something from a USA recipe. Why do they measure ingredients by cups, rather than weight, which is far more accurate?
I hate cooking
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hedgehog
Originally posted by Flosshilde View Postsomething from a USA recipe. Why do they measure ingredients by cups, rather than weight, which is far more accurate?Last edited by Guest; 24-03-13, 08:31.
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Originally posted by hedgehog View Postyou haven't got round to getting a new battery for your digital weighing machine etc....
American standard cup is 240 ml,
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Anna
My mother had an all purpose measuring cup, the inside of which was marked with British and American dry and fluid measures - surely these must still be around?
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostWith a buttercup, which:
a) reveals who likes butter and who doesn't; and
b) must be in season
I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Richard Tarleton
Cups are OK where it's a case of relative volume, rather than weight. For perfect brown rice (or brown basmati) for 2 people, it's one level cup of rice to two of water. Bring to boil, simmer with lid on till all water absorbed and rice just beginning to stick
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Yes - in that particular case it doesn't matter what size the cup is - it could be anything from an egg-cup to a pint mug (or a 2-gallon bucket), since you simply need 1 part rice to two parts water. But in baking, for example, where the the proportions & balance of ingredients matter using cups isn't very precise - & they are a good deal more awkward than weighing things. There must presumably be some reason for the difference, rather than plain cussedness & a desire to be different
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I tend to find that with too little water to rice, the result when cooked is always a mush of rice and starch, which then requires copious amounts of rinsing. Better to have large volume of water from the start, remembering that tipping the rice in slowly when the water is boiling lessens the grains sticking - then, when the rice is cooked it should then only need draining.
I am speaking of long-grain btw - not sure if this applies to brown rice.
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostI am speaking of long-grain btw - not sure if this applies to brown rice.
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Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View PostMine is the "Buddhist monk" method for whole brown long grain rice - if you use precisely twice as much water as rice you will not need to drain. Start the water off from cold with the rice already in it, bring to boil, turn down to a simmer, leave the lid firmly on, resist the temptation to keep lifting it, don't stir....You can tell when the rice is done, because all the water is absorbed and evenly-distributed small "pits" appear on the surface of the rice. Slight sticking indicates the rice is done to perfection.
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