by Jenise » Tue Feb 17, 2009 9:18 am
I have never been interested in owning a rice cooker. After all, I cook perfect rice on the stovetop and never seem to have any problems keeping an eye on it while I'm doing other things, and I don't cook rice every day. Own one more appliance? No thank you.
But Karen recently asked about them and Bob Ross made a comment about using his rice cooker to steam vegetables, a functionality I was previously unaware of, on the exact day I was jonesing for a low-cal plate of steamed vegetables and something that, without a kitchen, wasn't going to be happening any time soon.
Before many days would pass, a new jones emerged as I thought about Bill's last supper question: a meal that could make me die happy would be a meal wherein every course was some form of Asian noodles. So enamored am I of this culinary art form (and if all you've ever had of dumplings is the crappy Ling Ling potstickers at Costco, then you have no idea what I'm talking about), that my new favorite restaurant is Northern Delicacy in Richmond B.C. (Canadian Hong Kong) 30 miles north of here, a restaurant which specializes in the noodle dishes and fancy dumplings of the what-rich Xian region of northern China.
Fast forward to yesterday, and I'm standing in a little Asian market picking up some green tea and a steamed bao to go, and feeling sorry that I had no way to cook any of their very good frozen dumplings (this is what passes for convenience food at Chez J), when my eyes spied a Zojirushi rice cooker on the opposite wall whose box clearly said: Rice Cooker & Steamer.
GONG!!!!!!!!
Next thing you know I was on my way home with a trunkfull of dumplings and a new appliance.
Dinner last night was heaven. Fifteen minutes after loading the Zoji with frozen dumplings, they were ready to serve. And though under normal circumstances I would make a more complex condiment with fresh ginger and green onion, neither of which I had, these dumplings needed no more than a liberal douse of soy sauce and a long drizzle of a good sesame chili oil to make me intensely happy. Oh, and a bottle of chardonnay from Ponzi Vineyards in Oregon.
My only complaint? I bought the six cup size--where that would be the right size for most rice cookery I might do, the ten cup would be the more useful size if I principally use it as a steamer, which is entirely likely.
My wine shopping and I have never had a problem. Just a perpetual race between the bankruptcy court and Hell.--Rogov