T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1035.1 | RICE-SAUSAGE CASSEROLE | STEREO::WHITCOMB | | Mon Mar 07 1988 17:16 | 25 |
| 2 lbs. bulk pork sausage
1 med. onion, chopped (about 1/2 cup)
2 cups cooked wild rice
2 cups cooked white rice
1/2 cup shredded Swiss cheese (2 oz.)
1 1/2 cups milk
1 small green pepper, chopped (about 1/2 cup)
1 can (10 3/4 oz.) condensed cream of chicken soup
1 can (4 oz.) mushroom stems and pieces, drained
1 jar (2 oz.) pimiento, drained
1/4 cup toasted sliced almonds
Cook and stir sausage and onion in 4-qt. Dutch oven until sausage
is brown; drain. Stir in wild rice, white rice, cheese, milk, green
pepper, soup, mushrooms and pimiento. Pour into ungreased 3-qt.
casserole.
Cover and bake in 350 degree oven until center is bubbly, 45-50
minutes. Stir and sprinkle with almonds. Garnish with cooked carrot
slices and parsley if desired.
(8 servings, 440 calories per serving)
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1035.2 | Risoto ala Milanese | HOONOO::PESENTI | JP | Tue Mar 08 1988 07:36 | 31 |
| The proportions on this recipe are variable to taste. And there are lots of
variations, but this is the one my dad always made:
Soak a vial of SPANISH safron in 1/2 cup boiling chicken/turkey stock (this
stock better be homemade, using white wine!)
Chop a whole yellow onion, and sautee in olive oil.
Add 1 lb sliced raw Italian sausage or sausage meat, may be hot or sweet,
according to taste.
Sautee the sausage until lightly browned.
Stir in 2 cups long grain rice, NOT converted or minute, but REAL rice, until
coated with oils, and sautee until slightly opaque about 5 minutes.
Add a total of 6 cups* of boiling chicken/turkey stock as follows: Add a cup,
stir until absorbed, add a cup, stir until absorbed,...
* The last cup is 1/2 cup stock plus 1/2 cup stock plus saffron
The rice will be slightly starchy and somewhat gooey.
Add 1 cup hand shredded imported Italian parmesan cheese (not the sawdust
style cheese that the store will grate for you), stirring it in as you
sprinkle on top.
Goes great with a dry white wine or a hearty Cianti classico.
- JP
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1035.4 | a vegetarian casserole | THE780::WILDE | Imagine all the people.. | Tue Mar 08 1988 12:39 | 21 |
| I don't have a name for this, but my roomy and friends like it so much they
don'e miss the meat....I like it because I can get it together and in the
oven in less than 30 minutes.
For each two cups of cooked, short grain brown rice:
Saute in 4 Tablespoons olive oil:
1 chopped zuchini (size approx. 7 inches long)
1 medium onion
handful small mushrooms, chopped
2 small yellow crookneck squash chopped up
1 small sweet red pepper chopped up
1 small sweet green pepper chopped up
until crisp tender.
Mix with rice, a good bottled marinara sauce (or homemade if you've got it),
1 bag frozen peas (or fresh shelled peas blanched for 4 minutes), approx.
1 cup parmesan or romano cheese. Place in oiled casserole and bake approx.
1 hour.
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1035.5 | Chicken Rice Recipe, Um, Um, Good! | ALPINE::REVCON2 | | Thu Mar 17 1988 16:42 | 15 |
| Well, one of my favorites and favorites of others is what I call
chicken rice. This dish goes wonderfully with baked chicken, or
baked fish.
Start with Uncle Ben's natural white rice. Measure rice according
to dish size. I make enough for 4 servings. Boil water and add rice.
Put in 2 chicken bouillon cubes, dash garlic powder and cook for
15 mins. simmer uncovered. Add dash majoram, teaspoon or two of
parsley, pat of butter, stir thoroughly, cook last 5 mins. or until
right texture has formed.
Enjoy!!!! P.S. Also good with a dash of Mrs. Dash on top.
