Cleaning your rice cooker after every use will not only make the cleaning process easier, but it will also make it run more efficiently, meaning more delicious meals and less mess. Never use steel wool, metal tools, or anything else that is super abrasive on your rice cooker.
Maintaining your rice cooker on a regular basis will keep it in tip top shape and will ensure that the food cooked in it will always taste great. By cleaning your rice cooker regularly, you will get rid of abnormal odors and keep uncooked and watery rice from getting stuck in those hard to reach places.
Rinsing your rice before cooking gives the surface starches on your rice somewhere to go besides the pot. For best results, rinse rice in a fine-mesh strainer under the tap until the water runs clear. It won't change your life, but it'll certainly change your rice for the better.
Rinsing rice before cooking is an Asian practice to remove dirt, dust and excess starch; but it's actually optional. However, we recommend cooking with a little less water if you rinse, because, without the starch to absorb the bit of extra water, your white rice may turn out too mushy.
Gets Rid of Dirt and Chemical
Washing the rice helps to get rid of any debris. That way, the rice is cleaned before cooking. It also helps to remove any chemicals which might have been used in the milling process.
If the grains aren't washed before cooking, this residual starch will gelatinize in the hot cooking water and make the cooked grains of rice stick to each other. In some instances, such as sticky rice varieties like glutinous rice and arborio rice, this can lead to a very gummy texture.
Togu: Washing Rice
Before cooking, white rice is first rinsed with water, then "washed" so as to remove rice bran from the outer hull: the word togu is used to describe this "washing," or rubbing together, of the rice grains.
Rinse basmati rice very well before cooking.
Wash a few times (4 to 5) until the water runs clear. This will help remove starch from the surface of the grains. Starch is what makes cooked rice sticky and gummy, so for fluffy rice, it is important to remove the starch.
Due to the starches in risotto and paella, washing the rice would ruin the dish as starch is a big component of its success. "If you are cooking risotto or paella, you should not wash the rice because the washed rice draws out more starch and coats the surface of the rice's surface," says Chef Hamaya.
Rinsing the rice is also a good way to clean off any excess starch, which will make the rice less sticky. The one exception to this rule is large, fully-automated rice cookers that rinse the rice for you. Another important tip is to keep the measuring cup that typically comes with a rice cooker.
Once cooked, unwashed rice comes out with big, sticky clumps. Washed rice grains separate more easily. Unwashed rice has a gluey texture while washed rice is fluffier, more al dente.
No rinsing – if you use 1 1/4 cups of water for every 1 cup of jasmine rice, your rice will be fluffy even without rinsing. If you rinse, you must reduce the water by 2 tablespoons to factor in the extra water than remains in the rice (ie 1 1/4 cups water minus 2 tablespoons)
Most types of rice, particularly white rice, have a high glycemic index, basmati rice is much lower on the scale. With a glycemic index between 50 and 58, basmati rice is a low to medium glycemic index food. If you have diabetes, small portions of basmati rice can be a part of your healthy diet.
Technically speaking, basmati rice does not need to be soaked before cooking; you'll have fully cooked rice if you follow the directions below and omit the soaking. However, the rice will look similar to jasmine rice (see photo above, left).
If your rice has absorbed too much liquid, the grains may have split and the starches may have given the rice a soft, gluey consistency. One way to fix that? Add even more liquid. Pour in some milk, a dash of vanilla, and spoonful of sugar, and suddenly your mushy rice is a rich rice pudding.
Lydia Buchtmann, from the Food Safety Information Council, says there's no need to wash your rice as any bacteria will be killed as the rice is boiled. "You might occasionally get a bit of grit, but that's pretty rare these days for commercial rice," says Buchtmann.
The reason is to get rid of impurities such as dust, rice bran, and potential agricultural chemicals. There are some brands that are pre-rinsed before they are packed, but they are usually 20-30% more expensive.
The reason for washing rice (or any food, for that matter) is cleanliness. Rinsing rice removes dirt, dust, debris, chemicals, and bugs—in short, you're getting rid of the types of things you probably don't want to eat in your finished rice dish.
If you are thinking of washing your rice after it has been cooked, then don't. Rice is not meant to be washed after it has been cooked unless you want your rice to become soggy and sticky. By washing your rice after it has been cooked you will be rinsing off the nutrients such as carbohydrates and proteins.
You need to soak rice for 6 to 24 hours to cut down the cooking time, and even with overnight soaking the most you can reduce cooking is perhaps 10 minutes like in the case of brown rice. I personally haven't found that overnight soaking really changes the cooking time that much.