Wine Dinner at The Buzz

13 Wednesday Apr 2011

Posted by Bob and Robin in Main Dish, Party Time, Photos, Photos By: Bob Young, Things To Do, What's For Dinner?, Wine and Food

≈ 3 Comments


On April 12, 2011, The Buzz held another of their Wine Dinners. This year, they are featuring Family Wineries. The winery this month was the Seghesio Family Winery, located near Healdsburg, California in Sonoma. These wines were awesome and I think Robin and I found another benchmark Pinot Grigio. I will state my opinion of the wines and rate them, [20] being the highest score.

A beautiful smile.

Edd Lopez, District Sales Manager for the Seghesio Family Winery and Bob.

Here are the wines we had with our dinner.

Buzz’s Seghesio Sausage Bruschetta
2009 Seghesio Sonoma Zinfandel
15% alc, [19], $23.00 Would be great with any pasta dish. If you are in a quandry of what wine to have with dinner, try this one. I don’t think you’ll go wrong. Purchased 4 bottles.

Cold Summer Soup
2009 Seghesio Pinot Grigio
13% alc, [19] $20.00 This is a New Benchmark for us. Full of ripe fruit and pear. Lingering pear Would be great with an Avacado and Spinach Salad. The wine went extremely well with this soup. Purchased 4 bottles.

Chicken Marsala
Grilled Asparagus and Melon
Pasta Ponza
Popovers
2008 Seghesio Rockpile Zinfandel
15.6% alc, [19] $35.00 This wine went quite well with the chicken and all. Purchased 2 bottles.

Mixed Greens with Pickled Cauliflower and Pickled Red Onions
2010 Seghesio Arneis
13.3% alc, [15], $20.00. Sorry. I was not inpressed in comparison to the other wines we had tonight.

Chocolate Honey Almond Tart with Strawberry and Balsamic Vinegar
2008 Seghesio Homeranch Zinfandel
15.5% alc, [16], $35.00. One-half ton of juice per acre. Intense falvor. Hot wine. Even though it was a fairly low score, we did purchase 2 bottles.

The comment was made that, “… In California, you would pay $100.00 per plate for an event like this!” Believe me, we didn’t. $15.00 per plate! See what you missed? See you at the next Wine Dinner. Cheers!

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Robin’s Biscuits and Dried Beef

10 Sunday Apr 2011

Posted by Bob and Robin in Baking, Main Dish, Photos, Photos By: Bob Young, What's For Dinner?

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Last nights dinner and dessert, see Robin’s Apple Tarte Tartin, was really good. But breakfast this morning, topped it off. She made a variation on Martha Stewart’s Biscuits by adding flax seed and whole wheat flour. Then we added Creamed Chipped Beef to the biscuits. A good breakfast! Now to go and work it off by riding on the Greenbelt! Wish me luck and cheers!

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Awesome Birthday Dinner at Le Café de Paris

01 Friday Apr 2011

Posted by Bob and Robin in Birthdays, Party Time, Photos, Photos By: Bob Young, Things To Do, What's For Dinner?

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Every year at our Birthday, we have the choice of where we want to eat; what restaurant. Mickey D’s doesn’t count! This year, I chose Le Café de Paris because they were having a special wine dinner with Michel-Schlumberger Winery from the Dry Creek area of California. As usual, it was a good choice. What a great dinner and some super wines.

Here Robin and I are with Jacques Schlumberger. Such an interesting person and great to talk to. He brought some awesome wines that went quite well with dinner. Oh yes, the dinner! See the photos below …. That’s all there is left!

2007 Schlumberger Chardonnay
(Front label)
This was a great chardonnay and went extremely well with all courses of our dinner. Long finish. Jasmine flowers. “Notes of dried flower, tarragon, quince and dried apricot. Expresses minerality and crisp freshness. Light on oak or buttery flavors.”

Back label explaining about the wine.

First Course
Plateau Apéritif
Crab
Cheese and Chicken Croquets
Potato and Fish Salad on Croustine, Crudite

Second Course
Brandade Stuffed Salmon
and
Roasted Tuna Filet
marinara sauce
Rice Timbale
small shrimp rice, leek, potato
(This was an awesome rice dish)

Main Course
Roulade de Bœuf
spinach-crème filling
xeres-bay leaf sauce
and
Gâteau de Canard
potato purée, zucchini flan, duck egg
(Such an amazing Main Course)

Dessert
Delice au Chocolat
chilled Spanish chocolate dessert
similar to a mousse

Daffodil
So what does this have to do with dinner? Probably nothing. But when we left for dinner, this was not in bloom. However, when we got home, it was as you see it here. One of the first signs of Spring. What a delightful way to end a perfect dinner. Thank-You to Robin and to all the folks at Le Café de Paris for this wonderful Birthday Dinner! (Anyone have a magnum of TBA? It’s my 70th next year.) Cheers!

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Chicken in Basil Cream

26 Saturday Mar 2011

Posted by Bob and Robin in Chicken, Recipes, What's For Dinner?

