It may have to do with the fact that in just over 24 hours I'll be on an airplane to Paris with my girlfriends, for my first trip there since my mother and I met up in the Marais for a weekend four years ago, but I can't seem to focus on any kind of proper recipe at all right now. Instead, I'm thinking about being in Paris.

It's funny, how each time there gets sorted under a different rubric. For a long time, I associated Paris with my father, who took me there a few times in college, and who has his own ongoing love affair with the city. I lived there for a year myself, working and struggling, because despite the glorious city around me and the interesting work I had, it felt like a struggle to this then-21 year old, to be seen, to feel connected, to find a way – any way – to feel a little less alone there. I had to take a break from Paris when I left, had to banish it from my thoughts, because my experience had turned into something quite painful, a lost love haunting every memory I had of the place. But I've slowly been finding my way back, through blogs and stories and the soft passage of time. And now I'm so excited I can't sit still, can't wait to be back for a new experience this time: Paris with my girls. It's a whole new thing.

I'll be back next week with photos and stories for you, but before I go, I have to tell you about something that seriously made my week (already): Francis Lam's method for cooking rice. Embedded deep within an article he wrote for Gourmet.com were just a few short sentences that me both smile and sit up straight:

"Warm up a heavy saucepan with a tight-fitting lid over medium-high heat. Give it a few nice glugs of olive oil. Don’t be stingy. Now throw in your rice and stir it around…until…maybe half the rice has turned opaque. Pour in your water; it will probably boil immediately. If not, make it boil. Then cover it and drop it in the oven. Pull it out 13 minutes later. If you’re one of those freaky people who can cook rice perfectly on the stove, do whatever it is that you do. Weirdo."

Freaky, indeed! Who, exactly, can cook rice perfectly on the stove? Not even my 12-grade boyfriend's Iranian mother and she had, like, 5,000 years of culinary perfection in her DNA. I use Martha Stewart's method and not even that is foolproof. So, clutching my computer and feeling determined, I marched straight into the kitchen and turned the oven on.

I had an inkling about those lines of Francis's, you know, that they would somehow change my life. Some of you might scoff, but the others know what I mean, right? Yeasted doughs, homemade pasta, soufflés, caramel, the supposedly difficult achievements in the kitchen that make you feel so proud when you master them, those achievements all fall away after being confronted by yet another pot of overcooked or undercooked, slightly chewy or frustratingly soft rice. So simple in theory, yet so difficult to master.

But my inkling was right, my life changed: perfect rice, suddenly within reach. Plus, so easy, so stress-free. The oven did all the work and all I had to do was show up when the timer screeched. It was quite the mid-week surprise. We scooped out our nice grains of rice, cooked with just the right amount of moisture, and munched happily away, with plenty left over for fried rice the next night.

(The fried rice, you ask: I used Mark Bittman's recipe, which was okay, but next time I'll try something that looks more like this, or like this. Or maybe one of you has a fried rice recipe that you think I can't live without? Pretty please!)

DSC_9167

Life-Changing Baked Rice
Serves at least 4

1 tablespoon olive oil or butter
2 cups basmati or long-grain white rice
3 cups (or 2 3/4 cups, if you like dryer grains) water
1/2 teaspoon salt

1. Heat the oven to 350 degrees. Pour the olive oil or place the butter in a heavy saucepan with a tight-fitting lid (I used my Le Creuset soup pot) and set the pan over medium-high heat. Throw in the rice and stir it until the oil or butter coats all the grain. Cook, stirring, for a few minutes. The rice will look glassy and smell toasty.

2. Pour in the water, add the salt, and bring to a boil. Stir the rice once, then cover the pot and place in the oven. Set the timer for 13 minutes.

3. After 13 minutes, remove the pot from the oven. Do not remove the lid from the pot and let the rice rest for five minutes. After resting, fork through the rice to fluff it and serve.

