How to Cook Rice — The Global Staple
The absorption method is the foundation: combine one part rice to a measured quantity of water (bring to 100°C/212°F, then reduce to the barest simmer at around 85°C/185°F) with a measured quantity of water in a heavy-bottomed pot, bring to a boil, reduce to the lowest possible flame, cover tightly, and steam until every drop of water is incorporated — typically 18 minutes for long-grain white rice, 12–14 minutes for Basmati, 25 minutes for short-grain Japonica varieties, and 40–45 minutes for unpolished brown rice. This is where the dish lives or dies: the ratio of water to grain, which changes with every species, every harvest, and every altitude.
Rice is not one ingredient. It is hundreds. Koshihikari, the prestige cultivar of Japan's Niigata prefecture, is a short-grain Japonica with high amylopectin content — the starch that makes grains cling. It demands 1:1.1 rice to water by volume and rewards a thirty-minute soak before cooking. Basmati from the Punjab — aged a minimum of one year for the best lots — is a long-grain Indica with high amylose, the starch that keeps grains separate. It wants 1:1.5 and benefits from rinsing until the water runs clear, typically five to seven changes. Carnaroli, the risotto rice of Piedmont, has a starch composition that releases creaminess while maintaining a firm core — you would never cook it by absorption. Calasparra, a Spanish Bomba variety from Murcia, absorbs nearly three times its volume in liquid without bursting, which is why it is the correct rice for paella. Carolina Gold, the heirloom long-grain of the American South, is the historically accurate choice for pilau, red rice, and hoppin' John — its flavour is nuttier and more complex than commodity long-grain.
Three methods, three philosophies. The absorption method, used across East and Southeast Asia, depends on exact measurement and an undisturbed lid — lifting it releases steam and breaks the cycle. The pilaf method, fundamental to Persian, Turkish, Indian, and Central Asian kitchens, begins by toasting the rice in fat (butter, ghee, olive oil) until the grains turn translucent at the edges, roughly two minutes, before adding hot liquid. The fat coats each grain in a lipid barrier that slows starch release and guarantees separation. The excess-water method, the default in South Asian kitchens for everyday Basmati, boils the rice in a large volume of salted water — like pasta — then drains it when the grains are just tender, roughly 10–12 minutes. The South Indian technique layers this parboiled rice into a heavy pot, seals the lid with dough or a cloth, and steams it over the lowest flame for 20–30 minutes. This is dum, and it produces rice where each grain is a separate, fragrant entity.
Sensory tests tell you everything. Properly cooked rice, regardless of method, should smell clean and faintly sweet — a starchy, comforting aroma with no hint of scorching. Undercooked rice is chalky white at the centre when you bite through a grain. Overcooked rice is mushy, translucent throughout, and collapses under gentle pressure. Perfectly cooked long-grain rice holds its shape when turned with a fork but yields immediately when bitten. Short-grain rice for sushi should be glossy and cohesive but never gummy — each grain should be distinguishable within the mass.
The quality hierarchy: (1) Competent rice is cooked through, with no hard centre and no burnt bottom. (2) Great rice shows distinct grains with uniform texture, seasoned properly, with a thin, even tahdig or socarrat crust if the tradition calls for it. (3) Transcendent rice — the kind served at the best Persian tables or in a paella over vine cuttings in Valencia — has a flavour that comes from the grain itself, amplified by technique: the butter-toasted nuttiness of a perfect chelo, the saffron-stained bottom crust of tahdig shattering like glass, or the socarrat of a paella that tastes of the sea and of caramelised starch simultaneously.