Monday, November 24, 2014

24th November,2014 Daily Global Rice E-Newsletter by Riceplus Magazine

Rice coming from Bangladesh
By  Rukshana Rizwie
Sunday, 23 November 2014 03:10

Without prior arsenic testing
Moves are afoot by the Ministry of Trader and Internal Affairs as well as the Consumer Affairs Authority to bring down a total of 50,000 metric tons of rice from Bangladesh in the coming days; however officials have openly stated that they haven’t done any tests to ascertain the traceability of arsenic in any of the stocks. 

Speaking to The Nation, Chairman, CAA Rumy Marzook openly stated that the authority and the ministry are yet to look into reports that rice in Bangladesh could potentially be contaminated with arsenic. “We haven’t done any tests, but will look into the matter,” he curtly said. The Sri Lankan Government is tipped to import 50,000 metric tons of rice from Bangladesh in a bid to ensure food security locally. The Cabinet recently glossed over the danger and swiftly approved it. It has been reported that the entire deal would cost US$ 450 per ton, inclusive of cost, freight and insurance.

 According to an article appeared in the Dhaka Tribune, this will be the largest quantity of rice to be exported from Bangladesh to Sri Lanka to date. Based on reports in the local press, the import of rice is to be carried with immediate effect and stocks would be distributed island-wide through the Lanka Sathosa supermarkets – the state-owned wholesale and retail supermarket chain.
It has been widely acknowledged that Sri Lanka’s rice harvest has been hit hardest after a spate of drought in the Polonnaruwa, Hambantota, Moneragala, Ampara and Vavuniya Districts during the 2014 Maha season. In order to compensate for the scarcity, import of rice has been sought as a remedial action. However, Sri Lanka in the past have only imported from China, Thailand, Vietnam and Pakistan since they were more suitable for the Sri Lankan palate.
 In September, Assistant Director Agriculture Ministry, Dr. DBT Wijeratne went on record to state that rice would not be imported from Bangladesh since it contains high level of arsenic averaging 340 mg per kg (compared to the negligible levels found locally). He was quoted in the weekend newspaper as saying that government would not “generally import agricultural products from Bangladesh since constant floods and digging of wells release arsenic into the soil” He further added that since the ministry had been alerted of a possibility of rice stocks that may contain high level of arsenic, inspections would be carried out in the warehouses and at customs to prevent them from being sold to the public should they contain any level of arsenic.

 At the time, this edition of the newspaper went to print. Dr Wijeratne, who was due to arrive in the country, was still abroad. An official at the Ministry of Agriculture stated that the ministry did not have the authority to conduct tests on imported rice, since most of their tests and checks were confined to rice that was locally harvested. In September, the Consumer Affairs Authority declared that the current stocks of rice available in the market were safe for consumption.
A study by the Food and Drug Administration noted that more than 10 percent of rice from China, Pakistan and Bangladesh was estimated to have arsenic concentrations exceeding 200ppb (parts per billion). Meanwhile, the Codex Alimentarius Commission, the top global decision-making body for food standards, issued the decision at its annual meeting in Geneva earlier this year. “Arsenic is an environmental contaminant.
It occurs naturally and is taken up by plants from the water and soil when they’re growing, in particular rice,” said World Health Organization food safety coordinator Angelika Tritscher.The commission set a maximum of 0.2 milligram of arsenic per kilo of polished rice -- the product that is traded and consumed. Bangladesh was cited as a top concern, with tens of millions of rural dwellers exposed via wells drilled in the 1970s in ‘access-to-water’ programs.

Concludes in Cambodia global rice trade conference                                 

Nom Penh, Nov 20 (Prensa Latina) The Sixth World Rice Conference concluded here today, hosted by a country like Cambodia which aims to develop its potential and to achieve a growing role in the cereal market.When opening the two-day meeting, the host Minister of the branch, Sun Chanthol, stressed the importance of the grass in ensuring food security in the world.He urged developing business strategies to maintain stability and ensure the category of interests between consumers, farmers and business entities.
Producing and exporting companies and associations from 40 countries and territories participate in the event to discuss issues relating to the improvement of production efficiency, trends, future challenges and sustainable farming.For the general secretary of the Vietnam Food Association, the second largest exporter, Huynh Minh Hue, the conference is a timely opportunity to disseminate national brands and reach agreements with importers.Cambodia organized a parallel Rice Festival to promote its own product that supplies 269,000 tonnes, of which 80 percent goes to the EU, well below the nearly seven million bill Vietnam.
This week it was reported that China will grant a loan of 300 million dollars for the construction of 10 warehouses, which is expected to overcome one of the most serious limitations of Cambodia to be inserted with force in the global market.


