My dear friend Debbie swears by warm rice pudding, but I'll never agree. For me, rice pudding is best served straight from the fridge. I want it cold. I want it thick. I want it creamy.
Rice
Home & Family: Expiration Dates
Home & Family, Gluten Free, Video
Home & Family: Rice Varieties
Rice, Decoded
Rice is the staple food for over half of the world’s population. As a commercial crop it has the third highest worldwide production (after maize and sugarcane). But, considering that much maize is not even grown for human consumption, rice is the most important crop to our species. It provides more than one fifth of the calories consumed around the world by humans.
Breakfast, Dairy Free, Side, Gluten Free
CORNED BEEF MUSUBI
What are your thoughts on SPAM? While I can't say I love the meat product dearly, I do find my palate tuned to the unique combination found in musubi. The Hawaiian dish pairs a slice of SPAM with sushi rice and some toasted seaweed, it's SPAM sushi. Hints of that dish find their way into my version of corned beef hash...
Dinner, Fall, Side, Veggies, Winter
BUTTERNUT RISOTTO
The most important ingredient in your risotto (and by far, the most often overlooked) is the stock. Go ahead and bicker over the rice (arborio or carnaroli?), the fat (olive oil or butter?), the acid (lemon juice or wine?), you’re just wasting time. No matter what combination of rice+fat+acid you settle on, if you use boxed vegetable or chicken stock your risotto will grow fat on that antiseptic flavor, the sanitized taste of cartoned stock.
INGREDIENTS
- 1 small Butternut Squash (about 1 pound)
- 1 Yellow Onion
- 3-4 tablespoons Olive Oil
- 1 cup Arborio Rice
- 1 glass White Wine (~3/4 cup)
- 1 quart Squash Stock
- Salt and Pepper to taste
GET BUSY
- Heat your oven to 450 degrees. Using a sharp knife, cut the rind off the squash, leaving bright orange all around. Cut the squash in half, scoop out the seeds, and then cut the flesh into small cubes (less than a centimeter). Add the squash rind and seeds to a small sauce pan on the side. Cover them with water (or extra veggie stock) and heat it over a low flame.
- Thinly slice the yellow onion and sauté with the olive oil in a dutch oven or other heavy bottomed stock pot. Add salt.
- When the onion is translucent, add the rice to the dutch oven and sauté just until the rice grains look lightly toasted.
- Add the white wine to the dutch oven, deglazing the pan. Stir in the cubed squash and cook for 5 minutes.
- Begin adding the warm stock one ladle at a time to the dutch oven. Allow the rice to absorb the liquid slowly, when it looks like the liquid is gone, add another ladle full.
- Stir and continue to ladle in stock until all the stock is gone, this should take about 30-35 minutes. Remove the risotto from your stove and serve.