DNX FOOD Recipes Jewelled rice pilaf – for Easter!

Jewelled rice pilaf – for Easter!

Jewelled rice pilaf – for Easter! post thumbnail image

Named as such for the sparkling colours, this is a striking rice pilaf that is made for festive occasions – like Easter! It’s a bright yellow Persian saffron rice that’s flavoured with spices and mixed with a jumble of fruit and nuts. Stunner to look at – and eat!

Close up of Jewelled rice pilaf

Jewelled rice pilaf

There are many rice dishes on this website, but this is the crown jewel of them all. Just LOOK at that colour! And the flavour – WOW. It’s a fruit-nut pilaf delicately perfumed with traditional Persian spices – cumin, fennel, cinnamon, all spice and cardamom – with that unmistakable, intoxicating scent and bright yellow colour that you only get from the world’s most coveted spice: saffron.

While this Persian /Middle Eastern rice is flavoured enough to make you want to eat it straight out of the pot, the flavour is still mild enough so it’s suitable to serve alongside bold flavoured mains. Think – Persian Lamb Shanks, Chicken or Lamb Shawarma, lamb koftas, chicken or vegetable tagine. For more, see here for all Middle Eastern recipes. Also, Mediterranean food will pair beautifully and I certainly wouldn’t hesitate to serve this alongside a roast chicken or a roast lamb.

And finally, a new one on offer – fish koftas. Coming this Wednesday, created especially to serve on this pilaf!

Overhead photo of Jewelled rice with fish koftas

Ingredients in Jewelled Rice Pilaf

Let’s stuff with the fun ingredients in this pilaf: the add-ins and flavourings. 🙂

Add-ins and flavourings

Ingredients in Jewelled rice pilaf
  • Saffron – This is an exotic spice used in Middle Easter / Persian cooking. It’s famous for being the world’s most expensive spice, reflecting the labour intensive production. There’s 3 tiny strands in each flower which blooms for only one week every year!

    Saffron makes anything it touches a bright vibrant yellow with a subtle perfume of earthy flavour unlike anything other spice.

    Find it in large grocery stores (here in Australia), Middle Eastern/Persian stores and online.

    Better value substitutes – I freely use turmeric in place of saffron, for a similar yellow colour albeit it doesn’t have the same flavour. Imitation saffron powder will provide the colour but doesn’t provide flavour. To be honest, there’s plenty of other flavour in this pilaf from the spices, so it’s actually fine to use imitation.

  • Spices – Cumin and fennel seeds, cardamom, all spice and a cinnamon stick. This is a combination of spices that reflects the Persian / Middle Eastern roots of this pilaf.

    Note: I choose to use cumin and fennel seeds and a cinnamon stick rather than powder because you end up with a more vibrant yellow rice. If you use powder then the rice ends up a slightly brown colour so when you add the saffron, it’s a slightly more muddied yellow colour.

  • Bay leaves – Aromatic added to cook the rice.

  • Lemon – We use the zest only, for a perfume of lemon flavour. It adds that little touch of extra-something.

  • Fruit and nuts – I use almonds, pistachios, apricots, golden raisins and cranberries. This is a combination that I think provides colour (green from pistachios, orange apricots, yellow rather than black raisins) as well as a good flavour combination.

    Other – You can really make this pilaf your own! Sultanas, raisins, figs, peach, cherries, mangoes, pineapple all would work here. For nuts, I’d suggest walnuts, cashews, macadamias and non-nuts like pepita. Peanuts would be a little out of place, I think.


The rice part

No less important but let’s face it, not as exciting as all the add-ins. 😊

Ingredients in Jewelled rice pilaf
  • Basmati rice – this is the traditional rice for pilafs. The rice grains are distinctively long with a perfume of flavour.

    Other rice that will work – long grain and jasmine rice. Medium grain rice will also work though the rice will be a touch stickier (because that’s how the rice is).

    Please do not use: wild rice, risotto, paella rice, brown rice or faux rice (quinoa, cauliflower rice etc).

  • Ghee is a type of clarified butter that has a more concentrated butter flavour because it’s 100% fat. Stored in pantry not in fridge. Make your own or just use butter.

  • Onion and garlic – Flavour base aromatics.

  • Stock rather than water, for better flavour. I use vegetable stock to keep this vegetarian but chicken stock works great too.


How to make Jewelled Rice Pilaf

Saffron water

How to make Jewelled rice pilaf
  1. Grind the saffron threads into a powder. This extracts more flavour and colour out of it – we want to do this for the world’s most expect spice!!! If you don’t have a mortar and pestle that’s ok, just soak the strands, it will still work.

  2. Soak – Add a bit of boiling water and mix. Set aside to steep while the rice cooks, and the colour will intensify.

Make pilaf

It’s no harder than making plain white rice, except we start with sautéed aromatics that adds so much flavour to the end result!

How to make Jewelled rice pilaf
  1. Sauté the fennel and cumin seeds first. This brings out their flavour. Then cook the onion and garlic for 5 minutes until the onion is translucent. And lastly, add the cinnamon stick, cardamom and all spice powder and stir for 30 seconds – again, to bring out their flavour.

  2. Coat rice – Add the rice and give it a good stir to coat the rice grains in all those tasty flavours.

  3. Cooking liquid – Add the stock, bay leaves, lemon, salt, fruit and nuts.

  4. Steam rice – Stir, bring to a simmer, then put the lid on. Reduce stove to low – but it should still be simmering gently around edges otherwise the rice is just sitting there, getting bloated in hot water. Cook for 14 minutes or until the liquid is all absorbed. Do not peek or stir while it’s cooking!

Rest

How to make Jewelled rice pilaf
  1. Rest – Remove the saucepan from the stove with the lid still on and set aside for 10 minutes. During this resting stage, the rice grains will finish cooking and the residual water on the surface of each grain gets absorbed, leaving you with fluffy rice rather than gluey mushy rice.

  2. Cooked rice – This is what it looks like when you remove the lid. The rice surface will be level and the colour is a light brown. We will fluff and colour it up in the next steps!

Sparkling jewels!

The best part – sparkle it up!

How to make Jewelled rice pilaf
  1. Saffron water – Pour over half the saffron water.

  2. Gently fluff the rice using a rubber spatula. Be very gentle! The long rice basmati rice strands are fragile, we don’t want to break them.

  3. Repeat – Once the rice is fluffed and is mostly yellow (some white spots still expected at this stage), pour in the remaining saffron water plus the melted ghee or butter. Then gently toss again until the rice is all yellow.

  4. Sparkling jewels! Tumble the rice onto a serving platter then sprinkle with pomegranate seeds, pistachios and coriander. Then serve!

Platter of jewelled rice with fish koftas on the side
Jewelled rice with fish koftas

Fish koftas coming Wednesday!

As mentioned earlier, the Jewelled Rice Pilaf is pictured in post with fish koftas. Fish mixed with spices then skewered and pan fried, this is a new recipe created especially to rest atop of a big pile of this fluffy saffron rice, a magnificent Easter Friday-worthy meat-free main. You’ve never had fish like it before – and it’s so easy!

I really hope some of you give this a go one day. Even just seeing the colourful photos puts me in a good mood and makes me feel all festive!! – Nagi x


Watch how to make it

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Close up photo of Jewelled rice pilaf

Jewelled rice pilaf

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4.91 from 11 votes
Servings6
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Recipe video above. This gorgeous, vibrant Persian saffron rice is perfumed with spices and studded with dried nuts and fruit. Featured in post with fish koftas. See in post for a list of suggestions for other things to serve this with!

Ingredients

Saffron water:

  • 1/2 – 1tspsaffron threads(125 – 250mg) (SUB: 1/4 tsp saffron powder OR 1/2 tsp tumeric powder) (Note 1)
  • 2tbspboiling water

Rice pilaf:

  • 2 tbsp (30g)ghee or butter(Note 2)
  • 1/4tspfennel seeds
  • 1/4tspcumin seeds
  • 1onion, finely diced
  • 2garlic cloves, minced
  • 1cinnamon stick
  • 1/8tspall spice
  • 1/8tspcardamom powder
  • 1 1/2cupsbasmati rice(Note 3)
  • 2 1/4cupsvegetable stock, low sodium (or chicken)
  • 3/4tspcooking/kosher salt
  • 2bay leaves(preferably fresh, else dried)
  • 1/2tsplemon zest

Fruit & nuts (your choice, Note 4):

  • 1/4cupdried cranberries
  • 1/4cupdried apricots, cut in 1cm / 1/3″ pieces
  • 1/4cupgolden raisins
  • 1/4cuppistachios, toasted (Note 5)
  • 1/4cupslivered almonds, toasted (Note 5)

Finishing:

  • 2 tbsp (30g)ghee or butter, melted
  • 1/2pomegranate, seeds only (Note 6)
  • 2tbspcoriander/cilantro leaves roughly chopped
  • 2tbsproughly chopped toasted pistachios(Note 5)
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Instructions

  • Soak saffron – Grind saffron into a powder using a mortar and pestle (Note 1). Mix in boiling water then set aside while the rice is cooking.
  • Sauté – Melt ghee or butter in large saucepan over medium high heat. Add fennel and cumin, then stir for 30 seconds. Add onion and garlic. Cook for 5 minutes. Add cinnamon, cardamom and all spice, then stir for 30 seconds. Add rice and stir for 1 minute to coat in the beautiful flavour.
  • Cook rice – Add the stock, bay leaves, lemon, salt, fruit and nuts. Stir, bring to a simmer, then put lid on. Reduce stove to low (should still be simmering gently around edges), and cook for 14 minutes. Do not peek or stir!
  • Rest – Quickly check to ensure liquid is absorbed. Remove from the stove (lid still on) and leave for 10 minutes.
  • Yellow! Pour over half the saffron water then very gently fluff the rice using a rubber spatula (so you don’t break the long rice strands). Once mostly mixed through, add remaining saffron water and ghee. Gently toss until the rice is all yellow.
  • Serve – Tumble onto serving platter. Sprinkle with pomegranate seeds, coriander, pistachios and serve with fish koftas.

Recipe Notes:

1. Saffron – spice used in Persian and Middle Eastern cooking. Fine red threads, stains things a vibrant bright yellow with a distinct albeit subtle earthy flavour. One of the most precious spices in the whole world so it’s not cheap. 1/2 tsp (125mg) is enough though rice colour not quite as vibrant. I use 1 tsp when I’m out to impress (250 mg) – pictured in post – a whole standard pack in Aust supermarkets (Master Foods).GRINDING gets more flavour and colour from the strands. But you can skip this.ECONOMICAL ALTERNATIVES: I sometimes use turmeric which also makes the rice yellow though slightly less vibrant, and a slightly different rice flavour, but is the best alternative I find. Imitation ground saffron will provide the same vibrant yellow colour as pictured but doesn’t have the flavour.2. Ghee is a type of clarified butter that has a more concentrated butter flavour because it’s 100% fat. Stored in pantry not in fridge. Make your own or just use butter.3. Rice – basmati is the traditional rice for pilafs though long grain or jasmine rice would also work here. Recipe will also work with medium grain rice though the rice will be a touch stickier (because that’s what the rice is). Please do not use: wild rice, risotto, paella rice, brown rice or faux rice (quinoa, cauliflower rice etc).4. Fruit and nuts – use any you want though I recommend chopping large ones. Sultanas, raisins, figs, peach, cherries, mangoes, pineapple all would work here. For nuts, I’d suggest walnuts, cashews, macadamias and non-nuts like pepita. Peanuts would be a little out of place, I think.5. Toasting nuts – heat up a small skillet over medium high heat (no oil). Add the nuts and toss for a few minutes until they are light golden and you can smell them. Don’t walk away – they burn easily! Remove from skillet immediately, cool then use.6. Pomegranate – Click here for how I remove the seeds from pomegranates (quickly and easily!).

Nutrition Information:

Calories: 369cal (18%)Carbohydrates: 58g (19%)Protein: 6g (12%)Fat: 13g (20%)Saturated Fat: 6g (38%)Polyunsaturated Fat: 2gMonounsaturated Fat: 5gTrans Fat: 0.3gCholesterol: 22mg (7%)Sodium: 713mg (31%)Potassium: 322mg (9%)Fiber: 4g (17%)Sugar: 14g (16%)Vitamin A: 660IU (13%)Vitamin C: 4mg (5%)Calcium: 56mg (6%)Iron: 1mg (6%)

Life of Dozer

Wondering how many shots he has to suffer through before he can launch himself onto those Easter eggs (doggy friendly ones, of course!).

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