Government jumps to cushion rice price fall


Published on Saturday, 22 November 2014 17:58
To prevent rice prices from plummeting due to limitations on trade with China, the Myanmar Rice Federation (MRF) will consider buying three million bushels of rice from the Ayeyarwady Region, according to General Secretary Ye Min Aung.
“We’re now talking with Myanmar Oriental Bank to buttress the rice price. There’s a rice surplus of three million bushels in the Ayeyarwady Region and 1.5 million bushels in the Bago Region. Someone must purchase them all to prevent the price from falling,” said Ye Min Aung.Rice prices are likely to continue to fall unless Chinese buyers resume their trade and, meanwhile, the MRF is trying to agree official rice exports for December.“I’m sure there is demand in China,” said Aung Than Oo, the deputy chairperson of MRF.Officials from China’s Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine, and Agriculture Ministry visited in September and signed the memorandum of understanding with Myanmar’s Ministry of Agriculture and Irrigation to secure an official rice trade.
An agreement for rice exports for January and February next year has already been reached with official exports starting next month.Currently, the government is planning to purchase unsold rice and the military will buy stocks in December while the Myanmar Agribusiness Public Corporation (Mapco) is also considering buying up stocks.Ye Min Aung said: “We find it difficult to buy reserved rice and store it in warehouses. I don’t want to encourage the purchase of reserved rice. I want the millers and merchants to buy more as that is more beneficial in the long term but they need financial support to do so. They also have the responsibility to pay back that support. So we’ll buy it. The Mapco also plans to buy approximately 300,000 bushels of rice.”Rice millers and merchants are in discussions to acquire three million bushels of rice from the Ayeyarwady Region


Once a researcher, always a researcher

Henry is a retired researcher from the University of Arkansas Rice Research and Extension Center, which was originally called the Arkansas Rice Branch Experiment Station, because there were a number of rice research experiments being made there.



Description: Seth HenryPhoto by Bill Shrum/Stuttgart Daily LeaderSeth Henry

STUTTGART —

Seth Henry is not your typical 95 year old.Henry is a retired researcher from the University of Arkansas Rice Research and Extension Center, which was originally called the  Arkansas Rice Branch Experiment Station, because there were a number of rice research experiments being made there.Henry, who had an official title of research assistant, graduated from the University of Arkansas at Fayetteville in 1950 with a Bachelor of Science degree in agriculture and was employed at the experiment station from 1955 until 1991."For decades I had a motto of 'No one will be perfect, but everyone will try,’" Henry said.
His variety of duties while employed there included:
• Conducting a variety of experiments;
• Working with rice breeding, soybean breeding, oat breeding and Lespedeza breeding;
• Weed control;
• Diseases in rice; and
• Mosquito control research
Henry would take projects, with the men assisting him, in the crops that they were working on at that particular time. For example they would take rice, which they cut from an exact amount of space, thrashed it, weighed it, checked for moisture and milled it."We kept the samples in an orderly fashion," Henry said. "I also selected individual heads or panicles for the next year."Among Henry's other duties were writing reports of experiments in other counties, which he visited periodically.After retirement, he wanted to do something and decided he was going to grow climbing pole lima beans and performed his own kind of experiment in his backyard."I also did it for the food supply," Henry said.
 "I certainly enjoyed it."Henry said he planted late April to early May in the spring and started harvesting in July or early August until the frost or cold weather kills them, which this year was early this week.Henry harvests the pods two or three times a week. When the pods mature, he places them in a small packet with four seeds, which will be ready for planting next year."I have experimented with cross breeding the climbing pole beans," Henry said. "I have a speckled pink bean."Henry treasures his family, which includes two daughters,Mary Alice McGraw and Martha Davis, five grandchildren, nine great-grandchildren and a number of friends he has made along the way.

