Thursday, February 5, 2015

Perfect, Amazing Rice

I recently made gumbo from The Encyclopedia of Cajun and Creole Cuisine (henceforth to be known the "The Encyclopedia") and decided to make rice that was not boil-in-the-bag rice. While boil-in-the-bag rice is pretty handy and provides a decent rice, I had found a recipe in The Encyclopedia for rice and I wanted to see if it worked. Something seems indecent about BITB rice and I just needed to see if maybe I was doing something wrong. And boy was I...

Ingredients:
1 cup long grain rice
1 ½ cups water
1 tsp salt
1 tbsp butter

Directions:
  1. Wash rice in cold water and drain well.
  2. Combine all ingredients in pan over medium-high heat and bring to a rolling boil.
  3. Reduce temperature to a simmer, cover, and cook for 30 minutes. Do NOT remove the cover or attempt to stir rice.
Now, I know, this doesn't necessarily follow the traditional 1 cup rice to 2 cups water ratio we have all memorized. And I was scared, really scared that I was going to have rice adhered permanently to the bottom of my pan. But I was just being silly. This rice was the most perfect rice I have ever cooked. I didn't remove the cover, as hard as it was, but it was well worth the final outcome. This rice was so good I found myself eating it fresh out of the pot. Not to mention what a wonderful compliment it was to the gumbo I had made. After learning this recipe, I won't be making boil in the bag rice again. I think I've become a rice snob.

Why Trinity & Roux?

In 2007 I moved from Boerne, Texas to New Orleans, Louisiana. More specifically, Kenner. When I moved I had some experience cooking. My parents, never ones to coddle, had made sure I could at least sustain myself on boxed meals. But, I guess I have some natural inclination to cooking, because I quickly left boxes and started following - and altering - recipes. This has been both a positive and a negative in my life. Sometimes, I make something great, but I can never repeat it again. That's not quite wonderful. But other times, I'm comforted by the idea that I can't possibly make that mistake again.

After living on my own for a few years, my repertoire of meals I could cook successfully had grown and my husband had a list of recipes I could cook anytime and he would gladly eat. But, every fairy tale has it's evil step-mother. My cooking fairy tale took the terrible turn of living with my in-laws for two years. I was never comfortable cooking there for many reasons, and we ate out more meals than I could have ever counted. But, a new apartment (this story's fairy godmother) came along and with it, eventually, inspiration to cook again. And that is where you join the story.

I realized how out of practice in the kitchen I was. I was watching 8-13 year olds on Master Chef Junior do things I couldn't imagine doing in the kitchen, and I knew I needed to cook again. Suddenly, I had to return to the kitchen and stretch my legs. And so, I decided I needed a challenge. I wanted to be the next Julie & Julia. Ok, maybe not that extreme, large numbers of readers need not apply (although they are warmly welcomed). But, I needed MY Julia Child.

Enter Chef John Folse and The Encyclopedia of Cajun and Creole Cuisine. My father-in-law had been gifted this cookbook and I had made gumbo from it. And read it. And loved it. So, it went on a wish list and we received this wonderful cookbook in the form of a wedding gift. But, my cooking from the book was limited. In some ways, the book scares me. It has sauces, and broths, and seafood you have to peel before you cook it. All skills I lack.

But, now I see this cookbook as a challenge. I'm not going full out Julie and Julia on this. There is a recipe for Cochon de Lait which requires a 50 pound pig, wire mesh, a meat saw, and a fire. This just isn't reasonable for me to attempt. I was going to say "in the near future" but decided it may never be reasonable for me to attempt this. So, barring any extremes (cost, amount of food prepared, tools unavailable to me) I'm going to attempt all of the recipes at my discretion.

Since this blog is going to focus on this challenge, and this challenge focuses on cajun and creole cooking, the title comes from two important parts of cooking cajun and creole food. The "trinity" is all important to cooking. It's onion, bell pepper, and celery. It is in so many foods in this area and one of the first ingredients listed in many cook's recipes. Roux is right of passage to cooking the local foods. 1 part fat to 1 part flour and cooked until it reaches the perfect color for your dish, roux is as important as the trinity. Both are paramount to any Louisiana cook's skills. I at least have these two down and that makes it a perfect title for the home of my challenge.
 
SITE DESIGN BY DESIGNER BLOGS