Books : The Ultimate Rice Cooker Cookbook : 250 No-Fail Recipes for Pilafs, Risottos, Polenta, Chilis, Soups, Porridges, Puddings and More, from Start to Finish in Your Rice Cooker
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Binding: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 641
EAN: 9781558322035
ISBN: 1558322035
Label: Harvard Common Press
Manufacturer: Harvard Common Press
Number Of Items: 1
Number Of Pages: 352
Publication Date: April 25, 2003
Publisher: Harvard Common Press
Sales Rank: 831
Studio: Harvard Common Press
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Editorial Review:
Product Description: This book unlocks the rice cooker's true potential. It thoroughly explains how this appliance works and how to prepare every kind of rice, grain, and dried bean.
Amazon.com Review: Beth Hensperger and Julie Kaufmann's The Ultimate Rice Cooker Cookbook offers 250 timesaving, convenient, and healthy recipes for making everything from simple white rice to full-course meals. This cookbook proves the rice cooker--which tends to have a bad rap as a never-opened or oft-neglected wedding gift--can be surprisingly versatile: not only does it prepare your rice, it can be used for every dinner course--salad, soup, vegetable, entree, and even dessert.
There is a complete buying and cooking guide for the many rice varieties, as well as other whole grains such as barley, millet, wheat berry, and quinoa. Many of the recipes provide convenient alternative cooking methods for traditional dishes like Italian risottos (the Italian Sausage Risotto is wonderful). Hensperger and Kaufmann show the rice cooker can also work miracles for hot breakfast cereals and porridges with such recipes as Hot Fruited Oatmeal. Delightful main courses include Steamed Ginger Salmon and Asparagus in Black Bean Sauce, and the meal is done almost exclusively within the rice cooker for simple preparation and cleanup. The dessert section has many ideas beyond the expected Old-Fashioned Rice Pudding--the Poached Pears with Grand Marnier Custard Sauce is one elegant and sophisticated example. Both authors of this cookbook are seasoned food writers and this combined effort gives tasty, easy, and healthy recipes that will motivate you to use what has been, until now, an underutilized appliance. --Teresa Simanton
Average Rating: 
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I bought this book looking to expand my range of recipes for my rice cooker. What I got was a book that did nothing to excite my palate. The recipes mainly seemed to focus on Asian cuisine. I hate to tell them but rice is consumed in other parts of the world. Beside that the actual typeset of the book makes it very hard to read. The paper is an off white on which they used a grey ink for the main text with the highlighted portions in a pale orange. If I even attempt to make any of these recipes I will be surprised.
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Good, interesting recipes to experiment with in my new Sanyo Rice Cooker. But, how am I supposed to keep the page flat while I follow them? My third arm is very slow in evolving. Shouldn't cook books be spiral-bound or in binders? This is a major problem. I don't think a brick (to hold the pages apart) should be a part of the cooking process. Now, I'm going to have to buy one of those plexiglass holders for the book.
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The cooker and book are in excellent condition with many delicious sounding recipes. A friend of mine sot the same offer and has taught herself to cook many rice dishes. I am hoping to be as lucky.
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This really is a great book for things to make in your rice cooker. A lot of awesome ideas.
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I've been using rice cookers for about 20 years with both white rice and mixed grains (brown rice, beans, oat groats, etc). I just received this book hoping to learn some new tricks. Reading the first chapter, describing how the different types of rice cookers work, I'm amazed at inaccuracies/vagueness.
On page 1, they write that the sensor detects when the water is boiled off and the amount of rice doesn't affect the cooking time. This is clearly wrong--these types of rice cookers prevent all but a small amount of steam from escaping so almost all the water is absorbed. Both the quantity and type of rice affect the rate of water absorption.
On page 5, they describe the induction heating type cooker (the most recent technology, which I own and was hoping for a little insight into) as being fitted with "state-of-the-art microm technology designed for sensitive sensor timing and temperature detection...it delivers a finished product that is the most evenly cooked of any method available because of the accuracy of the microm technology controlled by a microcomputer (think microchip)." So they've said the induction machines differ from the fuzzy logic ones by the inclusion of a microm microcomputer which is like a microchip. However, the other type--fuzzy logic--so they haven't explained how they're different. It's as if a non-technical person speculated on how, say, a helicopter works. You'll get an answer but it won't be very useful--it almost ... Read More
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