SERVES 4 TO 6

Short-grain brown rice (see related How To Cook) can also be used.

You might need to buy:
  • olive oil
  • low-sodium chicken broth
  • water
  • chopped roasted red peppers
  • chopped fresh parsley
  • ground black pepper

SERVES 4 TO 6

If you cannot find Andouille sausage, substitute chorizo, linguiça, or kielbasa. Short-grain brown rice can also be used in this recipe.

WHY THIS RECIPE WORKS:
To bump up the flavor of our basic brown rice recipe, we made a few easy additions. Caramelizing onions in a Dutch oven before stirring in the rice and incorporating chicken broth into the cooking liquid had a positive impact. Fresh herbs and a squeeze of citrus just before serving brightened our brown rice recipe.

You might need to buy:
  • olive oil
  • low-sodium chicken broth
  • water
  • long-grain brown rice
  • roughly chopped fresh basil
  • ground black pepper

SERVES 4 TO 6

Short-grain brown rice (see related How To Cook) can also be used.

WHY THIS RECIPE WORKS:
To bump up the flavor of our basic brown rice recipe, we made a few easy additions. Caramelizing onions in a Dutch oven before stirring in the rice and incorporating chicken broth into the cooking liquid had a positive impact. Fresh herbs and a squeeze of citrus just before serving brightened our brown rice recipe.

You might need to buy:
  • water
  • low-sodium chicken broth
  • olive oil
  • chopped fresh cilantro leaves
  • ground black pepper
Belongs to Bethany Skillet Jambalaya 

Serve 4 to 6

If you cannot find andouille sausage, either chorizo or linguiça can be sustituted. For a spicier jambalaya, you can add 1/4 teaspoon of cayenne along with the vegetables, and/or serve it with Tabasco.

You might need to buy:
  • long grain white rice
  • vegetable oil
  • Table salt and ground black pepper
  • low-sodium chicken broth
  • chopped fresh parsley leaves

Serves 4 as a main course with a topping or 6 to 8 as a side dish

Coarse-ground degerminated cornmeal such as yellow grits (with grains the size of couscous) works best in this recipe. Avoid instant and quick-cooking products, as well as whole-grain, stone-ground, and regular cornmeal. Do not omit the baking soda—it reduces the cooking time and makes for a creamier polenta. The polenta should do little more than release wisps of steam. If it bubbles or sputters even slightly after the first 10 minutes, the heat is too high and you may need a flame tamer, available at most kitchen supply stores. Alternatively, fashion your own from a ring of foil (see Homemade Flame Tamer step by step below). For a main course, serve the polenta with a topping (see related recipes) or with a wedge of rich cheese or a meat sauce. Served plain, the polenta makes a great accompaniment to stews and braises.

You might need to buy:
  • water
  • Ground black pepper

For five minutes of stirring, just Dutch and cover.

Serves 6 as a side dish

This recipe does not employ the traditional risotto method; the rice is mainly stirred for 3 minutes toward the end of cooking instead of constantly throughout. This more hands-off method does require precise timing, so we strongly recommend using a timer. The consistency of risotto is largely a matter of personal taste; if you prefer a looser texture, add extra broth in step 4.

WHY THIS RECIPE WORKS:
Classic risotto can demand half an hour of stovetop tedium for the best creamy results. Our goal was five minutes of stirring, tops.

First, we chose to cook our risotto in a Dutch oven, rather than a saucepan. A Dutch oven’s thick, heavy bottom, deep sides, and tight-fitting lid are made to trap and distribute heat as evenly as possible. Typical recipes dictate adding the broth in small increments after the wine has been absorbed (and stirring constantly after each addition), but we added most of the broth at once. Then we covered the pan and simmered the rice until almost all the broth had been absorbed, stirring just twice during this time. After adding the second and final addition of broth, we stirred the pot for just a few minutes to ensure the bottom didn’t cook more quickly than the top and turned off the heat. Without sitting over a direct flame, the sauce turned out perfectly creamy and the rice was thickened, velvety, and just barely chewy. To finish, we simply stirred in butter, herbs, and a squeeze of lemon juice to brighten the flavors.

http://www.americastestkitchenfeed.com/test-kitchen-community/2012/08/best-of-the-best-day-six-almost-hands-free-risotto/

You might need to buy:
  • dry white wine
  • Arborio rice
  • water
  • low-sodium chicken broth
  • juice from 1 lemon
  • chopped fresh parsley leaves
  • chopped fresh chives
  • Ground black pepper

Serves 6 to 8 as an entree and 8 to 10 as a side dish

Serve this recipe as a side dish or as a main course with a simple green salad. It is important to use lean—not fatty—salt pork. If you can’t find it, substitute six slices of bacon. If using bacon, decrease the cooking time in step 4 to eight minutes. For a vegetarian version of this recipe, use water instead of chicken broth, omit the salt pork, add 1 tablespoon of tomato paste with the vegetables in step 4, and increase the amount of salt in step 5 to 1½ teaspoons.

WHY THIS RECIPE WORKS:
Beans and rice is a familiar combination the world over, but Cuban black beans and rice is unique in that the rice is cooked in the inky concentrated liquid left over from cooking the beans, which renders the grains just as flavorful. For our own superlative version, we reserved a portion of the sofrito (the traditional combination of garlic, bell pepper, and onion) and simmered it with our beans to infuse them with flavor. Instead of just draining off and throwing away the flavorful bean cooking liquid, we used it again to cook our rice and beans together. Lightly browning the remaining sofrito vegetables and spices with rendered salt pork added complex, meaty flavor, and baking the dish in the oven eliminated the crusty bottom that can form when the dish is cooked on the stove.

You might need to buy:
  • olive oil
  • long grain white rice
  • bay leaves
  • water
  • minced fresh oregano leaves
  • ground cumin
  • red wine vinegar
Belongs to Bethany Basic Couscous 

Serves 4 to 6

WHY THIS RECIPE WORKS:
Couscous, granules of semolina, traditionally serves as a sauce absorber under stews and braises, but it can also be a quick and flavorful side dish for a variety of foods. We wanted to develop a classic version for saucy dishes as well as a handful of flavor-packed versions, as convenient as the boxed kind, but much fresher tasting. Toasting the couscous grains in butter deepened their flavor and helped them cook up fluffy and separate. And to bump up the flavor even further, we replaced half of the cooking liquid with chicken broth. For our enriched variations, dried fruit, nuts, and citrus juice added textural interest and sweet, bright notes.

You might need to buy:
  • 1cup low-sodium chicken broth
  • 1cup water
  • 2cups couscous
  • 2tablespoons unsalted butter
  • 1teaspoon table salt
  • Ground black pepper

Serves 4 to 6

If Thai chiles are unavailable, substitute two serranos or two medium jalapeños. Reduce the spiciness of this dish by removing the ribs and seeds from the chiles. This dish progresses very quickly at step 4; it’s imperative that your ingredients are in place by then and ready to go. If desired, serve the rice with sliced cucumbers and tomato wedges.

You might need to buy:
  • vegetable oil
  • fish sauce
  • soy sauce
  • light or mild molasses
  • dark brown sugar