Research finds corn, rice, wheat, and soybean crops contribute to global warming, emits CO2 when grow


Posted on Nov 22 2014 - 8:51am by Clinton Hesler
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Description: Parchem-2012-Corn-FieldWhile the UN and other world governments are blaming industrial facilities and greenhouse gas emissions as contributing to climate change, a new study has revealed that four crops, namely: corn, rice, wheat, and soybean are also playing their parts in the whole climate change game.Scientists found that it is true that crops require carbon dioxide for respiration and to manufacture their food, but they do not burn up this element before their deaths; they store it. Carbon dioxide is therefore re-released into the soil when these crops die, and this ultimately makes carbon dioxide to find its way back into the environment.

According to Mark Friedl of the University of Boston, “It’s a remarkable story of what we’ve done in agriculture in general. And particular in corn, which is one crop that’s just exploded. Over the last 50 years, the area of croplands in the Northern Hemisphere has been relatively stable, but production has intensified enormously. The fact that this land area can affect the composition of the atmosphere is an amazing fingerprint of human activity on the planet.”
Friedl’s research establishes one fact: the return of CO2 via dead crops like corn to the earth enriches the soil and makes it more fertile and efficient for further crop growths. The soil yields more crops per acre, even though more carbon dioxide gas is still released during winter via the soil to the earth.“Something is changing about this cycle. Ecosystems are becoming more productive, pulling in more atmospheric carbon during the summer and releasing more during the dormant period,” Friedl adds.
The National Science Foundation’s Water Sustainability and Climate Program’s director, Tom Torgersen, notes that “these indications of increased productivity speak well for agriculture. But such enhanced agricultural productivity makes significant demands on water supplies, which will require further investigation.”See Also: AT&T and Verizon offers Moto X 2014 2nd Gen on $0.01 upfront at Pre Black Friday dealsWhile crop scientists continue to research the effects of enhanced agriculture on natural water supplies, researchers found that corn, rice, wheat, and soybean constitute 64% of all calories consumed around the world. And that, is something of interest.


Scientists: Higher crop yields increase levels of CO2 in the atmosphere


By Kellan Howell - The Washington Times - Saturday, November 22, 2014
Description: (Associated Press) ** FILE **Scientists assert that crop yields in the Norther Hemisphere are producing higher concentrations of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere each summer.
Boston University researchers found that corn, rice, wheat and soybean are the four leading crops that account for maximum CO2 release in the atmosphere, Maine News Online reported Friday.
Carbon dioxide levels increase each summer as crops absorb CO2 to convert sunlight in to food and then release it after the growing season.Researchers estimate that agricultural production accounts for a 25 percent surge in the seasonal carbon cycle.That number could increase as the number of crops continues to grow.Since 1961, the production of corn, wheat, rice and soybeans has more than doubled in the northern hemisphere and new crops are absorbing and releasing nearly one billion metric tons of CO2 each year, Maine News Online reported.“This study shows the power of modeling and data mining in addressing potential sources contributing to seasonal changes in carbon dioxide. It points to the role of basic research in finding answers to complex problems,” said Liz Blood, program director for the National Science Foundation’s Macro Systems Biology Program, which funded the study.

Odisha fails to recover Rs 128 cr. from rice millers

The Odisha government has failed to recover the dues amounting to Rs. 128 crore from ‘unscrupulous’ rice millers, who evaded returning milled rice.Odisha Food Supplies and Consumer Welfare minister Sanjay Kumar Dasburma on Saturday informed the State Assembly that rice mill operators had not returned 67,181 metric tonnes of rice.Every year the State government gets huge stocks of paddy milled by rice millers. As per the existing system, millers are supposed to give back 68 kg of rice for every one quintal of paddy. The rice millers are paid the amount of converting paddy into rice and supplied gunny bags to pack the rice.
However, over the years millers have not returned the entire stock of milled rice worth crores of rupees. As per the statistics tabled in the Assembly, total outstanding amount estimated by government was Rs. 131 crore. The government could recover only Rs. 2.9 crore from the millers.Despite several criminal cases instituted against millers, the recovered amount constituted less than 5 per cent of the total outstanding. Opposition political parties alleged that the government was hand in gloves with unscrupulous rice millers.
Exporters risk losing traditional rice markets


Salman Siddique
Saturday, November 22, 2014
From Print Edition


KARACHI: Rice exporters on Friday warned Pakistan could lose its traditional rice markets if the government buys the commodity from farmers to guarantee them high prices. 

