Use a plantain leaf instead of plastic, that's what my mother-in-law used to do.
I would repent your sinful ways and enjoy the glory of Dominican rice. I'd sooner eat a plate of red hot chili peppers than tell a Dominican how to cook rice. You may as well tell them that their mother doesn't know how to cook, and if their mother can't cook rice, well, that isn't a very nice thing to say, is it?
And, as nasty as it seems, there should be no prob using plastic bags. In the US, they have all kinds of foods cooked in plastic bags in microwaves. Plastic bags are made from low density polyelthylene(LDPE) which is far less complex than say, cellulose or wood fiber. It's a very basic hydrocarbon like any fat, wax or oil, just with longer carbon chains.
People drink hot coffee out of polystyrene cups all the time without a second thought and that is some toxic stuff.
What about using a food grade LDPE like Saran Wrap?
Interestingly enough, the saran wrap used in homes does not contain the same phthalates is supposed to be safe. Different home fragrances or air fresheners also carry phthalates, so be careful!
While in the DR, my babysitter did just that and the plastic bag never melted.
I figured she does that to have the lid closed tighter and the rice cook a tad faster.
I also think it has just become an habit because I have cooked rice in the same pot and it came out just like hers.
I prefer using a lid, but used a plastic bag when I didn't have one and the bag touched the sides of the pot and melted because I was doing it wrong.I was then shown the correct way to do it. You cut the plastic so it's slightly smaller than the diameter of the pot, wash it and apply it over the rice carefully when the rice has cooked until most of the water is absorbed ...and it doesn't melt.
I believe people tend to make things more complicated than they are. If you don't have a lid, just use a plate to close the pot, add a bit more water since some vapor will escape, that's it. It's not like rice has to be placed in a air-tight pressure cooker in order to cook.
Dominicans cook rice pretty much like I was taught. In France, I realized a lot of people did not wash rice. The first time, I saw a friend doing that I couldn't eat :cheeky:. Another funny thing is that I have seen is people cooking rice just like pasta: lots of water,boil it then drain it :cheeky:
until I was told no no no, you wash the rice, salt the water bring it to a boil, then add the rice and don't cover it until it's nearly cooked... LOL and make sure you get some con con on the bottom or all hell will break loose :cheeky: I made him cook his own rice last time :cheeky:
Yes, wrap used by most butchers tends to be PVC. Saran Wrap used to be made from PVDC, but SC Johnson decided to stop using chlorine in its plastic wrap products and switched to polyethylene (PE). IF you look on a box of Saran Wrap (at least in the States), it specifically warns "Not for use in browning units, conventional ovens, stovetops or toaster ovens."
Yup - that's how the English cook rice - then you're supposed to pour boiling water through the drained rice to wash out the starch. Total sacrilege and heresy.Another funny thing is that I have seen is people cooking rice just like pasta: lots of water,boil it then drain it :cheeky:
If you don't like the con-con, try cooking in a pressure cooker. Put the rice in a large uncovered bowl with the right amount of water into the cooker and set the bowl in about an inch of water inside the cooker. After it gets to pressure for about four minutes, take it off the heat and cool it to release the pressure. Not only does it make good rice, it will also kill any Bacillus Ceres, which is not killed by normal cooking methods. This also a great way to cook any beans from dry in less than an hour.
LOL
That's how I was taught (since that's how Africans make it too). My question is how not to NOT get con con at the bottom. No one likes it in my house, so it goes to waste. :tired:
Heh. I can relate to that. I still haven't really mastered rice making ? la Dominicana so I leave it to the experts. When I cook Indian food Mr C always asks me if the basmati rice "hizo conc?n" - just to wind me up.You're right about the plate working, I've done it before and even used a large mixing bowl that fit over the pot.... LOL I've learned though that when cooking for a Dominican man, not to mess with his ideas of how rice should be cooked :ermm: I have been cooking rice for years by washing it first, then adding sufficient water to cover rice, and covering it with a lid when it comes to a boil... letting it steam until fluffy.. etc.. until I was told no no no, you wash the rice, salt the water bring it to a boil, then add the rice and don't cover it until it's nearly cooked... LOL and make sure you get some con con on the bottom or all hell will break loose :cheeky: I made him cook his own rice last time :cheeky: