The cultivation of rice began as early as 6,000 B.C., making rice one of the oldest grains grown for food. Even now, it’s a dietary
staple for almost half the world’s population, especially in China, India, Japan, and
Southeast Asia.
While the most familiar types are the long-grain white or brown rice, found in most
markets, there are actually more than 7,000 varieties of rice. In the United States, rice is
grown primarily in Arkansas, California, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, and Texas. It comes
in three basic varieties: long-grain, medium-grain, or short-grain. Long-grain rice is four to
five times longer than it is wide, and includes such aromatic rices as the highly fragrant
basmati and jasmine varieties. When cooked, it’s fluffy and somewhat dry. Medium-grain
rice has shorter, fatter grains and a medium starch content, yielding a slightly denser end
product that’s suitable for most uses. Short-grain rice (also called pearl rice and
glutinous rice) is plump and almost round, with a high starch content that, when cooked,
yields rice that is moist and somewhat sticky. Because it’s easier to handle with
chopsticks, this is the variety preferred in the Orient.
Brown rice is more nutritious than white rice, and has a mildly nutty flavour and chewy
texture. Only the inedible outer husk has been removed, leaving the nutritious, high-fibre bran coating. Brown rice takes somewhat longer to cook than
white rice.
White rice has had the husk, bran, and germ—and thus, most of the
nutrients—removed. Converted or parboiled white rice contains some of the nutrients of
the bran and germ. Instant rice or quick rice has been cooked before being dehydrated and
packaged, so it’s quick to cook but also lacking in flavour and texture. Wild rice
isn’t a rice at all, but rather the seed of a water grass native to the northern United
States. Nor is “wild” rice wild—most is grown in commercial rice
paddies.
If you don't see a variety that you're looking for, visit the Foods index.