The Rice Exporters Association of Pakistan (REAP) has also asked the government to avoid buying rice from farmers, as it may destabilise the private sector. The association, however, said the government should provide direct subsidy to farmers in order to support them.“The government’s involvement in such business activity (procurement) will be harmful to the private sector, which has invested billions of rupees to build an infrastructure and human resources,” Rafique Suleman, chairman of REAP, said in a statement.

“In case of the government’s involvement in rice business, we will lose huge foreign exchange, as well as the credibility, which the rice exporters have earned after long hard working.”Suleman demanded the government to give due consideration to the grievances of the rice industry and give free hand to the private sector for playing their positive role, boosting the economy, which is badly affected due to a number of reasons.

He said the international market is depressed and all the rice exporting countries are facing tough competition and prices are on the decline. “This is the market phenomena and due to the demand supply aspect, we see such trend in times and have to cope with it,” Suleman added.The price issue highlighted following reports of a pick-up in paddy harvest that has weakened its prices to at least 40 percent this season. The price of paddy – raw rice – has dropped by Rs1,000/40 kilogram to around Rs1,500-1,600/ 40 kilogram against the last year’s price of Rs2,500-2,600/40 kg.Growers, who lack the storage facility, have no other option, but to sell it, but buyers — notably the mill-owners and middlemen — are deliberately delaying the buying to pressurise the growers sell the crop at throwaway rates.


Farmers have asked the government to immediately announce subsidy to them through providing subsidised fertilisers, seeds and diesel for the next crop. They also demanded the government to fix a minimum export price at the previous year average export rate of $1,153/ton. This will help avert such price crisis at the growers end.The government should also not intervene through the Trading Corporation of Pakistan and Pakistan Agricultural Storage and Supplies Corporation.Suleman recalled PASSCO, in the year 2008, procured 200,000 tons of rice at a premium price and “even after six years they could not disposed of those stocks and ultimately government had to face losses of up to Rs24 billion.

Description: $80 to $100 price difference: 70pc EU buyers place 40,000 tonnes rice orders to Indian”The RECP chairman also quoted the example of Thailand, where government procured the rice with higher prices, but the move damaged 17 million tonnes of rice in the absence of proper storage and warehouse facility and finally. “The Thai government suffered a loss of $30 billion.” Suleman said.He advised the government to support farmers, but “this should be done through a proper mechanism”.The government should compensate farmers in the shape of free seeds, free pesticides, free water, free fertiliser, free electricity and other facilities. “As farmers are not equipped with the latest machinery and due to the mishandling, every year we have to see crop loss, further we could not get the right quality of rice,” Suleman added.Home / Business / $80 to $100 price difference: 70pc EU buyers place 40,000 tonnes rice orders to Indian

$80 to $100 price difference: 70pc EU buyers place 40,000 tonnes rice orders to Indian

LAHORE: Apart from other obstacles, the difference of around $80 to $100 per tonne in the export price of rice, foreign buyers mainly from EU have diverted their import orders of around 40,000 tonnes rice to India.As per details, 70 percent of the international buyers from EU countries have diverted orders from Pakistan to the Indian millers mainly due to price difference price.

Currently Pakistani rice export price to Dubai is hovering at around $1,250 per ton while India sells her non-basmati rice variety at $1,150 per ton. Pakistan basmati rice export price is at around $700 per tonne while Indian variety of Pusa (copy of basmati rice) is easily available for $625 per tonne.

According to Pakistan Rice Exporters Association, the government, instead of supporting the exporters, is planning to interfere in rice market through procurement, causing further decline in rice export and depriving the country of precious foreign exchange.The association said that rice export was almost stagnant due to high prices of rice in Pakistan as govt did not provide any subsidy to farmers on agri inputs. On the other hand, subsidy from Indian government to growers as well as rice exporters, have seriously affected the rice export of Pakistan, causing decline of more than 30 per cent.The subsidy on rice by Indian government in the name of food security is currently hurting directly millions of Pakistani farmers who are already facing various challenges due to past two consecutive floods in Pakistan.


