Naturalpath

  • NaturalPath Media
  • Member Directory
  • Our Publishers
  • Green Directory
  • Home
  • Sustainability
  • Eco-Tech
  • Style/Shopping
  • Healthy Living
  • NaturalPath Media

Basmati Rice

Basmati Rice

See also: Recipes with Rice

Illustration

Skip to:

  • Varieties
  • Buying and storing
  • Preparation tips
  • Nutritional highlights

Varieties

Basmati rice is available in white and brown (unprocessed) forms. White rice sets off food flavors more distinctly, while brown rice has a higher fiber content and takes longer to cook.

Buying and storing tips

Buy basmati rice in the packaged or bulk grain section at your grocery, or local health food or specialty store. When purchasing basmati rice from the bulk section of health food stores, look for intact kernels that aren’t broken, scratched, or damaged.

Store rice in a cool, dry area in a sealed glass or plastic container, away from the open air and moisture.

Cooked rice can be refrigerated for up to seven days, or stored in the freezer for six months.

Preparation, uses, and tips

Rinse 1 cup of rice and drain well. In a heavy saucepan with a lid, combine rice with 2 cups (500mL) of water and a pinch of salt. Bring to a boil, reduce heat to medium, and simmer, covered, until tender (about 30 minutes for medium- to long-grain white rice, 40 minutes for brown rice, 20 minutes for arborio or short-grain rice, and 1 hour for wild rice).

Add chopped basil and diced tomatoes to cooked rice, or stir in cashews, golden raisins, and curry powder or paste during the last five minutes of cooking time.

To reheat cooked rice, for each 1 cup (200 grams) of rice, add 2 Tbsp (30mL) liquid. Cover and heat four to five minutes on top of range or in oven. In a microwave oven, cook on High about 1 1/2 minutes per cup (200g).

Nutritional Highlights

Basmati rice, 1 cup (200g) (cooked)
Calories: 205
Protein: 4.2g
Carbohydrate: 44.5g
Total Fat: 0.44g
Fiber: 0.63g
*Good source of: Iron (1.9mg), Selenium (11.8mcg), Thiamine (0.26mg), and Niacin (2.3mg)

*Foods that are an “excellent source” of a particular nutrient provide 20% or more of the Recommended Daily Value. Foods that are a “good source” of a particular nutrient provide between 10 and 20% of the Recommended Daily Value.



Copyright 2007, Healthnotes, Inc., 1505 S.E. Gideon St., Suite 200, Portland, Oregon 97202, www.Healthnotes.com.

2006-09-07

  • Login or register to post comments
Sign in | Register

NaturalPath Media's Blog

  • Most Executives Would Cut Pay to Support Green
  • Companies seeking innovative online green marketing can benefit from Yahoo!’s success & strategies
  • Marketers are Seeing Green
  • Soaring energy prices give green products a competitive advantage
  • Report shows growing importance of sustainability in the food, beverage, & consumer products industry

Latest Articles

  • New Flavors of Organic EnviorKidz Cereals by Nature’s Path
  • Mr. Gore, how do you feel about 90 percent?
  • PolyFuel Methanol Fuel Cell T40 Laptop Prototype
more

Recent Comments

  • Beyonce herself said...
  • Only 50 years... and of major delusion!
  • I have the worst allergies
  • I had gotten food poisoning
  • function pr_swfver(){ var
  • go slow with the cleanse
  • I have yet to try cleansing,
more

Navigation

  • Community Forums
  • Feedback
  • Invite your friends and colleagues
  • create content
About NaturalPath | TOS | Disclaimer | Privacy and Policies | Help | Advertise (NaturalPath Media)
Copyright 2008 Lark Media, Inc. All rights reserved. Naturalpath.com does not provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. See additional information.