Coconut Rice with Chives: How to Make Fluffy Coconut Rice
>> Monday, June 1, 2009

The best coconut rice, in my opinion, is made from quality long grain rice (that would be old crop Jasmine rice, if you ask me) and fresh coconut milk extracted from finely-grated mature coconut meat. The rice-liquid ratio is 1:2 or 1:1.5 depending on whether the rice is an old or new crop as the former has lower moisture content than the latter and therefore requires more liquid.
Depending on what you like, several different perfuming or flavoring agents may be added to the rice as it cooks: smashed fresh garlic, bruised fresh pandan leaves, smashed fresh cilantro roots, crispy fried shallots, etc. If you grew up in Southeast Asia, chance are you’ve had at least 4-5 different varieties of coconut rice. Each culture, each sub-culture, each household has its own version.
This one of mine has added fresh chives. It's not the most traditional flavor, but I happen to think chives and coconut go very well together. Also, the method which I use is a little different from what is considered the standard. That is to say, while most recipes instruct you to cook long grain rice with coconut milk in lieu of plain water, mine holds off on the coconut milk until the very end.
I’m not very picky about the type of rice. (Having said that, I have to say Thai Jasmine rice will forever remain the love of my life. I may sometimes get infatuated with Basmati or Mochigome, but my dalliances with anything but Thai Jasmine have invariably proven short-lived; I always come crawling back to my true love.) I am, however, very picky about the texture of cooked rice. I can’t stand wet, gummy rice – a sign of over-hydration and/or too much starch in the liquid in which the rice is cooked. It’s similar to what happens to pasta when it's cooked too long in too little water, and we all know how tragic that is.
It could be just me. Perhaps other people have better luck making nice, fluffy coconut rice with canned coconut milk than I do. While I've never had problem making good coconut rice with freshly extracted coconut milk, every time I cook coconut rice with canned coconut milk (even my favorite brand which I normally consider godly and blameless), it often comes out wet and gummy. And since freshly-extracted coconut milk from freshly-grated coconut meat isn't readily available where I live, canned coconut milk is my only option. As for spray-dried coconut milk powder, I think it has very little taste. The other problem is that regardless of whether the rice comes out wet and gummy or partially undercooked (which sometimes happens when I make a misguided attempt to reduce the wetness by using less coconut milk), the rice at the bottom invariably gets over-browned and sticks to the pot or the rice cooker. This makes me cranky.
I have recently learned to do things differently: I do not add coconut milk until the very end. This is the only method which has consistently yielded perfectly-cooked rice, fluffy and thoroughly perfumed with coconut milk with no hard, brown crust at the bottom of the rice pot. The coconut milk is added at the moment when the rice has absorbed all of the water or broth, yet is still not quite fully cooked, which means it is still capable of taking on additional moisture without turning wet and gummy. The use of broth is optional; it’s just an extra step to enhance the flavor. What’s not optional, however, is the rinsing of the rice. Rinsing helps wash off some of the starch which would otherwise get released into the cooking liquid and cause the gumminess. (Imagine what it's like to cook your rice in starchy liquid similar to cornstarch or Wonder flour slurry.) I rinse my raw rice until the water runs clear.
Coconut Rice with Fresh Chives
(Makes 4-5 cups)
Printable Version
2 cups uncooked long grain rice, preferably Thai Jasmine or Basmati
2 3/4 cups water or unsalted chicken or vegetable broth
1 cup good canned coconut milk, not the "light" variety which is too thin
1 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon ground white or black pepper
3/4 cup snipped fresh chives

See review of this cooking method on A Little Yum.





21 comments:
great - now I have to figure out when it is five minutes before the ding...I have tried to make this before and it was not fluffy so I turned it into coconut rice pudding...thanks for the tips!
doggybloggy - All you have to do is turn on the rice cooker and let it do its thing. Then you sit right next to it, ignoring your job, your family, etc., and stare at the rice cooker until the rice seems to have absorbed all the water. That's roughly about five minutes before the ding. :)
That rice looks so perfect! How wonderful with coconut milk and chives!
That rice looks SO good! I have tried to make coconut rice but it came out icky. I will have to try your recipe. I love the stuff ... love.it. Thanks!!
I would LOVE to attempt this though I'll try my luck with the preferred canned milk. I don't have a lot of experience extracting milk from coconut milk and do find it a bit intimidating.
TKTC - This recipe calls for canned coconut milk.
Dang, we should've read this before we made ours. :( Well we can keep it in mind for the next time! Especially the chives. Good addition.
I love my rice!! But I don't think I've had coconut rice before. I'll have to try this. hopefully it'll come out like yours.
I always love stopping by and learning wonderful new things about Thai cooking. I made coconut rice this weekend, and mine was of the sticky gummy variety, I should have waited until after you posted.
Love your blog, it's must read, everyday!
I tried a coconut rice last year and I loved it! But now I have learned a couple of secrets to make it even better. Beautiful pictures!
Rick - You read my blog more often than I do. :)
Your rice looks perfect! So interesting about adding the coconut milk later. Have to try this.
Hi, I enjoyed this post on coconut rice. In South India where I live, there are kinds and kinds of rice and biriyanis prepared with coconut milk, but when we say coconut rice, it usually means plain rice sauteed with some grated coconut and tempering.
It's such a coincidence that I saw this post today - only today I learnt that the packaged coconut milk I use (an Indian brand) here in India, the coconut milk actually comes from Thailand!
This is a wonderful post! Thanks for sharing!
Mmmm! This looks SO good! And great pics as usual!
This is my favorite type of rice ever!
you can actually see how perfectly cooked your rice is. i think cooking good rice doesn't come natural to most people from ethnic backrounds that don't use rice predominantly in their cooking. maybe i mean americans? either way, over the past few years i've been working to improve my "rice game" and i have such a greater appreciation for it now. rice can really be the star of the show instead of mearly a backdrop.
actually my rice cooker will start indicating how many minutes left before the ding...around 13 minutes to.
i'll try this method and pour my coconut milk 5 minutes to.
Thanks so much for the tips, cant wait to try it.
Do you think we can make this with jasmine brown rice?
mrs_vanity - Definitely. I have done that many times.
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