Hot buttered corn rice

If using fresh corn, it won’t cook through in this time which is fine because it will steam cook with the rice.

  • Coat rice – Add the rice and stir to coat it in the tasty garlic butter flavour.
  1. Bring to simmer properly – Add the stock and salt. Stir then let the stock come to a simmer.⚠️ Make sure the whole surface is bubbling or rippling, not just around the edges, before you lower the heat and put the lid on. We want to make sure the stock gets enough heat in it to make sure the rice actually cooks, rather than sitting in hot water just bloating.
  2. Cook the rice for 12 minutes with the lid on. No peeking (this lets steam escape) and no stirring (express path to mushy rice!). At the end of this time, the water should be absorbed by the rice. Tilt the pot and peek quickly to check.
  1. Rest 10 minutes – Remove the pot from the the stove and leave it to rest for 10 minutes with the lid still on. This step is so important anytime you cook rice, whether plain or fully-loaded! The rice will finish cooking and the residual water on the surface of the grains gets absorbed, leaving the rice beautifully fluffy. See FAQ for more information about this and for more rice-making rantings, see my How to cook White Rice post. Writing that was so therapeutic!😂
  2. Butter & fluff – Remove the lid and add the butter. Gently fluff the rice. Once the butter is mostly melted, toss the green onion through. By the time you’ve finished, the butter should be fully melted. Time to serve, while it’s hot and fresh! After all, it’s called HOT Buttered Corn Rice, not Lukewarm Corn Rice (well there’s an average recipe name for you!).
Bowl of Hot Buttered Corn Rice

Hot Buttered Corn Rice will last for 3 days in the fridge or 3 months in the freezer. And it will reheat really well, so this is a good one to add to your menu planning for a big gathering because you can make it well in advance then just reheat until steamy!

I’m also thinking this might be a good one to add to the RecipeTin Meals rotation! (This is my food bank where we make and donate meals to the vulnerable). Though possibly my team will make a version with more vegetables in it so it will be a complete two-in-one side dish (ie starch plus vegetables). Then we can just add a piece of protein and we’ll have a complete, nutritious meal that’s efficient to make on a large scale! Must run this past them. 🙂