Grains of Japonica (left), Indica (centre) and Glaberrima (right)rice.
Welcome to the summary page for FabulousFusionFood's Cook's Guide entry for Rice along with all the trcipes employing Rice presented on this site, with 715 recipes in total.
This is a continuation of an entire series of pages that will, I hope, allow my visitors to better navigate this site. As well as displaying recipes by name, country and region of origin I am now planning a whole series of pages where recipes can be located by meal type and main ingredient. This page gives a listing of all the Rice recipes added to this site.
These recipes, all contain Rice as a major wild food ingredient.
Rice is a cereal grain and in its domesticated form is the staple food of over half of the world's population, particularly in Asia and Africa. Rice is the seed of the grass species Oryza sativa (Asian rice)—or, much less commonly, Oryza glaberrima (African rice). Asian rice was domesticated in China some 13,500 to 8,200 years ago; African rice was domesticated in Africa about 3,000 years ago.
Oryza sativa rice was first domesticated in China 9,000 years ago, by people of Neolithic cultures in the Upper and Lower Yangtze, associated with Hmong-Mien-speakers and pre-Austronesians, respectively. The functional allele for nonshattering, the critical indicator of domestication in grains, as well as five other single-nucleotide polymorphisms, is identical in both indica and japonica. This implies a single domestication event for O. sativa. Both indica and japonica forms of Asian rice sprang from a single domestication event in China from the wild rice Oryza rufipogon. Despite this evidence, it appears that indica rice arose when japonica arrived in India about 4,500 years ago and hybridised with another rice, whether an undomesticated proto-indica or wild O. nivara.
Rice was introduced early into Sino-Tibetan cultures in northern China by around 6000 to 5600 years ago, and to the Korean peninsula and Japan by around 5500 to 3200 years ago. It was also carried into Taiwan by the Dapenkeng culture by 5500 to 4000 years ago, before spreading southwards via the Austronesian migrations to Island Southeast Asia, Madagascar, and Guam, but did not survive the voyage to the rest of the Pacific. It reached Austroasiatic and Kra-Dai-speakers in Mainland Southeast Asia and southern China by 5000 years ago.
Rice spread around the rest of the world through cultivation, migration and trade, eventually to the Americas as part of the Columbian exchange after 1492. The now less common Oryza glaberrima (African rice) was independently domesticated in Africa around 3,000 years ago, and introduced to the Americas by the Spanish. Italian Arborio rice is a cultivar of Oryza sativa subsp Japonica.
Dry rice grain is milled to remove the outer layers; depending on how much is removed, products range from brown rice to rice with germ and white rice. Some is parboiled to make it easy to cook. Rice contains no gluten; it provides protein but not all the essential amino acids needed for good health. Rice of different types is eaten around the world. Long-grain rice tends to stay intact on cooking; medium-grain rice is stickier, and is used for sweet dishes, and in Italy for risotto; and sticky short-grain rice is used in Japanese sushi as it keeps its shape when cooked. White rice when cooked contains 29% carbohydrate and 2% protein, with some manganese. Golden rice is a variety produced by genetic engineering to contain vitamin A.
This is a continuation of an entire series of pages that will, I hope, allow my visitors to better navigate this site. As well as displaying recipes by name, country and region of origin I am now planning a whole series of pages where recipes can be located by meal type and main ingredient. This page gives a listing of all the Rice recipes added to this site.
These recipes, all contain Rice as a major wild food ingredient.
Rice is a cereal grain and in its domesticated form is the staple food of over half of the world's population, particularly in Asia and Africa. Rice is the seed of the grass species Oryza sativa (Asian rice)—or, much less commonly, Oryza glaberrima (African rice). Asian rice was domesticated in China some 13,500 to 8,200 years ago; African rice was domesticated in Africa about 3,000 years ago.
Oryza sativa rice was first domesticated in China 9,000 years ago, by people of Neolithic cultures in the Upper and Lower Yangtze, associated with Hmong-Mien-speakers and pre-Austronesians, respectively. The functional allele for nonshattering, the critical indicator of domestication in grains, as well as five other single-nucleotide polymorphisms, is identical in both indica and japonica. This implies a single domestication event for O. sativa. Both indica and japonica forms of Asian rice sprang from a single domestication event in China from the wild rice Oryza rufipogon. Despite this evidence, it appears that indica rice arose when japonica arrived in India about 4,500 years ago and hybridised with another rice, whether an undomesticated proto-indica or wild O. nivara.
