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Rice, pure and simple, is the food most
suited for hot climates and where a natural indolence of
disposition results in one’s day’s work of an ordinary
Englishman being divided among twenty people. As we move
towards more temperate zones it will be found the universal
custom to qualify it by mixing it with some other substance;
thus, though rice is largely eaten in Italy, it is almost
invariably used in conjunction with Parmesan cheese. Rice
contains no flesh-forming properties whatever, as it contains
no nitrogen; and with all due respect to vegetarians, it will
be found that as we recede from the Equator and advance towards
the Poles our food must of necessity vary with the latitude,
and, whereas we may start on a diet of rice, we shall be
forced, sooner or later, to depend upon a diet of pemmican, or
food of a similar nature.
Rice, to Boil.—The best
method of boiling rice is, at any rate, a much disputed
point, if not an open question. There are as many ways
almost of boiling rice as dressing a salad, and each one
thinks his own way the best. We will mention a few of the
most simple, and will illustrate it by boiling a small
quantity that can be contained in a teacup. Of course,
boiling rice is very much simplified if you want some
rice-water as well as rice itself. Rice-water contains a
great deal of nourishment, a fact which is well illustrated
by the well-known story of the black troops who served in
India under Clive, who, at the siege of Arcot, told Clive,
when they were short of provisions, that the water in which
the rice was boiled would be sufficient for them, while the
more substantial grain could be preserved for the European
troops. Take a teacupful of rice and wash the rice in
several waters till the water ceases to be discoloured. Now
throw the rice into boiling water, say a quart; let the rice
boil gently till it is tender, strain off the rice and
reserve the rice-water for other purposes. The time rice
will take to boil treated this way would be probably about
twenty minutes, but this time would vary slightly with the
quality and size of the rice.
Many years ago we watched a black man
boiling rice on board a P. and O. boat (the Mizapore);
he proceeded as follows:—He boiled the rice for about ten
minutes, or perhaps a minute or two longer, strained it off in
a sieve, and then washed the rice with cold water, and then put
the rice back in the stew-pan to once more get hot and swell.
Of course, this rice was being boiled for curry, and certainly
the result was that each grain was beautifully separated from
every other grain. We do not think, however, that this method
of boiling rice is customary on all the boats of the P. and O.
Company. Of course this method of boiling rice was somewhat
wasteful.
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