The govt, instead of disturbing market phenomena by procuring rice, should compensate farmers by providing them free seeds, free pesticides, free water, free fertilizer, free electricity and other facilities. He recalled that in year 2008 PASSCO had procured 200,000 M/Tons rice with prices higher than the prevailing market and even after 6 years they could not disposed of these stocks and ultimately government had to face up to Rs24 billion loss.Experts said that the government involvement in such business activity would be harmful to the private sector who had invested billion of rupees to build an infrastructure and human resources, turning the country into the 2nd largest foreign exchange earner through rice export.


The association also regretted that presently, the rice exporters are utilizing warehouses of Trade Corporation of Pakistan and Pakistan Agricultural Storage & Services Corporation Ltd, storing more than 200,000 tons rice there for export purpose and if this facility is withdrawn, the exporters will be unable to procure the commodity, as they cannot arrange alternative arrangement at such a huge level in very short span

 

Crops of Corn, Rice, Wheat and Soybean Contribute to Climate Change

Description: images (7)Greenhouse gas emissions and industrial facilities have been blamed by the United Nations and world governments all over for their negative contributions to climate change, however, a new study now shows that four different types of crops, corn, rice, wheat and soybean, are actuallyplaying a large role in the climate change around the world.

The website The Westside Story recently posted about this matter the following: “Scientists found that it is true that crops require carbon dioxide for respiration and to manufacture their food, but they do not burn up this element before their deaths; they store it. Carbon dioxide is therefore re-released into the soil when these crops die, and this ultimately makes carbon dioxide to find its way back into the environment”.
 Researcher Mark Friedl, from the University of Boston, also said the following about the matter: “It’s a remarkable story of what we’ve done in agriculture in general. And particular in corn, which is one crop that’s just exploded. Over the last 50 years, the area of croplands in the Northern Hemisphere has been relatively stable, but production has intensified enormously. The fact that this land area can affect the composition of the atmosphere is an amazing fingerprint of human activity on the planet.”
According to the website The Christian Science Monitor: “Friedl’s research establishes one fact: the return of CO2 via dead crops like corn to the earth enriches the soil and makes it more fertile and efficient for further crops. The soil yields more crops per acre, even though more carbon dioxide gas is still released during winter via the soil to the earth.”
 Researcher Friedl also pointed out that: “Something is changing about this cycle. Ecosystems are becoming more productive, pulling in more atmospheric carbon during the summer and releasing more during the dormant period.”Tom Torgerson, the director for The National Science Foundation’s Water Sustainability and Climate Program, said: “These indications of increased productivity speak well for agriculture. But such enhanced agricultural productivity makes significant demands on water supplies, which will requeire frther investigation.”

Portland Beer News: Two New Breweries, Bottling Release, and Updated Pub Menu

November 22, 20149:48 PM MST

Some updates regarding Portland area breweries
Baerlic Brewing Company
Description: Some updates regarding Portland area brewerieslHere's some latest news among craft breweries in Portland, a city named by CNN as the best beer city in the world.Barelic Brewing Company located in on 2235 SE 11th Portland just north of Division Street, affords one to be close to the nightlife without the crowded throngs venturing to this latest Portland hot spot. Since opening on June 28, 2014, this brewery joined area brewers Commons Brewery and Ground Breaker Brewing to form what they jokingly refer to as the Beermuda Triangle.

