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Two of NSM's loyal customers, Jity Naik and her friend Asha Adhvary, won't buy anything except basmati. "I eat rice every day, so it's very important to buy the right one," Naik says, nodding seriously. She buys both young and aged basmati, depending on what she is cooking. "The young rice has the best aroma, but aged rice is the better product - it's lighter and fluffier."
Or,Could it be the flavour/aroma of the sack its stored in and that most brands sold here have been packaged in paper or nylon rather than the old cloth sacks?
A thought just struck me that perhaps what the restaurants were using when I used to get plain boiled 'Basmati' rice was, in fact, Patna rice. It may be that I just made the assumption (wrongly) that it was Basmati rice I was being served. I'm pretty sure I've never bought any Patna rice because it's supposd to be an inferior product, but I'm going to get some now to find out. It'd be great if what's considered to be an inferior product turns out to be my superior product. ;D
Quote from: natterjak on June 03, 2013, 10:08 PMI must confess I'm not sure exactly which aroma you mean.Ah, maybe that's the point!At home I don't ever achieve the wonderful aroma that restaurant plain boiled basmati rice has. Or, in fact, is it that the restaurant rice no longer has it either? I confess that it's years since I had plain boiled Basmati at a restaurant/takeaway and it may be that the wonderful fragrance I remember of old no longer exists in the restaurants either.Would you say then natterjack that your own and the restaurant/takeaway plain, boiled basmati rice have no discernable aroma/fragrance - or, at least, no really alluring aroma?
I must confess I'm not sure exactly which aroma you mean.
Another thing i was going to suggest was to try some Poha (pressed rice) which can also be strong in flavour and aroma.
Quote from: DalPuri on June 04, 2013, 12:24 AMAnother thing i was going to suggest was to try some Poha (pressed rice) which can also be strong in flavour and aroma.It's an interesting thought but I'm pretty sure there wasn't any in the rice I used to get - it would be detectable visually wouldn't it?