Monday, July 18, 2011

So Now You've Got All That Rice...Put It To Work!

   Rice seemed to be the one thing that regularly turned up in the leftover bowl in our house. Not that we didn't eat rice growing up. It's just that rice always seemed to be something that my mom would make and there always seemed to be so much of it ! No matter how much we choked down, there always was more of the damn stuff, and nothing is more depressing than looking into the fridge on the morning after anything and finding a hard, cold, tough, stiff, congealed bowl of rice. It usually got tossed after a few dispirited days of all of us staring at it hiding behind the "real" butter my parents always bought for big dining events, trying not to be noticed, wishing we'd all just go away and let it harden in peace. And sure enough, a couple of days later there would be a bowl-shaped rice sculpture sitting in the Hefty bag awaiting it's final trip to the dumpster.
    Now I hate hate, hate waste. I will go out of my way to make a meal stretch more ways than Silly Putty on a July day. What's not eaten gets recycled and composted. Also I try to cook only the amount of stuff that I know will get eaten, one day or another. But sometimes no matter how careful you are, you just get rice, rice and more rice. There's nothing to be done, and that's where this recipe comes in, the makeover for tired rice. 
   Rice, meet Rice Curd, the solution to leftover, neglected, lonely old rice. This cold salad can be made in just a few minutes, and for pennies. It works with Indian food and also goes fabulously  with any Potluck bringalong, or back yard Summer time event. You'll never toss it again.


Indian Rice Salad




Here's what to do:
 Take 1 cup of cooked rice. In this case I used the leftover rice from the Coorgi Roti I'd made earlier. The Coorgi Roti demands soft, freshly made, fluffy rice, the Rice Curd is not so particular. In fact it actually helps if your rice has been hanging around for a few hours.
 Take the rice and mix it together with:
  1 cup of plain yogurt
 Add some salt to taste.
 Now for the chaunk or tempering:
 In a small pan heat  2 Tbs of vegetable oil.
 When the oil is hot toss in:
  1 tsp of mustard seeds
  3 dried red chilies
  5 curry leaves (if you have them)
 When the mustard seeds start to pop and the chilies darken, you are done.
 Pour the oil and spices into the rice and yogurt mixture.
 Give it all a stir and sprinkle a few chopped cilantro leaves across the top.
   There it is. Yes, that is all there is to it.  Nothing exotic (well maybe the curry leaves) nothing fancy, just a simple cold rice salad with a bit of a kick. Every now and then it's good to be simple and put that leftover rice to good use.
 Coming up next. I take a challenge to turn a Bastille Day Lunch in an Indian direction. Follow along on Twitter @kathygori
  

11 comments :

  1. what a lovely and unusual (for me!) dish.

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  2. I cannot do witout rice. Bring it on!

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  3. Leftover rice turns into Kimchi fried rice at my house.

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  4. @janis,
    I can't stand throwing perfectly good plain rice away

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  5. Belinda@zomppa,
    love all the stuff unused cooked rice can be turned into

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  6. Looks delish!
    The unused rice here gets fed to our water buffalo. She 'recycles' our vegetable scraps too.

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  7. Don't you just love curd rice in the summer? Check out my recipe for curd rice- http://plateandpour.blogspot.com/2010/03/recipe-curd-rice.html

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  8. Oh Kathy, everytime I come visit your blog it makes me smile! Everytime I see these traditional Indian recipes replicated so well by you I feel like talking to you over a cup of chai and listen to you talk about Indian food :-)
    Saw your comment on my blog. I really hope you try the stir fried noodle recipe. We recently moved to the SF bay area. Located in San Jose right now.

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  9. addition of urad and chana dal to the tempering gives a good crunch to the curd rice.Green chilli makes it more flavourful.You can add fried or roasted peanuts also.

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