≈ Leave a comment



This recipe and the photo to the left is from
Recipe Rapsody, another one of my many recipe/cooking blogs that I subscribe to. The Lamb Shanks alla romano, previous post, may not appeal to some of you. But chicken? That appeals to almost everyone. And with a basil cream sauce and asparagus, Yum-O! The original recipe can be found at the link above. This just looked good and different. Let us know if you try it and what you thought of it. Cheers!

Chicken in Basil Cream

Recipe source: adapted from Fast and Easy by Suzanne Somers and Suzie S.
Makes 8 servings. Per serving: 544 calories; 41 g fat; 2.5 g carbohydrates; 0 g fiber; 36 g protein
Bake and Fry Mix
1 cup minced onion
1 teaspoons salt
¼ t Black pepper
¼ t ground Sage
½ t dried Rosemary
½ t dried Coriander
½ t dried Thyme
¼ t dried Oregano
¼ t Paprika
¼ t Red Pepper Flakes
1 Bay Leaf, crushed
½ c grated Parmesan cheese
Chicken and Sauce
8 (4 oz) boneless, skinless Chicken Breasts
1 stick (1/2 cup) unsalted Butter
1 c Chicken Broth
2 c Heavy Whipping Cream
1 (4 oz) jar sliced Pimentos, drained
1 c grated Parmesan cheese
2 T dried Basil
¼ t Pepper
Directions:
Place minced onion in food processor fitted with blade attachment. Process one minute. Add remaining mix ingredients, except the cheese, and process another minute. Add cheese and pulse until combined. Place in a gallon-sized Ziploc bag. Add chicken to the bag and shake until every piece is coated.

On medium-high heat, cook chicken in butter on both sides until juices run clear, about 10 minutes. Remove and keep warm. Add broth to the skillet. Bring to a boil over medium heat; stir to loosen browned bits. Stir in the cream, pimientos and basil; boil and stir for 1 minute. Reduce heat. Add the Parmesan cheese and pepper; cook and stir until heated through. Pour over the chicken and serve.

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Lamb Shanks alla romana

26 Saturday Mar 2011

Posted by Bob and Robin in Italian foods, Lamb, Recipe By: Bob Young, Recipes, What's For Dinner?

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I have told you this before, but it bears to mention again. I subscribe to an Italian (among several ethnic food blogs) food blog called Memorie de Angelina. The photo on the left is from that blog, as is the recipe. I get some really great recipes from this site. Here is another one using lamb shanks and this sounds delicious! One might be able to replace the lamb with pork shanks, but I don’t know how that would be with the way these are prepared. If you have not looked at this blog, do so. It is a fantastic blog with many ideas , recipes and history. Try this recipe and let us know how you liked it or not. Cheers!

Lamb Shanks alla romana

Baby milk-fed lamb or abbacchio is one of the wonders of Roman cooking, in particular in the spring. Lamb that young is not often found in markets in our neck of the woods, but the same techniques work well with mature lamb as well. So the other day I took some lamb shanks I had in the freezer, braised them slowly until the meat was falling-off-the-bone tender, and finished them with flavorings typical of abbachio alla romana, Roman-Style Baby Lamb. The result was certainly different, but delicious all the same. I served the shanks with polenta, a combination perhaps more typical of America than Rome, but all the same it makes a fine combination for a piatto unico.
Source: Lamb Shanks alla romano

Ingredients (for 4 servings):
4 lamb shanks
olive oil (or lard)
Salt and pepper
White wine
For the finish:
1-2 cloves of garlic
2-3 anchovy fillets
A spoonful or two white wine vinegar, enough to form a paste

Directions:
Sauté the garlic and rosemary in olive oil (or lard) in a heavy casserole until the garlic has been ever so lightly browned and fragrant. Remove both the garlic and the rosemary from the pot.

Add the lamb shanks to the seasoned fat and brown them well on all sides. Season them generously with salt and pepper, turning all the while. Add a splash of white wine to the pot, turning the lamb shanks around once again to coat them well. Then cover the pot tightly and lower the heat. Let the lamb shanks simmer, covered, until very tender, about 2-1/2 hours or so. Moisten from time time, as needed, with a bit more wine or water.

About 20 minutes before the lamb is done, mash together the garlic and anchovy finely, then add a bit of the vinegar, enough to form a loose paste. Add this mixture to the lamb and mix well. Then finish simmering the lamb. Serve hot as a secondo. For a one-dish meal (but not in the usual Roman style but very nice all the same) accompany with some hot polenta.

Blog Author’s Notes: They say that meat is sweetest close to the bone, and lamb shanks are certainly evidence for that assertion. I don’t recall shanks being served on their own in Rome, even if lamb was perhaps the favorite local meat. Rib chops, as is the iconic scottaditto (Grilled chops eaten with your fingers) were, of course, very popular, but otherwise the whole baby lamb would be cut up into pieces and prepared just like this. Although shanks are particularly delicious prepared this way, the same method can be used with lamb stew meat or cut up lamb shoulder meat, or even with shoulder chops, adjusting times according. One hour should do fine for any of these other options.

