Botanically
speaking, wild rice is really an aquatic grass and not a true
member of the rice family. Whatever its classification, with its
dark, mysterious qualities and strong, earthy flavor, wild rice
combines beautifully with aromatic basmati rice and a few touches
of fruit and herbs to make this lovely dish, which can be served at
any temperature and at any time of day. (It actually tastes best
served at room temperature.)
NOTE: This keeps well for several days, if tightly
covered and refrigerated. Just hold off on adding the fresh herbs
until shortly before serving, so they won't turn
black.
1 cup
uncooked wild rice
1 medium recipe Pilaf-Style Basmati Rice (recipe follows)
1 teaspoon minced garlic
1 1/4 teaspoons salt
1/2 to 3/4 cup dried sour cherries, halved
1/2 to 3/4 cup dried cranberries
1 to 2 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
2 tablespoons grated orange zest
1 cup orange sections
1/4 cup orange juice
Black pepper to taste
1/4 cup minced fresh chives or scallions
1/4 cup minced fresh mint
OPTIONAL TOPPINGS:
Strips of orange peel
Minced parsley
- Place the
wild rice in a medium-sized saucepan and add 2 1/2 cups water.
Cover the pan and heat to a boil. Lower the heat to the slowest
possible simmer, and cook, covered and undisturbed, until tender.
This will take about 1 1/4 to 1 1/2 hours.
- While the
wild rice is simmering, prepare the Pilaf-Style Basmati Rice
(below).
- When the
wild rice is cooked, fluff it thoroughly with a fork to let the
steam escape, then add it to the cooked basmati rice, still in its
baking pan. Gently stir in the garlic, salt, dried fruit, lemon
juice, grated orange zest, about half of the orange sections, and
the orange juice. (Fluff the pilaf with a fork as you
stir.)
- Add black
pepper to taste. Let it stand for at least 30 minutes, to let the
flavors mingle.
- Serve at
room temperature, or cold. (If you want to serve it warm, just
place the covered pan back in a 350ÁF oven for about 20
minutes, or until heated through.) Shortly before serving, stir in
the chives or scallions and the mint. Place the reserved orange
sections on top, and sprinkle with strips of orange peel and a
little minced parsley, if desired.
PILAF-STYLE BASMATI RICE
Adapted from Mollie Katzen's Vegetable Heaven
Preparation time: 25 minutes (white basmati); 55 minutes (brown
basmati).
Yield: About 6 cups cooked rice (medium batch); about 9 cups
cooked rice (large batch)
NOTE: The actual work time is about 5 to 10 minutes. You can
prepare the other pilaf ingredients while the rice cooks.
Basmati rice is my favorite choice for pilafs,
because it has a fantastic nutty taste, an excellent texture, and
great versatility. It is an aromatic rice, originally from Northern
India and Pakistan, but is now grown in the United States as well.
The word "basmati" means "queen of fragrance", and the minute you
drop these grains into a potful of boiling water and take a whiff,
you'll know why.
This is the best way I have found
to cook basmati rice for pilafs: First you boil it in a large
quantity of salted water until it is mostly cooked, then you drain
the rice, transfer it to a shallow pan, cover tightly, and bake it
until done. This takes about the same amount of time as the
old-fashioned stovetop method, but more reliably produces perfectly
separate, fluffy rice, ready to combine with whatever additional
ingredients are called for. (Several pilaf recipes follow.) Two
additional benefits: a) You are spared having to worry about
proportions of rice to water; and b) after the rice is done, you
can leave it right where it is, directly add the other pilaf
ingredients, and reheat as necessary in the same
pan.
NOTE: Use this method as
the springboard for the pilaf recipes that follow. (You can also
make plain basmati rice this way, or just cook it as you normally
would.)
These instructions will work for
any amount of basmati rice, white or brown.
NOTE: For a medium recipe,
use 2 cups uncooked rice; for a large recipe, use 3 cups uncooked
rice.
8 to 10 cups water (it doesn't
need to be exact)
1 tablespoon salt
2 or 3 cups uncooked basmati rice, white or brown
1 tablespoon vegetable oil or melted butter
- Preheat the oven to 350°F.
Put the water and salt in a large saucepan, and bring to a rolling
boil. Meanwhile, place the rice in a strainer and rinse several
times under cold running water.
- Add the rice to the boiling water
and let it boil rapidly, 10 minutes for white; 30 for brown , or
until the rice is just tender to the bite–in other words,
almost done. Drain the rice in a colander over the sink, and rinse
with warm running water.
- Brush the oil or melted butter
over the bottom surface of a 9 X13-inch pan (or a 10 X 13-inch pan,
if you have one, for the large batch), and spread out the rice in
an even layer. Tightly cover the pan with foil, and bake for 15
minutes (25 minutes for brown basmati), or until the rice is done
to your liking.
- Carefully stir in whatever
special ingredients the pilaf recipe calls for, and cover the pan
tightly until serving time. Serve hot, warm, or at room
temperature. (Reheat in a 350°F oven to the desired
temperature, if necessary.)