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I'm not convinced that appearance guides our choice in terms of what something should taste like. It's a con perpetuated upon us by wily restauranteurs to mislead us into thinking dishes are going to taste better than they actually are.
That's not to say a dish's appearance isn't important, it is, but when we sit down in a BIR restaurant to select from the menu, we make choices on dish descriptions, and past taste experience - not on what they look like.
If it looks as we want it to, it is more likely to taste as we want it to.
Just because something looks right, doesn't mean it will taste right.
Quote from: chonk on March 19, 2013, 07:08 PMI'm not sure about that. The muslims of Kashmir did and do use the cockscomb plant, and they used and/or still use "Ratan Jot" (Alkanna tinctoria).Interesting.Do you have any more information on why they used these? Was it for religious reasons? I was reading yesterday that Indian Muslims exempted certain vegetables from their fast for some reason, something to do with the health properties or religious.
I'm not sure about that. The muslims of Kashmir did and do use the cockscomb plant, and they used and/or still use "Ratan Jot" (Alkanna tinctoria).
I add green, red and yellow food colourings to my pulao rice (separately, well separated, and in small quantities only) so that the rice meets my expectations as to what a "good" pulao rice will look like. If I can achieve the right balance of colours, the rice /will/ taste better as a result (so long as my spicing is also up to par).
I think you're in the minority there Phil. As i was reading this it reminded me of a photo CA posted of some rice. I'd forgotten that it was you alone who didn't like the look of his rice.
Quote from: Phil (Chaa006) on May 22, 2012, 03:27 PMBut for me, a pulao rice needs to have more colour differentiation between the grains -- the white grains (the majority) should be a clear, clean, white, whilst the coloured grains should be few in number and saturated [1]. In your rice, the grains seems to be a sort of uniform creamy yellow, which I don't personally find appealing or appetising. But that's just me : I am sure that many will be more than happy to enthuse about its presentation.Interesting point, Phil, and not one that I would necessarily disagree with. Your are totally correct that the grains in mine are "sort of uniform creamy yellow" since I deliberately made them so. The reason for this is that the rice was left over from a large dish of Chicken Biriani I cooked for a large group of people, which included none curry eating Aussies! And, from experience, I know that Aussies (and even many British expats!) tend to shy away from highly coloured rice (even though, like you, I personally prefer it that way).
But for me, a pulao rice needs to have more colour differentiation between the grains -- the white grains (the majority) should be a clear, clean, white, whilst the coloured grains should be few in number and saturated [1]. In your rice, the grains seems to be a sort of uniform creamy yellow, which I don't personally find appealing or appetising. But that's just me : I am sure that many will be more than happy to enthuse about its presentation.
...sometimes you have to take a leap of faith from what your eyes tell you...
No they haven't, at least not artificially coloured, that's a modern invention.
I would go for the first one because to me, that looks like it has some flavour running through it rather than coloured grains of plain rice
Not artificially, through naturally available plants etc. I have recently researched colourings though haven't saved any data (didn't seem relevant at the time) I do have this from a site I found