In some recipes, chopped rosemary is added to the finishing paste, but personally I find that this gives it too strong a flavor. Many recipes call for sage as well as rosemary. Ada Boni, in her classic Talismano della Felicità (Italian Cookbook) tells you to add the garlic, rosemary and sage, all chopped up, to the pot after you have browned the lamb pieces (in lard). If you want a stronger flavor, by the way, add the finishing paste only a few minutes before the end or even at the very last minute. By the way, don’t worry about the anchovies if you don’t care for them—they melt into the sauce as the lamb simmers and lend a savory, but not at all fishy, note to the dish. By the way, in Rome itself abbacchio alla romana is often called abbacchio alla cacciatora.

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Short Grain vs Medium Grain vs Long Grain Rice

19 Saturday Mar 2011

Posted by Bob and Robin in Anthropology of Food, Rice, Special Information, What's For Dinner?

≈ 2 Comments


I had the car radio on while driving through Boise and the station was our local NPR station – the car radio only gets one station! They were having a discussion on the different types, not particularly the different kinds, of rice. No, rice is not just rice. With over 40,000 different kinds of rice, the varieties are almost endless. If you wanted to try a different kind of rice each day until you got through those 40,000 varieties, it would take you 105.9 years! It’s probably too late for me to start that experiment now. So, I thought it might be interesting to explore this idea and get to know rice. Here goes -In looking at many, many pages on rice types and kinds, I did find this one from Hubpages about the 3 classifications (types) for rice. Here is part of that article.

3 Classifications for Rice Length: Long, Medium and Short

By Kathryn Vercillo

There are literally tens of thousands of different varieties of rice in the world. However, rice can actually be broken down into just three different types if you want to keep things simple. There is long-grain, medium-grain and short-grain rice. As the classifications suggest, the three different types of rice grains are categorized based upon their length as compared to their width. A skinny, long type of rice grain would be a long-grain whereas a round-ish grain that’s about as wide as it is long would be a short-grain.
Long vs. Medium vs. Short Grain Rice

Long-Grain Rice Long-grain rice is easy to identify because it is the narrowest or skinniest of the different types of rice that you might come across. If a piece of rice is at least four times in length what it is in width then it is considered to be a long grain. Long-grain rice is usually the fluffiest type of rice. For that reason it is considered the best type of rice to serve with sauces; it holds the sauce well but it also tastes good plain. A popular example of long-grain rice is Basmati. It is long grain rice with a beautiful fragrance. Traditionally it was grown in India, but now famous around the world. On the other hand, Jasmine is an excellent long-grain fragrant white rice. It has a slight jasmine aroma after cooking and are slightly stickier than Basmati. It is grown in Thailand and used throughout Southeast Asia.

Short-Grain Rice. Whereas long-grain rice is skinny and tall, short-grain rice is short and fat. It often looks round in shape because the width is so close in size to the length with this grain. Short-grain rice generally has a higher level of starch content than the other grains do making it a type of rice that tends to be sticky. For that reason it’s especially popular for rice pudding although it can be eaten alone or in other rice dishes as well. A popular example of short-grain rice is Arborio. Arborio is a short-grain rice that takes its name from the town of Arborio in the Po Valley of Northern Italy where it was originally grown. It is high in starch content and thus has a starchy taste of its own.

Medium-Grain Rice. Once you get a good idea of what constitutes long-grain rice and what would be considered short-grain rice, you’ll also be able to identify medium-grain rice. It’s the type of rice that falls somewhere in between the two other grains. For example, a rice grain that is about three times as long as it is wide would be a medium-grain rice. Medium-grain rice is terrific in rice-based dishes such as paella and risotto.

OK. So now you’re going to ask, “But what about brown rice?” Hmmmm.

Brown Rice. Brown Rice is not a separate variety of rice, but any rice, short-grain or long-grain, which is not polished or part is called brown rice. They are more nutritious than the white rice and are of two kinds:
Fully Unpolished – When the entire layer of bran is not removed.
Partially Unpolished – When bran is only partially removed.
Although it takes longer to cook, the more nutritious rice is brown or hulled rice. The rice is milled to remove the hull, but keep the rice bran layer and the germ. It has more of a nutty flavor is chewy. It is more nutritious and has a lower glycemic index than white rice. The bran contains most of the minerals and vitamins. It is the bran that also gives it the darker color. Any type of rice can be milled as brown rice. It is more expensive because less people like to eat it, and it has a much shorter shelf life. (Kinds of Rice)


So with all of this information, sum it up in one or two sentences. “The Long and Short Of It. Although there’s an exact science to the measurement of rice grains, as a [home] cook you really only need to know the basics. A long skinny type of rice grain will be less sticky and a bit firmer than a short, fat rice grain.” Now, go and try each of the types of rice. The web is full of information and recipes for using rice. There’s more to it than steaming, add butter, eat. Enjoy!

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