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68 responses to “Francis Lam’s Baked Rice”

  1. Ulla Avatar

    I had a similar experience when I was living in Reykjavik as a newly minted adult after graduating from college. Paris is amazing! Have fun! Can not wait to see the pictures, your pictures of Berlin were breathtaking:)

    Like

  2. Katharine Avatar

    Here’s my favorite (and healthy) fried rice. Funny you mention it, I have the brown rice in the fridge chilling right now!
    http://frommytable.com/2009/02/02/fried-rice-and-shrimp/

    Like

  3. Jodye Avatar

    What a wonderful discovery, I’ll be sure to try this soon! I hope you have an amazing trip to paris!

    Like

  4. Treehouse Chef Avatar

    Your recipes are always just so delicious. Thanks for sharing.

    Like

  5. Recipe man Avatar

    WOW! this sounds amazing.
    Paris is so hot. good anytime
    great post

    Like

  6. CookingSchoolConfidential.com Avatar

    One of the chef’s at my school (I’m a culinary school student) says rice separates the real cooks from those that can’t. Such a simple thing, so tricky to get right.
    Cheers!

    Like

  7. Annie Avatar

    I mess up rice every single time. And I thought I was the only one! Glad to know I’m not alone, will be trying this asap.

    Like

  8. tara Avatar

    OH! How did I miss this one! My Mum has this baffling rice-making mojo, and gets it bang on pretty much every time. She takes her skill so for granted that each time I ask for pointers, she looks as if I am mad. She can’t see the big deal over making rice.
    You’ve now saved me from getting that look from my mother. Thank you.

    Like

  9. Sarah Avatar
    Sarah

    My favorite version of fried rice is not a specific recipe – I just threw some things together one night, and it worked.
    Brown rice, cooked
    Shrimp, cooked, shells and tails removed
    Canned pineapple chunks in juice
    1 egg
    1 onion, diced
    Crushed red pepper flakes
    Soy sauce
    Canola oil
    – Beat egg and cook in a small amount of canola oil. Remove from pan and cut into strips
    – In same pan, cook onion until translucent. Drain pineapple chunks, reserving a little bit of juice. Add pineapple to pan.
    – Add shrimp and crushed red pepper (to taste) to pan. Add rice, soy sauce (to taste), and a bit of reserved pineapple juice. Cook until heated through.
    That’s it! It’s really delicous.

    Like

  10. Plush Palate Avatar

    Wow, I have never heard anyone articulate how I felt after living/struggling in Rome for two years so well. I wanted to banish it, run from it, not even think about it….until recently, when those feelings have changed to an affection for the experience. Thanks so much for sharing.

    Like

  11. John Avatar
    John

    I can’t wait to try this. Tell me, do you rinse (or soak) the Basmati rice before you cook it in the olive oil?

    Like

  12. Stacey Snacks Avatar

    I hate making rice, it never comes out well.
    So thank you for posting this easy recipe! It will change my life (so I’ve been told!).
    Enjoy Paris. Can’t wait to go back in September. I dream about it everyday. It must be a fun trip with girlfriends!
    Eat and Enjoy!

    Like

  13. GraceF Avatar
    GraceF

    I can’t wait to try this! Maybe my poor family doesn’t have to eat the 5 minute rice anymore! I have to wonder what else is easy in the kitchen that I don’t know about!

    Like

  14. Avneet Avatar
    Avneet

    This sounds like the North Indian method of cooking rice. Startchy, buttery goodness. Cooking onions and cumin in the butter before adding the rice makes it nothing short of amazing. I could eat it plain, as a meal.

    Like

  15. jocelyn Avatar
    jocelyn

    thanks for that – i do rice in the aga at home and have no idea how to cook it here so will try this method next time I cook it! lol

    Like

  16. kristyn Avatar
    kristyn

    You know my secret pain! Maybe this method will make me and rice friends again. Thanks for sharing!

    Like

  17. M Jay Avatar
    M Jay

    I don’t feel so badly after reading these comments. All these years I thought it was just me.
    And I had the most perfectly humiliating experience this fall, staying with a Maasai family way out in the country in Kenya, and couldn’t my hostess cook perfect rice, every time, over a small wood fire, in a kitchen made of sticks and cow dung!
    Made me want to curl up and turn in all my badges!
    Now I just have to see what might go into the oven . . .

    Like

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