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The next step was to go to a great Asian Market for ingredients. Crepe Myrtle Market came heavily recommended from friends. It was modern, clean and roomy. They had fresh (and organic, maybe?) produce and loads of dried and frozen food. It was primarily Chinese, Thai, Japanese, Korean, and Vietnamese food from what I could tell, but there was just enough English on packages that I was able to navigate easily. The owners are fantastic, friendly and fluent in English (which helps with my lack of knowledge concerning authentic Asian ingredients). They even had a toy corner where my 3 year old was entertained for a while. It was a life saver!! Oh, and the prices!! They were incredibly affordable, better than Walmart (one of only two grocery stores in town) in quality AND price.
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We didn't get any bean paste, but we did pick up a bottle of Sri Racha sauce. That was sufficiently spicy. :)
The only cons to cooking bibimbap this time was lack of kitchen space, pots and pans, and rice cooker. If we could have used the rice pot for cooking the spinach and bean sprouts instead of sitting there doing nothing but cooking the rice, we could have had it down to one pot and one pan to cook everything. (You cook every ingredient separately - so multi-tasking efficiently is central to pulling off a dish like this)
I'm going to be shopping for a rice cooker when our tax return comes in. So here go my initial impressions of rice cookery.
(Sally's Kitchen has pretty good reviews of several rice cookers because she uses, like, four a day. Wow. I'm not going to be doing that, but it is nice to know she has used all of these...and more than once each, too.)
NOTE: I have not bought a rice cooker yet. I am currently researching which one to get. So this is more of a PREview instead of a REview. All prices below are the prices quoted on Amazon.
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Aroma ARC-1000 Professional Rice Cooker/Food Steamer
$44.52
Likes: It cooks different things, including white rice, brown rice, veggies, etc. It has a time delay feature, which would be great if I got up in the morning in time enough to prep rice for lunch or have enough energy at lunch to prep rice for dinner time. It would be cooked in time for me to get home and cook some sides. Me likey.
Dislikes: Warming feature. In every good Japanese food blog and review for rice cookers they say to turn off the rice cooker warmer function ASAP...otherwise, you're going to get mush with a burned bottom. It makes 20 cups of cooked rice. GOOD GAWD! That is a lot of freaking rice. I am not feeding the (terra-cotta) army here (har har). And as I mentioned before I have limited kitchen real estate.
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$49.99
Likes: Size: 6 cup, perfect for our currently small family. It also takes up less counter space. It's a Zojirushi and Japanese cooks love the brand. Steamer rack.
Dislikes: No brown rice setting. No delay timer setting.
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$153.13
Likes: It's so cute!! Ahem, but seriously. Again, Zojirushi is the most popular rice cooker brand in Japan. Brown/White/Sweet rice settings. Delay timer. LCD display.
Dislikes: Price. Size. 5-1/2- cup uncooked capacity...which means about 10 cups cooked. (be careful when buying a rice cooker and know if it's saying uncooked capacity or cooked capacity!)
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Zojirushi 3-cup Rice cooker, NS-VGC05
$105.00
Likes: Size. Can cook as little as 1/2 cup (uncooked) rice. LCD, delay timer. Multiple rice settings.
Dislikes: It's a little more expensive. Doesn't have a steamer tray because it's quite a bit smaller.
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Zojirushi Micom 3-Cup Rice Cooker and Warmer, Stainless Steel
$124.56
Likes: Multiple rice settings. LCD.
Dislikes: Price is getting on the high side for me. Not as cute as the NS-VGC05 above. Doesn't say it has the delay timer, but I suspect a lot of the Zojirushi DO have that setting, even if Amazon doesn't note it.
So, the good stuff this month is my obsession with Asian food. I blame it all on Miyazaki films and a dish I fell in love with 13 years ago and couldn't get out of my head. :)
Update: Life caught up with us and we're putting the rice cooker purchase on hold. I think we had decided on the Zojirushi NS-ZCC10 5-1/2-Cup Neuro Fuzzy Rice Cooker and Warmer
$153.13, but we can't swing that right now. We'll continue to cook rice the old-fashioned way....for now!! :)
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