What is the best way to infuse garlic flavor in the bland brown rice?

What is the best way to infuse garlic flavor in the bland brown rice? - Appetizing traditional Brazilian Feijoada dish of black bean stew served with boiled rice and couscous served on wooden table and decorated with black beans and garlic cloves

I have got fresh garlic cloves. I want the brown rice to have a garlic flavor.
Please mention the garlic quantity needed for the 5 table spoons of uncooked brown rice.

What is the best way to infuse garlic flavor in the bland brown rice?



Best Answer

Garlic flavors are soluble in oil, simply chopping up garlic and putting it in with the rice will not distribute the flavor well. I would recommend you chop the garlic finely and then infuse into a tablespoon of oil or butter by putting the pan on very low heat for a few minutes. Then add the rice and stir to coat the grains with the infused oil before adding water and cooking as normal.

How much garlic to use depends on how strong your garlic is and how garlic-y you want it to taste. 5 tbsp of rice isn't much, for a medium garlic flavor using average strength garlic a whole small clove or half a large is probably enough. With the garlic I grow I'd add a few slices from a clove at most.

Another option would be to cook the rice and then stir in the garlic infused oil afterwards, The benefits to this option are that you can drain the rice after cooking without all the flavor going down the drain.




Pictures about "What is the best way to infuse garlic flavor in the bland brown rice?"

What is the best way to infuse garlic flavor in the bland brown rice? - Clear Glass Teacup With Coffee Beverage
What is the best way to infuse garlic flavor in the bland brown rice? - From above of clear glass cup with hot aromatic drink placed near black metal spoon on beige table for coffee break
What is the best way to infuse garlic flavor in the bland brown rice? - Flat lay of glass of fresh beverage with slices of lemon and leaves of mint placed on white background



What can I add to brown rice to give it flavor?

Once your rice is fully cooked, add your seasonings, like soy sauce, dried basil, ground ginger, or cayenne pepper. If you want more subtle flavors, use whole spices. Otherwise, ground spices will bring out the flavor much more. Allow your rice dish to sit for 5 minutes to absorb the flavor before serving it.

Can I put minced garlic in my rice cooker?

Yes, just add the seasonings (garlic powder, thyme, crushed red pepper, and salt) to the rice maker along with the rice and water, then use the rice maker as you normally would.

How do you add Flavour to rice?

One of my favorite ways to add flavor to rice is by either using a cooking liquid other than water (bouillon or broth is an easy alternative), or by stirring in some fresh herbs, dried fruit, peas, nuts, or other flavor and color boosters.

How do you make brown rice taste good in a rice cooker?

Salt makes a huge difference in the brown rice taste, so don't forget to add it. I always add salt directly to the rice cooker, right after adding rice and water. I use 1/4 tsp of salt for each 1 cup of uncooked rice. If it's not salty enough for you, just increase the salt amount next time to 1/2 tsp.



3 cooking tips to instantly COOK BETTER RICE




More answers regarding what is the best way to infuse garlic flavor in the bland brown rice?

Answer 2

The technique that GdD mentions (infuse oil, then use that in the rice), is the technique used in Sinangag (Filipino garlic fried rice), but the rice is cooked first, then fried lightly in the garlic infused oil.

Because you still have the garlic in with the rice, and it hasn't undergone long, slow cooking like you would have from cooking the rice (even longer w/ brown rice), the garlic bits still retain much of the fresh garlic flavor, although the flavor still permeates through the rice.

A quick survey of recipes yields the following ratios (skipping those that don't give any measurements for the rice or garlic at all):

  • a head of garlic for 5-6 cups cooked rice
  • 3 cloves garlic to '1 large serving bowl of cooked rice'
  • 12 cloves of garlic to 4 cups cooked rice
  • 9 cloves garlic to 4 cups cooked rice (plus 4 green onions)
  • 5 cloves garlic to 3 cups cooked rice
  • 2 cloves garlic to 750g cooked rice (4 cups?)
  • 6 cloves garlic to 3 cups cooked rice
  • 14 cloves garlic to 4 cups cooked rice (plus one scallion, vinegar and chile flakes)
  • 3 TB minced garlic to 5 cups cooked rice
  • 3 TB minced garlic to 6 cups cooked rice
  • 1.5 TB minced garlic to 4 cups cooked rice
  • 3 cloves garlic to 3 cups cooked rice
  • 6 cloves garlic to 3 cups cooked rice

You'll likely need to experiment with it to find where you like it -- but be warned some recipes for Sinangag are very, very garlicy. (as I'm guessing the ones with 3+ cloves per cup of rice are ... it's possible that the vinegar might temper it, though). I also like the freshness that you get from mixing in green onion at the end, but I don't know what you're doing with this so if that would be appropriate.

Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

Images: Dayvison de Oliveira Silva, Engin Akyurt, Karolina Grabowska, Karolina Grabowska