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#1
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On Wed, 13 Jul 2005 09:37:00 -0400, HarryKrause wrote:
Doug Kanter wrote: "HarryKrause" wrote in message ... Doug Kanter wrote: "HarryKrause" wrote in message ... Makes perfect sense. You use a rice cooker? Harry, what the phuque is a rice cooker???? A kitchen electrical pot in which you place measured amounts of rice and water. It steams the rice until it is perfectly cooked. Mine is about the size of a two quart pot, and it has a glass cover. They're inexpensive. They're also called "rice steamers." Here's one: http://importfood.com/ricecooker.html Some oriental families I know have very large and somehow boxlike rice cookers. Chinese restaurants also use the bigger units. I thought a pot with a lid did just fine for the past 30 years. I guess I was wrong. :-) You was wrong. Actually, I use ours mostly when I am cooking a bunch of stuff at the same time in four or five pots and the oven. As you know, you have to keep an eye on rice to cook it properly, and the rice cooker not only keeps its eye on the rice, as it were, but it also frees up a cooktop burner. Please show me something that says to keep an eye on rice to cook it properly. If you've been raising the lid to look, no wonder a 'rice cooker' is your method of choice. -- John H. On the 'PocoLoco' out of Deale, MD |
#2
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![]() "John H." wrote in message ... On Wed, 13 Jul 2005 09:37:00 -0400, HarryKrause wrote: Doug Kanter wrote: "HarryKrause" wrote in message ... Doug Kanter wrote: "HarryKrause" wrote in message ... Makes perfect sense. You use a rice cooker? Harry, what the phuque is a rice cooker???? A kitchen electrical pot in which you place measured amounts of rice and water. It steams the rice until it is perfectly cooked. Mine is about the size of a two quart pot, and it has a glass cover. They're inexpensive. They're also called "rice steamers." Here's one: http://importfood.com/ricecooker.html Some oriental families I know have very large and somehow boxlike rice cookers. Chinese restaurants also use the bigger units. I thought a pot with a lid did just fine for the past 30 years. I guess I was wrong. :-) You was wrong. Actually, I use ours mostly when I am cooking a bunch of stuff at the same time in four or five pots and the oven. As you know, you have to keep an eye on rice to cook it properly, and the rice cooker not only keeps its eye on the rice, as it were, but it also frees up a cooktop burner. Please show me something that says to keep an eye on rice to cook it properly. If you've been raising the lid to look, no wonder a 'rice cooker' is your method of choice. For once, I have to agree with John. Perhaps some people have issues with measuring cups, or getting used to a particular stove. There are only 3 variables: Quantities, time and heat. Harry...tune into Emeril Live now and then. :-) |
#3
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On Wed, 13 Jul 2005 19:54:34 GMT, "Doug Kanter"
wrote: "John H." wrote in message .. . On Wed, 13 Jul 2005 09:37:00 -0400, HarryKrause wrote: Doug Kanter wrote: "HarryKrause" wrote in message ... Doug Kanter wrote: "HarryKrause" wrote in message ... Makes perfect sense. You use a rice cooker? Harry, what the phuque is a rice cooker???? A kitchen electrical pot in which you place measured amounts of rice and water. It steams the rice until it is perfectly cooked. Mine is about the size of a two quart pot, and it has a glass cover. They're inexpensive. They're also called "rice steamers." Here's one: http://importfood.com/ricecooker.html Some oriental families I know have very large and somehow boxlike rice cookers. Chinese restaurants also use the bigger units. I thought a pot with a lid did just fine for the past 30 years. I guess I was wrong. :-) You was wrong. Actually, I use ours mostly when I am cooking a bunch of stuff at the same time in four or five pots and the oven. As you know, you have to keep an eye on rice to cook it properly, and the rice cooker not only keeps its eye on the rice, as it were, but it also frees up a cooktop burner. Please show me something that says to keep an eye on rice to cook it properly. If you've been raising the lid to look, no wonder a 'rice cooker' is your method of choice. For once, I have to agree with John. Perhaps some people have issues with measuring cups, or getting used to a particular stove. There are only 3 variables: Quantities, time and heat. Harry...tune into Emeril Live now and then. :-) Crap. If you're agreeing with me, I must be doing something wrong. : ) -- John H. On the 'PocoLoco' out of Deale, MD |
#4
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![]() "John H." wrote in message ... On Wed, 13 Jul 2005 19:54:34 GMT, "Doug Kanter" wrote: "John H." wrote in message .. . On Wed, 13 Jul 2005 09:37:00 -0400, HarryKrause wrote: Doug Kanter wrote: "HarryKrause" wrote in message ... Doug Kanter wrote: "HarryKrause" wrote in message ... Makes perfect sense. You use a rice cooker? Harry, what the phuque is a rice cooker???? A kitchen electrical pot in which you place measured amounts of rice and water. It steams the rice until it is perfectly cooked. Mine is about the size of a two quart pot, and it has a glass cover. They're inexpensive. They're also called "rice steamers." Here's one: http://importfood.com/ricecooker.html Some oriental families I know have very large and somehow boxlike rice cookers. Chinese restaurants also use the bigger units. I thought a pot with a lid did just fine for the past 30 years. I guess I was wrong. :-) You was wrong. Actually, I use ours mostly when I am cooking a bunch of stuff at the same time in four or five pots and the oven. As you know, you have to keep an eye on rice to cook it properly, and the rice cooker not only keeps its eye on the rice, as it were, but it also frees up a cooktop burner. Please show me something that says to keep an eye on rice to cook it properly. If you've been raising the lid to look, no wonder a 'rice cooker' is your method of choice. For once, I have to agree with John. Perhaps some people have issues with measuring cups, or getting used to a particular stove. There are only 3 variables: Quantities, time and heat. Harry...tune into Emeril Live now and then. :-) Crap. If you're agreeing with me, I must be doing something wrong. : ) Damn, now I have to agree with Doug as well :-) He hit it on the nose.......quantities, time and heat. -- John H. On the 'PocoLoco' out of Deale, MD |
#5
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![]() "John H." wrote in message ... On Wed, 13 Jul 2005 09:37:00 -0400, HarryKrause wrote: Doug Kanter wrote: "HarryKrause" wrote in message ... Doug Kanter wrote: "HarryKrause" wrote in message ... Makes perfect sense. You use a rice cooker? Harry, what the phuque is a rice cooker???? A kitchen electrical pot in which you place measured amounts of rice and water. It steams the rice until it is perfectly cooked. Mine is about the size of a two quart pot, and it has a glass cover. They're inexpensive. They're also called "rice steamers." Here's one: http://importfood.com/ricecooker.html Some oriental families I know have very large and somehow boxlike rice cookers. Chinese restaurants also use the bigger units. I thought a pot with a lid did just fine for the past 30 years. I guess I was wrong. :-) You was wrong. Actually, I use ours mostly when I am cooking a bunch of stuff at the same time in four or five pots and the oven. As you know, you have to keep an eye on rice to cook it properly, and the rice cooker not only keeps its eye on the rice, as it were, but it also frees up a cooktop burner. Please show me something that says to keep an eye on rice to cook it properly. If you've been raising the lid to look, no wonder a 'rice cooker' is your method of choice. No ****.........once again harry show how little he knows -- John H. On the 'PocoLoco' out of Deale, MD |
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