Yes, brown rice takes longer to cook. In order for your rice cooker to stay
on longer, you need to add more liquid. As far as I have found, for white
rice it's often one cup water for one cup rice. For brown rice just add
another half cup of liquid. You might have to play around with the amount of
liquid to see how it goes. Good luck

Drew Hunthausen
The No Excuses Blind Guy
#1 Blind and Hearing Impaired Motivational Speaker, Triathlete,
& International Best Selling Author

Get my free guide, The Five Keys To Living A No Excuses Life Filled With
Joy, Peace, and Prosperity!
http://DrewsInspirations.com

To book Drew for your event go to
http://bookdrew.com
(714) 296-7111

With an Attitude of Gratitude and no excuses, The Best Is Yet To Come!
http://NoExcusesBlindGuy.com




-----Original Message-----
From: Cookinginthedark On Behalf Of Larry Gassman via Cookinginthedark
Sent: Friday, July 31, 2020 9:04 AM
To: cookinginthedark@acbradio.org
Cc: larrygass...@roadrunner.com
Subject: [CnD] Cooking Brown Rice in a rice cooker

Hi all,
I've cooked white rice in a rice cooker for years and now want to switch to
brown because it is healthier.
But, my first attempt was just okay.
I usually use a cup of rice, some butter, some Lowerys seasoning, and a can
of low sodium Chicken Boullion.
When I tried it with Brown rice, the rice came out rather chewy, and may not
have been done, even though the rice cooker did click off.
I do not have a setting for brown rice on my rice cooker.
At least, I don't think I do.
I googled some recipes today and found one in particular that might work.
But my twin brother John and I are the only ones eating for the most part.
So could I cut this in half?
Should I ignore the chicken boullion based on the ingreedients given in this
recipe?
Thank you for any hints and help.
Larry

Brown Rice in a rice cooker

The best quantity to cook is 2 cups of rice with 4 cups water.  If this is
your first time, that's what I recommend you start with.
5) Add salt
Salt makes a huge difference in the brown rice taste, so don't forget to add
it.  I always add salt directly to the rice cooker, right after adding rice
and water.  I use 1/4 tsp of salt for each 1 cup of uncooked rice.  If it's
not salty enough for you, just increase the salt amount next time to 1/2
tsp.
6) Cook in the rice cooker
Set the rice cooker to cook :)  If you have the "Brown Rice" setting, use
that.  If you only have the "Rice" or "White Rice" setting, just use that -
if you used the brown rice to water ratio above, it should turn out just
fine.
Make sure to never open the rice cooker while the rice is cooking, or it
will mess up the rice!  Be patient and wait until the cooking cycle is done.
7) Fluff with fork after cooking
When the rice is done cooking in the rice cooker, it won't look like the
fluffy rice on the above picture.  In order to get it to be fluffy, you have
to fluff it with a fork!  Just get a regular fork and stir the rice with it,
separating the grains until is looks tasty and fluffy.
8) Add optional seasonings
You can eat your brown rice as is, or to kick the flavor up a notch you can
use extra seasonings.  You can add a dab of butter and a squeeze of lemon
juice, as well as a sprinkle of your favorite spices to season the brown
rice.   Enjoy!
 

_______________________________________________
Cookinginthedark mailing list
Cookinginthedark@acbradio.org
http://acbradio.org/mailman/listinfo/cookinginthedark

_______________________________________________
Cookinginthedark mailing list
Cookinginthedark@acbradio.org
http://acbradio.org/mailman/listinfo/cookinginthedark

Reply via email to