The Food
Snoop
By Masha Gutkin
Rice
dreams
'MAMA TOLD ME how to wash rice clean," Cibo Matto sings.
"She didn't tell me how to clean the lint of love." Rice and
love: a time-honored association, though nowadays most people don't
throw rice at weddings, since it supposedly expands in birds' bellies
and makes them explode. I admit to taking a wicked pleasure in the visual
association of weddings with bird carnage. Not that I've ever seen this
rice = bird death correlation in action. Maybe it's a rumor spread by
the birdseed industry. How can rice be the silent bird killer when rice
fields are, like, bird havens? Some birds literally depend on rice fields
to sustain their migration flights. Maybe it's just Uncle Ben's that's
deadly. I bet any fowl would be delighted with arborio, brown, wild,
basmati, or jasmine.
Rice, in its myriad forms, serves in the formidable role of staple
food for (besides birds) about half the world's human population. Considering
the aforesaid, and also that rice has been in cultivation for more than
7,000 years and now numbers around 100,000 varieties, there's a good
deal more to say about rice than I can fit on this nonexpanding page.
Happily, I have yet to come across links between rice and exploding
newspapers.
Zizania aquatica is, in addition to a neat conflation of both
ends of the alphabet and the name I wish for my first godchild, the
Latin name of wild rice. It is not rice at all, but a marsh grass and
a staple of Great Lakes region Native American tribes. Besides being
beautiful (it tends to a black-blue-green color spectrum), it's
very tasty in a smoky, nutty way and has an extrachewy texture that
invites attention. Traditionally gathered in canoes, the reeds were
bent over the side of the boat and the ripe grains knocked off, leaving
some grain to reseed for the next year. California, the largest producer
of Zizania aquatica in the world, has been growing it
since the 1970s. In the topsy-turvy manner of contemporary agriculture,
farmers have to simulate its native Midwestern conditions by wintering
the seeds in water-filled bins in cold-storage facilities until it's
time to sow next year's crop.
Delectable as it is, wild rice can't compare in popularity and economic
importance to its namesake, rice a nearly $200 million industry
in California, one of the six rice-producing states in the United States
(the others being Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, and Texas).
The United States ranks third among the rice-exporting nations of the
world, exporting 4.5 million metric tons last year.
It seems counterintuitive to grow rice, a crop that needs a lot
of water, in drought-prone California. I still hear the public-service
announcements from the 1980s drip drip drip drought
playing in my head whenever I turn on the shower. Apparently, though,
rice farming puts to use the heavy, water-retentive clay soil of the
Sacramento Valley, which is not suitable for most crops but perfect
for rice. I was relieved to read that the industry has improved water
conservation and claims to have reduced water use by two-thirds in the
last 30 years. A UC Davis Web site on California rice asserts that "net
water use is similar to that of pasture, alfalfa, cotton, and several
tree and vegetable crops."
Most California rice is of the middle-of-the-road, medium grain japonica
variety not too fluffy, not too sticky. Long grain rice, on the
other hand, such as the aromatic basmati, is four to five times longer
than it is wide and has a lower starch content, so it cooks up fluffy
and the grains remain distinct. I still remember the smell coming from
the apartment of my neighbor down the hall, Firouzeh, who cooked basmati
for pilaf when I was a kid. Sometimes I'd just stand by her door inhaling
the amazing scents. What makes it smell so good? An article on Basmati.com
explains: "the aroma in Basmati arises from a cocktail of 100 compounds
hydrocarbons, alcohols, aldehydes and esters. A particular molecule
of note, detected by Dr. R.G. Buttery and others, is 2-acetyl-1-pyrroline.
Buttery went ahead to patent the use of this compound to flavour normal
rice and other food items." I wonder if Dr. Buttery is working
on a new product called I Can't Believe It's Not Basmati! Speaking of
patents, India is trying to get the name basmati protected as
a "geographic indicator" (like champagne), so that only rice
grown in a specific region can be called basmati.
Despite the political and flavor intrigues of basmati, it was a medium-short
grain hybrid that got me started on this armchair rice odyssey. A bag
of black rice caught my eye at Trader Joe's: Black Japonica. It cooks
up purple-black, a little sticky and fragrant, and turns the water a
gorgeous deep purple. The other day I served it with broccoli in a bright
yellow bowl. My heart skipped a beat just from the color impact. Because
it's not processed (the grain still has the nutritious, cholesterol-fighting
bran and germ, as does brown rice), it's on the chewier side and takes
about 40 minutes to cook just enough time to get the rest of
dinner ready.
The USA Rice Federation says, "American-grown rice is a clean
product that does not need washing ..." But that pompous tone just
isn't as convincing as "Lint of Love" 's plaintive symbolism.
I'm going with the song and what Mama says and spending some quality
time with the rice in a bowl of water, contemplating my own love for
this 7,000-year-old grain before it hits the stove and then my stomach.
E-mail Masha Gutkin at lydialeapfrog@yahoo.com.