Kathleen
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1035.6 | Try Basmati or Jasmine Rice | BOXTOP::JANCOURTZ | | Mon Apr 25 1988 11:49 | 19 |
| I gather you like rice. Why not try Indian Basmati rice or Thai
Jasmine rice? Both are white, long-grain rices. Both smell lovely
and nutty--like rice WOULD smell if it didn't usually smell like
wallpaper paste. Both are sold at Joyce Chen's in Acton. You can
also get basmati rice at most gourmet stores and at India Tea and
Spice in Belmont. Both must be washed, then presoaked for 15-30
minutes. For each cup of rice, use 1-1/4 cup of water. Add a little
butter to the basmati rice, or some chopped sauteed onion and green
peas. Stronger spices interfere with the lovely subtle taste.
(Whoops, the directions are vague. Rinse the rice thoroughly, then
soak it, then drain it and THEN add 1-1/4 cups water for each cup
of rice. Bring to boil, reduce heat to lowest setting, cover, and
cook 15 minutes.)
Look in a good Indian cookbook (I recommend those by Madhur Jaffrey
or Julie Sahni) for recipes for BIRYANI--meat, vegies, spices, and
rice all cooked together. Terrific and impressive for a crowd.
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1035.7 | Never soaked basmati... | HOONOO::PESENTI | JP | Tue Apr 26 1988 08:56 | 11 |
| re < Note 1035.6 by BOXTOP::JANCOURTZ >
> Both must be washed, then presoaked for 15-30 minutes.
I've never washed or soaked Basmati rice and it always comes out perfect. I
use it as a 1-1 substitute for long grain carolina rice in all recipes.
Usually, I cook it in the microwave.
By the way, does the Jasmine rice flavor resemble jasmine at all?
- JP
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1035.8 | I'll never go back... | SCIFI::SZYSZLO | | Sat Apr 30 1988 19:05 | 22 |
| re .6, .7
What's all this about soaking rice? I've never soaked rice and it seems
to come out perfect every time! Though I have seen it recommended
that basmati rice be soaked. I have two favorite methods of
preparation, pressure cooker or microwave. Lately I've been leaning to
the pressure cooker because in essence you're steaming the rice under
pressure which (personal opinion) keeps more of the flavor in.
Recently I ran out of Jasmine rice and found that I had some "premium"
Carolina long grain rice, so I used that...Yuck, the closest
approximation in taste has to be cardboard! I seriously doubt I'll ever
use anything but Jasmine or Basmati (or similar)again! By the way good
Jasmine runs around $0.45/pound, which is comparable to the common
cardboard variety. Basmati, which comes from India, runs around
$1.00/pound. The basmati has a nutty-like flavor, the jasmine a
fragrant aroma and a subtle flavor, I'm not sure if jasmine flowers are
used for the fragrance or its inherent in the variety.
-enjoy
-john
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1035.9 | Basmati from California? | HOONOO::PESENTI | JP | Mon May 02 1988 18:51 | 8 |
| I vaguely remember buying a basmati rice in Concord Spice and Grain that was
labeled "Basmati Rice - Long Grain - California". Never gave it a thought,
cuz it tasted like the Real McCoy. It was a while back, so I don't remember
the price. Can any of you Californians verify that Basmati rice is grown out
there? Or was the package just mislabeled?
- JP
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1035.10 | | CARMEL::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, & Holly; in Calif. | Mon May 02 1988 20:51 | 2 |
| I think it's being grown in Ca and also Texas.
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1035.11 | Looking for Saffron Rice | EARRTH::DREYER | Waiting for a challenge... | Fri Nov 13 1992 14:16 | 7 |
| Does anyone have a good recipe for Saffron rice? I've done a dir for rice and
saffron and come up blank. No tumeric instead, please...it looks the same, but
the taste just isn't there!
Thanks in advance,
Laura
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1035.12 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Fri Nov 13 1992 15:14 | 1 |
| Add a few strands of saffron along with the rice and cook as usual.
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1035.14 | Southeastern MA | BUSY::MANDILE | Hold you, with tears in my eyes.... | Mon Nov 16 1992 09:55 | 4 |
|
The local supermarkets are advertising at .79 per pound.
The local Turkey farm is $1.49-1.75 per pound.
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1035.15 | I'll try again! | EARRTH::DREYER | Waiting for a challenge... | Mon Nov 16 1992 14:14 | 9 |
| Funny note to be asking about the price of turkeys in...and I hoped it would
be recipes for saffron rice!!
