🌟 Elevate Every Meal with the Pride of India!
Pride Of India Extra Long Indian Basmati Rice is a premium, naturally aged aromatic grain, sold in a 3 lbs gourmet jar. This rice is 100% natural, aged for two years, and features extra long, thin grains that cook to perfection. It is GMO-free, gluten-free, vegan, and packaged in a sealed food-grade jar for optimal freshness.
D**L
Best Basmati Rice I've Had
Everything it says it is. I was pleasantly surprized with everything about it... extra long grain like I like, cooks up just right (no unpleasant surprises), aroma is very nice (dinner guests love it).I have been using nothing but this rice for a couple of years, and frequently make it just to fill the kitchen with it's wonderful aroma; of course, I eat it too. Before experiencing this rice, I hardly ever ate rice; just wasn't my thing. Now, I prefer it to French fries or mashed potatoes.There is another product sold on Amazon by the same name and has the same packaging that has very poor reviews, and sells for less; weird. I have no idea what that's all about, but I can vouch for this particular one as being of high quality and value.RECIPE:Rice, Basmati... the better rice★★★★★Prep 30 mins ∙ Cook 15 mins ∙ Makes 3 cups cooked riceINGREDIENTS:1 cup Basmati Rice2 cups water½ tsp salt (or to taste)splash of oil or bit of butter⅛ tsp turmeric (optional)DIRECTIONS:Using a strainer, gently rinse rice thoroughly with water to remove excess starch. Carful... the rice is britle and breaks easily. We are trying to get rid of small particles, not make more... easy does it.Soak rice in cold water for 30 minutes for softer, less brittle rice.Drain well, and transfer rice to pot with a good fitting lid.Add salt and butter to the rice and toss gently; gently. The butter not only adds flavor, but helps prevent the water from boiling over.Boil water in a seperate kettle or pot, and pour over the rice.Set pot over medium-high heat. When water starts boiling and steaming again, cover pot with tight fitting lid, reduce heat to just above it's lowest setting, and let rice cook for 15 minutes undisturbed.After 15 minutes, remove pot from heat, with lid still on (no peeking!); let rice steam another 5 minutes.Uncover rice, fluff it up with a fork.Fun with Tumeric:To add a bit of color, mix ⅛ teaspoon turmeric with a tablespoon of water, then add a handful of some still hot rice to the mixture. Then mix this rice back into the white rice.RICE Comparison:→Jasmine Rice (sticky)Jasmine rice is originally from Thailand and commonly used in Southeast Asian cooking. This is a long grain variety of rice that has a subtle floral aroma and a soft, sticky texture when cooked. The grains are also shorter and thicker than basmati rice.Before cooking it's important to wash all types of rice to remove dust and excess starch. Jasmine rice is traditionally cooked by steaming or using the absorption method, which simply means it's cooked in a measured amount of water which is completely absorbed by the rice.→Basmati Rice (non-sticky)Basmati rice hails from the foothills of the Himalayas in northern India and Pakistan. There are some varieties grown in the U.S., but they aren't quite as good as the imported varieties. This is a long grain variety of rice commonly used in Indian, Middle Eastern and Persian cooking. Basmati rice is commonly available at most grocery stores and is available in both white and brown varieties.Basmati rice needs to be soaked for at least 30 minutes before cooking. This allows the grains to absorb water and cook evenly without breaking. Basmati rice is traditionally cooked by boiling it in water.→Texmati rice is grown in Texas, and is a cross between Basmati and Texas long grain rice. We prefer Basmati over Texmati. To my taste, Texmati is missing length, fluffiness, aroma, and flavor compared to... okay... Texmati sucks compared to India Basmati. Although Jasmine is similar to Basmati and pretty good in it's own right, Basmati is a hard act to follow.→So... rinse and repeat to give either rice a thorough washing (carful not to break the grains... easy does it), then soak for at least 30 minutes to prepare it for cooking. Skipping either step will result in an end product that will surely disappoint. These fancier rices are a far cry from Minute Rice, and the other common, everyday rices most American's are used to. They require a lil' extra effort and care to prepare, but the end result is oh so worth it.I hope this helps.
M**N
Mmmm it's good.
I had bought store brand brown rice. I had bought the step up from the store. This is the real stuff. It doesn't get mushy when cooked. It has an excellent nutty flavor. I spent more for this rice from India, but it's worth it. Also, in some reviews of the other fifty Indian/Eastern rice brands sold in bulk bags noted there were insects (yuk) in it. Not in this. It's in a plastic jar (wish it were glass) - so I could see from the outside that it was clean and pure. Delicious and good even leftover days later.
E**A
Best Basmati Rice. The real deal!
There is no comparison to Pride Of India rice. It's authentic Indian Basmati rice and not the American version. This rice is light and fluffy and taste wonderful. Absolutely love it and will be a regular customer!
A**R
Leas calories and carbohydrates
I was looking for paraboiled rice because a recipe called for it. And since I love basmati rice this one seemed like a good choice.Instructions call for a 20 min soak before using. The proportion of rice to water is the same as usual.Later learned that paraboiled rice has less calories and carbohydrates, but has more proteins. All in all: good quality, taste and texture.
J**E
Rice perfection
I don’t think I knew how perfect rice could be. I wasn’t cooking it wrong - I was using the wrong stuff. Grains are a mile long and come out so fluffy and delicious.
S**.
My favorite rice.
Because it is Basmati rice and long and thin, it requires about HALF the cooking time of other brown rice!
N**P
Update 2/19/23 (Excellent product but wish it were organic)
5/21/23 Terrible: I’ve tried it again since I didn’t want a bad batch to ruin the good experience I’ve had…well, that was just terrible. Not only is it still not golden brownish color both jars have dirt. Not sure what’s going on and it’s no longer pride but shame of India. Will no longer buy and want my money back. I refuse to give access to my camera but will send video to seller. Shameful!!Last time I reviewed (below) on my fourth jar, it was wonderful. I’ve ordered at half dozen times since last review and the product was consistent. I usually order 2 to 3 jars of different sizes. I just placed another order last month and the rice looked like white rice unlike the golden brown in the past. I thought maybe I’ve received a wrong item but both jars say golden parboiled as before. This rice also breaks when cooked it, did not hold firm like the previous ones. This has never happened. What is going on? I know we’re the midst of an inflation and unscrupulous companies might try to pull the wool over ppl’s eyes but this is unacceptable. Totally unacceptable. I’ve bought enough of this rice to know it is NOT parboiled rice. Every parboiled rice is gold…different shades of gold but gold. The one I received is white basmati not parboiled as stated. Shame on you!This is my fourth jar I believe and this rice is simply marvelous. Very fragrant, clean, firm golden grains and taste amazing if you know how to cook rice :-) I give it a 4-Star because it’s not organic to my knowledge but I certainly will order again. It’s hard to find good organic parboiled rice. I found one but took almost two months to arrive. This one was as expected.
P**S
Tastes better than others.
Very good. Love this style rice.
Trustpilot
Hace 1 mes
Hace 1 mes