I’m asian and grew up in Asia cooking rice without a rice cooker. This is how we do it:
- 1:2 rice to water ratio
- Wash rice
- Put rice and water in a sauce pan(?) or whataver you call that pan with deep sides.
- Turn on stove to high heat until water boils (This is the initial 5-8 mins)
- Once boiling, turn down heat to low and simmer for 40 mins (for brown rice. White rice is 20-25, broken rice is 12-15)
If I was to boil the rice for 5 mins and throw the water out, that means I need to boil water first (5-8 mins), throw in the rice and wait 5 minutes, then throw out the water. Only then will I do the above steps. The fresh water needs to boil again (5-8 mins) before I simmer for 40 mins.
mox@lemmy.sdf.org 4 months ago
Do you mean when replacing the parboil water? At that point, the rice would already have been brought to a boil gradually. Discarding the parboil water and pouring in fresh boiling water wouldn’t be like throwing dry rice into a boiling saucepan.
Or are you thinking of changing your process, by no longer bringing the rice and water to a boil together in the first place, but instead waiting to add the rice until after the parboil water has reached a full boil? I realize that’s what the infographic shows, but I don’t think it’s necessary to do it that way. If anything, I would expect your way (bring rice & water to a boil together) to remove more arsenic.