You are not logged in. Login Now
 0-24   25-49   50-74   75-99   100-124   125-149   129-153   154-178   179-203 
 204-205          
 
Author Message
25 new of 205 responses total.
jadecat
response 154 of 205: Mark Unseen   Dec 11 14:30 UTC 2006

I'm boring, I just tend to have brown rice with a little salt and butter.
i
response 155 of 205: Mark Unseen   Dec 14 03:53 UTC 2006

I always mix rice into a casserole or stew sort of dish.  Cooking for one
makes it easy to avoid the issue.

Whole wheat noodles i sometimes serve plain, then add a bit of olive oil,
salt, & pepper, or maybe plain yogurt.  Depends mostly on what's on hand
and how much time i have.
mary
response 156 of 205: Mark Unseen   May 11 16:43 UTC 2008

I got a rice cooker.  I'm geeked, in a rice cooker kind of way. ;-)
furs
response 157 of 205: Mark Unseen   May 11 19:04 UTC 2008

hahaha.
I know people love those, but for me there is no purpose.  I don't cook
enough rice I guess.
tod
response 158 of 205: Mark Unseen   May 11 21:32 UTC 2008

re #157
They're great if rice is a side dish and you tend to forget it's cooking (thus
it doesn't burn as easily in a cooker)
keesan
response 159 of 205: Mark Unseen   May 11 22:46 UTC 2008

Rice cookers are designed to put a lot of steam into the air, which means they
waste a lot of energy and also make your room very humid.  We cook rice in
a tightly fitting pot and it comes to boiling much faster (and if in a
pressure cooker, you just turn it off once it reaches pressure, after a few
minutes, and it cannot burn).
mary
response 160 of 205: Mark Unseen   May 11 23:15 UTC 2008

All that wasted steam must be what's making my kitchen smell delish at the 
moment.

Tonight, at chez Remmers, it's orange beef stir-fry.
edina
response 161 of 205: Mark Unseen   May 12 04:22 UTC 2008

Steam is just one more excuse to open my pores.
keesan
response 162 of 205: Mark Unseen   May 12 14:56 UTC 2008

It is not good for the structure of whatever you are living in to have water
condensing in it.  Running down the windows.  Puddling on the sills.   Rotting
the wood.
mary
response 163 of 205: Mark Unseen   May 12 15:03 UTC 2008

I'm sure it's not.
edina
response 164 of 205: Mark Unseen   May 12 16:25 UTC 2008

Hi Sindi.  I live in the desert.  Trust me, I'm good.  The house is fine
too.
tod
response 165 of 205: Mark Unseen   May 12 18:38 UTC 2008

re #162
They've invented these crazy lil things called exhaust fans.  When I cook on
the stove, I use it.
keesan
response 166 of 205: Mark Unseen   May 12 20:44 UTC 2008

Do you have an objection to using less energy to cook with?  An exhaust fan
also cools the house (or heats it if it is warmer out).
edina
response 167 of 205: Mark Unseen   May 12 20:56 UTC 2008

I seriously could count on one hand how many times this year I've used
my   rice cooker, so it's not too much an issue.  We just don't eat that
much rice.
tod
response 168 of 205: Mark Unseen   May 12 22:25 UTC 2008

re #166
 Do you have an objection to using less energy to cook with? 

You mean do I object to eating only twigs and leaves like a Giraffe? Yes.
keesan
response 169 of 205: Mark Unseen   May 12 23:39 UTC 2008

Cooked rice does not grow on trees.
tod
response 170 of 205: Mark Unseen   May 13 00:07 UTC 2008

Neither do spastic colons.
keesan
response 171 of 205: Mark Unseen   May 13 00:35 UTC 2008

Do nonspastic colons?
Pressure cooked rice gets very thoroughly cooked.  With brown rice we add 1.3
cups water per cup of rice.  White rice would probably be less.  If you cook
with more water, the rest of it goes into the air along with wasted heat.
tod
response 172 of 205: Mark Unseen   May 13 02:21 UTC 2008

re #171
How long does that take?  Do you use a pressure cooker pot on a stove?
keesan
response 173 of 205: Mark Unseen   May 13 02:38 UTC 2008

Maybe 5 minutes to come to pressure, then 5 to come down?  I never timed it.
It is does before the rest of the meal.  Yes pressure cooker on stove.  We
also have one large electric pressure cooker which is more efficient but too
large (nuisance to clean).  We have at least 10 pressure cookers of various
sizes and designs, and take a small one bike camping with us.  I wonder if
we could cook oatmeal in it (dont' let the pressure come up too far).
void
response 174 of 205: Mark Unseen   May 13 05:32 UTC 2008

What the hell kind of rice cooker causes steam to condense on windows,
puddle on sills, and rot the house frame???
jadecat
response 175 of 205: Mark Unseen   May 13 13:59 UTC 2008

I dunno, but I do know that in the winter, when the air is very dry in
our apartment- a little steam only does good things. We tend to use the
'pot on the stove' method of rice making though- not a specific rice
steamer...
keesan
response 176 of 205: Mark Unseen   May 13 15:54 UTC 2008

Our house is well sealed, and adding steam to the air causes problems.
Our highest January heating bill was $60 (electric).  DO the rest of you not
believe in global warming or just not personally want to do anything about
it?  Some friends put in a geothermal heating system at great expense but
never insulated or weatherstripped and they now pay $180 in January for heat.
edina
response 177 of 205: Mark Unseen   May 13 16:25 UTC 2008

WTF Sindi?  The occasional use of a rice cooker is going to top the
balance?
tod
response 178 of 205: Mark Unseen   May 13 16:45 UTC 2008

re #176
My electric bill in Jan was about $60, too.  I do my part for low carbon
footprint but I also have to do my part for low mildew in rainforest climate.
I'm betting the cooking we do at home(rice rarely) is way more efficient
time, money, energy than restaurant or frozen microwavable.
 0-24   25-49   50-74   75-99   100-124   125-149   129-153   154-178   179-203 
 204-205          
Response Not Possible: You are Not Logged In
 

- Backtalk version 1.3.30 - Copyright 1996-2006, Jan Wolter and Steve Weiss