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Thread: Rice Pudding

  1. #1
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    Rice Pudding

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    I tend to make a lot of simmered rice pudding. It's easy and SKnot likes it, and it's comfort food.

    Just had a potful that turned out unusually good.

    Stove Top Rice Pudding

    1 cup brown rice
    2 cups water
    1 bay leaf
    cinnamon (lots! maybe a tablespoon?)

    Simmer until rice has started to swell. Then add:

    more cinnamon
    any other spice you like
    diced candied ginger
    chopped roasted and salted almonds

    When that has just about absorbed all the water, add:

    vanilla (I dunno, maybe a teaspoon?)
    sugar (quarter cup or third cup or something like that)
    soy milk enough to make pudding runny again

    simmer some more, until rice is tender. Add more soy milk as needed. Keep it at oatmeal consistency. Then add:

    salt as needed
    more cinnamon
    more candied ginger
    1 diced apple

    Fold it together and turn off the heat. When the apple is heated through, serve it up quick with soy milk poured over it.

    I need more rice pudding recipes! I've seen baked loaf-like rice pudding at a restaurant, smooth tapioca-like rose scented rice pudding, custardy baked rice pudding, etc. I'd love to have some more tried and tested in the real world rice pudding recipes. Please share yours if you have one!
    "If Americans want to live the American Dream, they should go to Denmark." - Richard Wilkinson

  2. #2
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    It looks like you don't do dairy, Knot, but this is an easy recipe that I make a lot. I'm not sure how it would work with soy milk:

    4 cups milk
    1/2 c rice
    1/2 c sugar
    1 egg
    1 t vanilla

    Boil the milk, add the rice and sugar, and lower the heat to a slow simmer. Beat the egg and vanilla with 1 cup of the hot milk mixture. Add the egg mixture to the pot in a stream while stirring. Let simmer for one hour, stirring occasionally. Pour into another container to cool (it will not be thick at this point, but thickens as it cools). I usually add raisins and cinnamon right at the end, but you can add anything you like.

  3. #3
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    Red, yours sounds more custard-y.
    (custardy=yummy)
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  4. #4
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    Yum.
    I love rice pudding and bread pudding too.
    And pretty much anything with crystalized ginger.

  5. #5
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    Knotted, looks like your recipe could be tried in a rice cooker?? Am just a lazy bum. I used to cook white /brown rice in pot over stove for lst 25 years of cooking life. Then got lazy.

    A rice pudding recipe with milk in it might burn in rice cooker.
    Just wondering. We have at the moment, red rice on hand. The grain is truly reddish-brown.

    I have heard of, but not yet tried black rice pudding. Have cooked with black rice which turns water dark purple. Kind of neat.
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  6. #6
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    Not sure of the exact recipe, but Thai people do a form of rice pudding with black rice and coconut milk. Of course coconut milk isn't exactly a low fat food, though you can get lower fat versions.
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  7. #7
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    I love rice pudding! I add raisins to mine also.

    DH freaks out when he sees me putting sugar or milk in rice........but then he eats cold rice with ketchup on it!!!
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  8. #8
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    I actually have not made rice pudding yet. Nor do I go out of my way to order rice pudding off a menu.

    But have had several times a delicately sweetened rice pudding flavoured with saffron in a Iranian restaurant. Lovely stuff.

    Another interpretation, was rice pudding with a bit of rosewater. Both definitely are Middle Eastern.
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  9. #9
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    I like it Indian style, with cardamom.

    (Yeah, I know, for all I talk about avoiding dairy, it sure seems like my favorite foods are dairy-laden. - but supposedly that's one of the things about food allergies, they're kind of an addiction - )
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  10. #10
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    Quote Originally Posted by OakLeaf View Post
    I like it Indian style, with cardamom.

    (Yeah, I know, for all I talk about avoiding dairy, it sure seems like my favorite foods are dairy-laden. - but supposedly that's one of the things about food allergies, they're kind of an addiction - )
    You must go through epi-pens by the dozens!
    "If Americans want to live the American Dream, they should go to Denmark." - Richard Wilkinson

  11. #11
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    here's a question from a person who's never made rice pudding:

    the rice you speak of in your ingredients, are they left over rice that's already cooked, or uncooked rice?

    I must admit most creamy things make me feel sick, so the one without milk sounds more palatable for me.

  12. #12
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    Quote Originally Posted by KnottedYet View Post
    You must go through epi-pens by the dozens!
    ha, no, fortunately it's the kind of allergy that makes me tired, swollen and congested in every mucous membrane - not the life-threatening anaphylactoid kind. I've had the other kind, but not from any food I eat on purpose (in fact, I haven't been able to identify what it was that set me off, only that it was at the same restaurant three times with food that shouldn't have contained anything I don't know I can safely eat)... So I do carry an Epi-Pen, but never had to use it. They're expiring this month and due to be replaced again...
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  13. #13
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    Quote Originally Posted by KnottedYet View Post
    You must go through epi-pens by the dozens!
    indeed allergy is a pretty widely misused term. Most people who think they have food allergies do not..... I'm not saying that they don't truly have some kind of reaction to what they avoid. There are other things that can happen. You can have intolerances like lactose intolerance from not producing the proper enzymes, or gluten intolerance from celiac disease, but these are not allergies in the proper sense of the word.(itching, sneezing, wheezing, hives, anaphalaxsis!) Of course lots of people do say they are allergic to something that they just don't like too. My neighbor was "allergic" to chicken.... until he tried it again, found that it wasn't so bad and started to get over his allergy.
    Last edited by Eden; 12-22-2009 at 10:29 AM.
    "Sharing the road means getting along, not getting ahead" - 1994 Washington State Driver's Guide

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  14. #14
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    I was diagnosed by an allergist. I know there's controversy among allergists over whether the kind of reaction I have is truly an allergy, or whether only the anaphylactoid type is, but I'll leave that to the scientists.

    It's not lactose intolerance (dairy is by no means the only food I'm allergic to, I'm more allergic to goat's milk than cow's, and digestive symptoms are minimal, attributable only to an excess of mucus) and it's not celiac (gluten-containing grains are not the only ones I'm allergic to, and in fact I'm more allergic to rye and corn than I am to wheat).

    Basically, I have the same type of reaction to foods as I do to pollens and molds. Fatigue, systemic edema, congestion and excess mucus production in all mucus membranes, and palpitations (SVT). As my allergic load increases, so do my symptoms - so I'm much more strict about my diet during weed season, for instance. No one disputes that inhalant allergies are truly allergies.
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  15. #15
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    Quote Originally Posted by badger View Post
    here's a question from a person who's never made rice pudding:

    the rice you speak of in your ingredients, are they left over rice that's already cooked, or uncooked rice?

    I must admit most creamy things make me feel sick, so the one without milk sounds more palatable for me.
    In my recipe, the brown rice is uncooked. As the dry rice cooks in the water with the cinnamon and bay leaf, it absorbs some of their flavor along with the water. Mmmmmm....
    "If Americans want to live the American Dream, they should go to Denmark." - Richard Wilkinson

 

 

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