At present this is a a 21 an over establishment with plans to expand their food menu in the future. Stop by happy hour for a $4.00 pint where the bartenders promise they serve 16 ounces in a 20 ounce glass thus ensuring one receives a full pint of beer. Check out their selection of year round beers such as their Cavalier classic cream ale made with Himalayan Basmati Rice or one of their seasonal or experimental beers. They will be at the Holiday Ale Fest with The Great Bear NW Red Ale, a full bodied blend of sweet candied malt flavors with spicy, piney and citrus hops aged on beechwood taken from Baerlic's tasting room buildout.Moving to North Portland, Ex Novo Brewing Company (2326 N Flint Avenue) opened in July 2014 as a neighborhood hangout situated east of Mississippi Avenue away from the heavy traffic.
 With a brewmaster hailing from Norway, they offer traditional beers such as their Scottish Red along with a whiskey and scotch menu. A family friendly menu makes this the prefect place to stop by for a family night out while the happy hour menu attracts those adults looking for a place to chill. As noted on their website, "they exist to blend fine craft beer with positive social change." Hence, they are committed to donating 100% of their net profits to organizations working to enact positive social change both locally in Portland, as well as more global endeavors. Those going to the Holiday Ale Fest can sample their Moonstriker, a Mexican Chocolate Baltic Porter created in collaboration with Moonstruck Chocolate that features subtle notes of Mexican hot chocolate with notes of cinnamon, nutmeg, chilies and chocolate.
Venturing on the Historic Mississippi Avenue district, StormBreaker Brewing (832 N. Beech Street) will be having their first ever bottle release party open to the public on Tuesday, November 25th at 5pm. They will be bottling their Mississippi Dry Hopped Red, Total ReKolsch, and their Winter Coat Warmer, a special brew made for the cool winter months. As per their description of Winter Coat: "Chocolate Malt and Special B insulation keeps you warm while your mouth on the glass prevents any snow or sleet from getting in. Features like fuggle hops, sterling hops, and sweet orange peel set this Winter Coat apart. During this party, they will have their DJ spinning and will have some StormBreaker giveaways like new winter beanies and ball caps. then at 8pm, they will show Total Recall on the big screen as they drink their Total ReKolsch in their little beer hall.

Then moving to the Northwest region of Portland, Kells Brew Pub (210 NW 21st Avenue) announces the addition of Travis Stark as its new head chef who has launched a refurbished rustic menu designed to appeal to all ages. Among his updated items includes “Wee Plates” which features all new items like salmon cakes with a chipotle remoulade & house made pickles; house-made falafel fritters served with tzatziki; and bacon wrapped figs stuffed with goat cheese. In addition to featuring traditional Irish favorites, Stark also prepared some vegetarian and gluten-free options. Also they have been expanding their beer lineup and will be featuring MIC Stout AKA Boom Roaster Coffee at the Holiday Ale Fest.
This Imperial Milk Stout starts with a robust head of rich chocolate and notes of brown sugar. The mouthfeel is smooth and fu-bodied, with notes of vanilla and a mild sweetness of caramelized sugar. This beer finishes with roasty notes and acidity from the Sidamo coffee from Ristretto Roasters that layer into a hint of light berry (think blue) with a touch of warming alcohol.

Keep abreast of the latest beers on tap in Portland and select other cities with Brew Notice, a smartphone app that allows beer lovers to get announcements via text messages or emails. Whenever a new beer is on tap. According to their estimates, about ten beers get tapped daily. Depending on one's interest and time constraints, one can email notifications immediately, daily at 4pm or weekly.

Basmati growers: Prime Minister for implementing ECC decision on compensation

November 22, 2014
RECORDER REPORT
Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif on Friday directed to properly implement the decision taken by the Economic Co-ordination Committee of the cabinet (ECC) on compensation of Basmati rice growers. The ECC had decided for provision of subsidy worth Rs 5,000 per acre to the growers of Basmati rice as compensation in view of the falling international prices of this variety. 

The PM termed agriculture a backbone of Pakistan''s economy and a significant contributor to the GDP. The farmer community had appreciated the decision, according to which 50 percent of the expenses incurred on provision of subsidy will be borne by the provinces that would also be responsible to ensure transparency in its distribution. 

PM Lee invites Indonesian president for nasi lemak and roti prata
AsiaOneSaturday, Nov 22, 2014
Description: PM Lee invites Indonesian president for nasi lemak and roti prata

SINGAPORE - Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong and wife Ho Ching hosted Indonesia's new president, Joko Widodo and his wife, Iriana, to a sumptious breakfast of nasi lemak and roti prata on Saturday morning.Widodo, known by his nickname Jokowi, was in Singapore yesterday to attend his youngest son's graduation from ACS (International). He flies back to Jakarta today.

