Rice – How does black rice cook

rice

I bought black rice for the first time, and I am unsure what to use it for. It would be helpful if I knew how it behaves when cooked. The info I'm looking for is: (assume fully cooked corns)

  1. Stickiness. Do the corns stick to each other, or remain separate?
  2. Corn structure. Does it feel mealy, or smooth to the tooth?
  3. Hardness. How hard is the fully-cooked grain as compared to other rice types (including wild rice)?
  4. General use. I assume it can be used as white rice, so I am not asking you to list how to use it. But are there uses for which it can't be used? Risoto is probably a no-brain example, are there other dishes where the use of black rice will be so bad as to cause the dish to fail?
  5. Taste. Is there something very specific about its taste, or is it within the usual variety to be expected from rice?
  6. Misc. If there is something important I forgot to include, feel free to include it in your answer.

I already went through Wikipedia and the highest Google results for black rice. I'd like some more information, preferably based on personal experience or not-so-obvious sources.

Best Answer

I used black rice in different recipes. It clearly take longer to cook than normal rice, the grains remain separate and its generally harder than normal rice (I would say something similar to wild rice, but more mealy). As you said, it's not suitable for risotto per se, but I once made a risotto with normal rice and almost at the end of the cooking I added some (already cooked) black rice, which added a nice color and texture. The taste is quite strong, so you might want to avoid foods that are too mild in taste. A good combination for me is with peppers, olives and feta cheese, possibly mixed together in a cold rice salad.