Rice was introduced early into Sino-Tibetan cultures in northern China by around 6000 to 5600 years ago, and to the Korean peninsula and Japan by around 5500 to 3200 years ago. It was also carried into Taiwan by the Dapenkeng culture by 5500 to 4000 years ago, before spreading southwards via the Austronesian migrations to Island Southeast Asia, Madagascar, and Guam, but did not survive the voyage to the rest of the Pacific. It reached Austroasiatic and Kra-Dai-speakers in Mainland Southeast Asia and southern China by 5000 years ago.
Rice spread around the rest of the world through cultivation, migration and trade, eventually to the Americas as part of the Columbian exchange after 1492. The now less common Oryza glaberrima (African rice) was independently domesticated in Africa around 3,000 years ago, and introduced to the Americas by the Spanish. Italian Arborio rice is a cultivar of Oryza sativa subsp Japonica.
Dry rice grain is milled to remove the outer layers; depending on how much is removed, products range from brown rice to rice with germ and white rice. Some is parboiled to make it easy to cook. Rice contains no gluten; it provides protein but not all the essential amino acids needed for good health. Rice of different types is eaten around the world. Long-grain rice tends to stay intact on cooking; medium-grain rice is stickier, and is used for sweet dishes, and in Italy for risotto; and sticky short-grain rice is used in Japanese sushi as it keeps its shape when cooked. White rice when cooked contains 29% carbohydrate and 2% protein, with some manganese. Golden rice is a variety produced by genetic engineering to contain vitamin A.
The alphabetical list of all Rice recipes on this site follows, (limited to 100 recipes per page). There are 715 recipes in total:
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| A Potage of Roysons (A Pudding of Raisins) Origin: England | Arroz de Coco e Papaia (Rice with Coconut and Papaya) Origin: Angola | Beignets de Banane au Lait de Coco (Banana Fritters with Coconut Milk) Origin: Togo |
| Adas Polo (Rice with Lentils) Origin: Iran | Arroz doce (Sao Tomean Rice Pudding) Origin: Sao Tome | Belizean Rice and Beans Origin: Belize |
| Air Fryer Egg Fried Rice Origin: Britain | Arroz Integral com Mantiega de Amendoim e Bananas (Brown Rice with Peanut Mantiega and Bananas) Origin: Angola | Beriani Origin: Brunei |
| Air Fryer White Rice Origin: Britain | Arroz Rojo (Mexican Red Rice) Origin: Mexico | Bermuda Peas n' Rice Origin: Bermuda |
| Al Machboos (Emirati Spiced Rice With Chicken) Origin: UAE | Ataanme Nmliche (Tiger Nut Pudding) Origin: Ghana | Bhuna Kedgeree Origin: Anglo-Indian |
| Alaisa fa'apopo (Samoan Coconut Rice) Origin: Samoa | Atadwe Milkye (Silky Tigernut Pudding) Origin: Ghana | Bhuna Khichuri Origin: Bangladesh |
| Alaisa fa'apopo (Samoan Coconut Rice) Origin: American Samoa | Aumonières aux pommes et aux marrons (Apple and Chestnut Purses) Origin: France | Bhutanese Red Rice Origin: Bhutan |
| Aljota (Fish Soup) Origin: Malta | Authentic Gochujang Origin: Korea | Bhutanese Red Rice Origin: Bhutan |
| Amulatum Aliter II (Another Thick Sauce II) Origin: Roman | Ayimonlou (Togolese Rice and Beans) Origin: Togo | Bibinka (Savoury Coconut Rice Cake) Origin: East Timor |
| Anguillan Rice and Peas Origin: Anguilla | Ayimonlou et N'gbagba (Togolese Rice and Beans with N'gbagba) Origin: Togo | Bihari Lamb Curry Origin: India |
| Angwa Mo (Ghanaian Rice Pilaf) Origin: Ghana | Ayrshire Shortbread Origin: Scotland | Birch Sap and Cleavers Risotto Origin: Britain |
