Boiled Rice for Curries, &c.

The Book of Household Management · Beeton, Mrs. (Isabella Mary) · 1861
Source
The Book of Household Management
Status
success · extracted 13 days ago
Not a recipe
No
Ingredients (3)
Instructions (11)
  1. Pick, wash, and soak the rice in plenty of cold water.
  2. Have ready a saucepan of boiling water.
  3. Drop the rice into the boiling water.
  4. Keep it boiling quickly, with the lid uncovered, until it is tender, but not soft.
  5. Take it up and drain it.
  6. Put it on a dish before the fire to dry.
  7. Do not handle it much with a spoon, but shake it about a little with two forks, that it may all be equally dried.
  8. Strew over a little salt.
Optional finishing
  1. Smooth the rice with the back of a spoon.
  2. Brush it over with the yolk of an egg.
  3. Set it in the oven to colour.
Original Text
BOILED RICE FOR CURRIES, &c. 1347. INGREDIENTS.—3/4 lb. of rice, water, salt. Mode.—Pick, wash, and soak the rice in plenty of cold water; then have ready a saucepan of boiling water, drop the rice into it, and keep it boiling quickly, with the lid uncovered, until it is tender, but not soft. Take it up, drain it, and put it on a dish before the fire to dry: do not handle it much with a spoon, but shake it about a little with two forks, that it may all be equally dried, and strew over a little salt. It is now ready to serve, and may be heaped lightly on a dish by itself, or be laid round the dish as a border, with a curry or fricassee in the centre. Some cooks smooth the rice with the back of a spoon, and then brush it over with the yolk of an egg, and set it in the oven to colour; but the rice well boiled, white, dry, and with every grain distinct, is by far the more preferable mode of dressing it. During the process of boiling, the rice should be attentively watched, that it be not overdone, as, if this is the case, it will have a mashed and soft appearance. Time.—15 to 25 minutes, according to the quality of the rice. Average cost, 3d. Sufficient for a large dish of curry. Seasonable at any time. RICE, in the native rough state, with the husk on, is called paddy, both in India and America, and it will keep better, and for a much longer time, in this state, than after the husk has been removed; besides which, prepared rice is apt to become dirty from rubbing about in the voyage on board ship, and in the warehouses. It is sometimes brought to England in the shape of paddy, and the husk detached here. Paddy pays less duty than shelled rice.
Notes