Rice dishes Recipe: Low Fat, Low Sugar
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- Allow 2 oz / 50 g of brown rice per person for a main meal.
- Add twice the volume of water as the volume of rice.
- Bring the water to a good rolling boil for three minutes.
- Cover the pan tightly and reduce the heat to the lowest possible simmer for 40 minutes to one hour. Most of the water will be absorbed by the rice and it should not be stirred while cooking.
- Remove from the heat and allow to stand for five minutes before serving.
Parboiled brown rice needs to be simmered for 25 -30 minutes.
The best way to reheat cooked rice is by steaming for 15 minutes.
Popped rice
- Cover the uncooked rice with cold water.
- Change the water morning and night until the rice has soaked for three full 24 hour days.
- Drain the rice and heat it in a heavy bottomed frying pan, stir constantly until all the rice has turned brown and popped.
- Popped rice can be stored for several weeks in an airtight container.
- Popped rice makes a crunchy addition to muesli or for a snack.
Fried rice
- For each 2 oz / 50 g portion, heat 1 tablespoon of olive oil in a deep frying pan until the oil is smoking. Then stir in the rice.
- Fry over a moderate heat for 5 minutes. White rice will turn translucent white again, but this change is not so easy to see with brown rice.
- Add 1/3 pint / 200 ml water or vegetable stock for each 2 oz / 50 g portion and simmer over the lowest heat until tender.
- The frying oil can be flavoured with cumin seeds, cassia, cloves and black pepper corns. These should be fried for thirty seconds before the rice is added.
Copyright Peter Thomson 2012-May-21
Why the low sugar, low fat lifestyle is easy
What is a healthy balanced diet?
Starchy foods - the basis of the diet
Plenty of fresh fruit and vegetables
Health is also dependent on exercise
Maintain a healthy body weight
Food Supplements pros and cons
Carbohydrates, Fats and Protein
Vitamins, Minerals and Trace Elements
Eat whole grain cereals, not highly refined flour
Further tips for a healthy lifestyle
How preserving affects nutrients
Getting Started - Changing your diet
Equipment for pressure cooking
Food mixers, food processors, grain mill
Ready meals, takeaways and cook/chill
Entertaining and special occasions
Picnics and children's party ideas
Diets for life stages - Pregnancy
Feeding Baby- breast or bottle
The Main Starch Grains: Wheat, Oats, Barley, Rye, Maize
The main starch grains: rice, millet and sorghum
Other starchy grains and flours: amaranth, buckwheat, quinnoa, teff, wild rice
Starchy roots and tubers: potato, sweet potato, jerusalem-artichoke, yam
Sesame, pumpkin, sunflower seeds
Starchy fruit: breadfruit, banana-plantain, water chestnut
Oils and fats: butter, olives, olive oil
Recipes for low-fat and low-sugar cookery
Rice with a hot vegetable sauce
Stuffed vine or cabbage leaves
Chestnuts with brussels sprouts
Chicken soup - pressure cooker
Vegetable spaghetti bolognaise
Low-fat yogurt sauces and dips
Spicy broad bean and pine kernel salad