| Antiguan Rice Pudding Origin: Antigua | Ayrshire Shortbread II Origin: Scotland | Biriani de Poulet (Chicken Biriani) Origin: Mauritius |
| Antiguan Seasoned Rice Origin: Antigua | Azerbaijani Plav (Azerbaijani Pilaf) Origin: Azerbaijan | Black Bean Burritos Origin: America |
| Antipasto Rice Origin: Italy | Bánh lọt (Sweet Rice Pasta) Origin: Vietnam | Black Eyed Beans Jambalaya Recipe Origin: American |
| Apple Cheesecakes Origin: Ireland | Baekse Karē (Korean Curry Rice) Origin: Korea | Blank Maunger Origin: England |
| Arancini di Riso (Rice 'Oranges') Origin: Italy | Baghali Shevid Polow (Lima Bean with Dill Rice) Origin: Iran | Blue Bayou Jambalaya Origin: Cajun |
| Aros di Koko (Coconut Rice) Origin: Dominica | Bahamian Crab and Rice Origin: Saint Barthelemy | Bobor Taro (Taro Root Pudding) Origin: Cambodia |
| Arroz a la Cubana (Cuban-style Rice) Origin: Philippines | Baked Rice Custard Origin: Australia | Borage Soup Origin: Britain |
| Arroz al Horno con Perdiz (Baked Rice with Garlic) Origin: Spain | Bakwan Jagung (Indonesian Corn Fritters) Origin: Indonesia | Braaied Balti Prawn Parcels with Spinach Rice Origin: South Africa |
| Arroz Amarillo Con Achiote (Caribbean Yellow Rice) Origin: Cuba | Banana Akara Origin: Sierra Leone | Brazilian-style Venison with Rice Origin: Fusion |
| Arroz com Camarão (Rice with Prawns) Origin: Brazil | Bandeja Paisa (Paisa Platter) Origin: Colombia | Brined Cabbage Sarma Origin: North Macedonia |
| Arroz con Camarón (Rice with Prawns) Origin: Ecuador | Barbecued Stuffed Tomatoes Origin: British | Brown Rice with Kombu Origin: Ireland |
| Arroz con Chorizo (Rice with Chorizo) Origin: Ecuador | Bariis iskukari Origin: Djibouti | Bua Loy (Pumpkin Sticky Rice Balls in Coconut Milk) Origin: Thailand |
| Arroz con Dulce (Puerto Rican Coconut Rice Pudding) Origin: Puerto Rico | Bariis Iskukaris Origin: Somalia | Bubur Ketan Hitam (Black Rice Pudding) Origin: Brunei |
| Arroz con Gandules (Puerto Rican Rice and Beans with Sofrito) Origin: Puerto Rico | Basanti Pulao (Bengali Pilau Rice) Origin: India | Bubur Pulut Hitam (Malay Black Glutinous Rice Porridge) Origin: Fusion |
| Arroz con Leche (Ecuadorian Rice Pudding) Origin: Ecuador | Basic Cajun Jambalaya Origin: Cajun | Budaatai Khuurga (Fried Rice, Meat and Vegetables) Origin: Mongolia |
| Arroz con Leche Origin: Mexico | Basic Dhokla (Basic Steamed Rice and Dhal Cake) Origin: India | Bukharan Pilaf Origin: Uzbekistan |
| Arroz con Leche Origin: Uruguay | Basic Jollof Rice Origin: Nigeria | Burmese grilled chicken with sticky and crispy rice Origin: Myanmar |
| Arroz con Leche (Rice with Milk) Origin: Colombia | Basic Microwave Steamed Rice Origin: Britain | Butternut Squash and Pea Risotto Origin: Britain |
| Arroz con leche sin azúcar de absorción rápida (Sweet Rice Pudding, made by Rapid Absorption) Origin: Spain | Basmati Steamed Rice Origin: Britain | Cëebu Jen II Origin: Senegal |
| Arroz con Pollo (Chicken with Saffron Rice) Origin: Spain | Beef Burritos Origin: America | Cabbage Jambalaya Origin: Cajun |
| Arroz Con Pollo (Costa Rican Arroz con Pollo) Origin: Costa Rica | Beef in Bistort Leaves Origin: Britain | Cabri farci, façon afar (Stuffed Goat, Afar Style) Origin: Djibouti |
| Arroz con Pollo Guatemalteco (Chicken with Rice, Guatemalan Style) Origin: Guatemala | Beefsteak Mushroom and Hen of the Woods Risotto Origin: British | |
| Arroz Con Pollo Panameño (Panamanian Arroz con Pollo) Origin: Panama | Beignet de Riz (Rice Fritters) Origin: Mali |
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