The saffron rice I've had seemed to be sauteed first, like a pilaf, with onions
and maybe some other spices. Does anyone have a recipe for this?
Thanks again,
Laura
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1035.16 | | CALVA::WOLINSKI | uCoder sans Frontieres | Tue Nov 17 1992 10:07 | 23 |
|
Rep .15
Here's how I make saffron rice,
1 small onion finely minced
2-4 cloves of garlic finely minced
Saute the onions and garlic in about 2 TBsp of good olive oil until
softened. Don't let them brown use a medium to low heat. Add 1 Cup
of rice to the pan and saute the rice until it turns opaque again
don't let the mixture brown. Add two cups of water or stock or a
mixture of both. Bring to a boil and cover tightly reducing the heat
to a bare simmer. After about 10 min add about 1/8 tsp of saffron
strands to the rice mix well and continue cooking covered until the
liquid is absorbed. The total time is around 20 minutes. I've found
that if you cook the saffron too long it tends to turn very bitter
and ruins the dish.
-mike
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1035.17 | On the money! | EARRTH::DREYER | Waiting for a challenge... | Tue Nov 17 1992 14:09 | 3 |
| Thanks Mike,
Sounds just like what I was looking for!
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1035.18 | Hungarian Paprikash Rice | KAOOA::BORDA | | Wed Nov 18 1992 10:54 | 32 |
|
This makes a nice side dish, or can be served as a main dish with a
salad and veggies.
3-4 chicken breasts,deboned,skin removed.
1-2 medium to large yellow cooking onions
1-1/2 tablespoons of sweet red Hungarian paprika.
1 cup of fresh chopped parsley(or lesser measure of dried parsley)
2-3 tablespoons oil
1-2 teaspoons salt depending on your tastes.
Slice up the chicken breasts into small pieces. Dice onions and fry in
oil medium heat untill they are clear.
Add the chicken pieces and brown lightly.add parsley at this time as
well.
Remove from heat and stir in paprika
(If paprika is left to fry it becomes very bitter)
Add sufficient water equivalent to the amount required for the amount
of rice you wish to use..ie(5 cups water for 2 cups rice).Simmer the
chicken in the water for approx 40 minutes..add rice..cover and reduce
heat just as if you were making plain white rice. Follow cooking time
of you particular brand of rice, remove from heat and let stand 5-10
minutes.
Chicken breasts are nice to use but one can also make this with any
chicken parts you wish. Wings are fine,legs,thighs and the bone may be
left in as well. I've done it this way many times and remove the
chicken pieces,take of the skin and meat and add the meat back to the
rice after.
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1035.19 | Rice, Soup and cheese | AKOCOA::BBAKER | | Mon Nov 23 1992 12:19 | 14 |
| This is easy and fairly healthy. I make it for dinner, but I suppose
you could have it as a side dish...
2 boxes Near East Rice Pilaf
1 can LOW-FAT Cream of Mushroom Soup
1/2 - 1 container NON FAT cottage cheese (the medium one)
Cook the rice according to pkg directions, when the rice is just about
done, add the soup and cottage cheese. Mix well. Turn off heat and let
it sit for about 5 mins. The cheese gets a bit melty.
It's really good if you like cassarole-y type things.
~beth
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1035.20 | noname rice dish | CNTROL::DGAUTHIER | | Tue Feb 14 1995 12:51 | 19 |
|
I live in a veggie house and am responsible for cooking once/wk. One
of the favorites is a rice thing I whipped up one night on a whim.
Chop up some onions and some garlic (lots of garlic!)
Saute' the onions/garlic in olive oil until the onions are cooked.
Add in the rice (I use this long grainbrowm stuff the others like) and
stir that around a few minutes. At this point, instead of adding just
plain water, add the volume of orange juice the rice pkg recommends to
cook the rice in. Add a little curry powder (please use someting
decent, like maybe Madras) and some sliced carrots. Let the whole mess
cook until the rice is done. Throw in some raisins just for the heck
of it. Add more curry powder if you want it hotter.
No name for this monster but it's worth a shot.
-dave
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