According to PM Lee's Facebook post, the nasi lemak was bought from Selera Rasa Nasi Lemak from Adam Road, while the roti prata was from Madras New Woodlands.It is no surprise that PM Lee chose Selera Rasa Nasi Lemak.

Established since 1998, the stall at Adam Road Food Centre is not only famous for its fluffy basmati rice, but it is apparently so good that the Sultan of Brunei takes away dozens of packets of this nasi lemak whenever he is in Singapore.The roti prata that PM Lee ordered is also from a restaurant that has a wealth of history. Located at Little India, Madras New Woodlands dates back to 1983 and is one of Singapore's most well-known vegetarian restaurants.It serves hearty Indian cuisine such as poori bhaji, which is deep-fried flour rounds with curried potatoes; chola bhatura, which is fried bread with spicy chickpeas; and snacks such as vadai, which is deep-fried fritters.The thosai at Madras New Woodlands is apparently so good that you don't have to dip it into chutney or sambar, wrote a former reporter from tabla!


Snap: Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong posted on Facebook on Nov 22: "Had breakfast with President Joko Widodo and his wife, Iriana, this morning. They were here for their son’s graduation from ACS(International). We had Selera Rasa Nasi Lemak from Adam Road and Roti Prata from Madras New Woodlands. See us tucking in!"

Sunday, November 23, 2014

Friday, October 31, 2014

What's the secret of cooking perfect rice?

Indian chef Anjum Anand returns to her roots as she searches out the scented secrets of one of India’s most popular dishes

Anjum Anand cuts a regal figure, sashaying through the hectic city streets of Hyderabad, right in the belly button of India. The television chef and creator of the Spice Tailor brand, supplying regional Indian sauce mixes to supermarkets, is serenely unruffled even by the flocks of motor-rickshaws – tiny, yellow, three-wheeled taxis – that hurtle past, barely missing her gold Jimmy Choos. The honk of horns and screech of brakes pulsate through the damp heat, but she remains cool, elegant and focused. Her mission: to get to the heart of Hyderabadi food and the dish it claims as its own, the biryani.Anjum Anand
A biryani, as any Indian food fan knows, is a fluffy concoction of saffron-scented rice, saffron, marinated lamb and crisp onions – which might sound like a pilaf, or pilau, but it isn’t. “Pilau never has the crisp onions,” says Anand. “And the biryani is layered, while a pilau is mixed.” A biryani has special significance for Indians, too. “Whenever we invite people around, it has to be part of the meal. Men always gravitate to it first, eat the meat and rice, and suck on the bones,” says Anand, who was born in London to a Punjabi father and north-west Indian mother, and brought up in London and Switzerland.
In fact, as befits a country whose cuisine is as diverse as the whole of Europe, every region of India has its own take on biryani, most notably Lucknow to the north. But Hyderabad reckons itself to be the king of biryanis. Generally made with mutton or lamb, they are the purist’s favourite, what Melton Mowbray is to pork pies or Naples is to pizza.
The dish is part of the Mughal gastronomy, brought by invading Persians, and characterised by mild spicing, and the use of northern basmati rice rather than the short-grained local variety. The cuisine is mild, creamy and as aristocratic as Anand herself next to the screaming heat of Hyderabad’s competing cuisine, the chilli-heavy Andhra cooking, indigenous to the local Andhra Pradesh region.
At dinner that evening, the local grandee and food expert Mehboob Alam Khan explains that a true Hyderabadi biryani is “kacchi” – made by cooking rice with raw mutton or lamb, rather than “pakki”, which uses precooked meat. And the connoisseur’s favourite is a white biryani, with no saffron or crisp onions, relying on the skill of the chef and the quality of the simple spices, meat, marinade and rice to shine through.
Right on cue, two men carry in a “deg”, the traditional wide-based, narrow-topped copper cooking pot, this one the size of a baby bath. “These things are always better cooked in quantity,” Khan declares. As the seal of dough, or “dum”, around the top is broken, a gush of fragrant steam explodes like a genie out of a bottle. The men use plates to scoop the biryani on to vast serving dishes, and we eat it with the traditional creamy raita and michi ka salan, a dish of chillies in a peanut sauce, marvelling at the subtle, but not bland, flavours.
At a house in a former army barracks near the centre of Hyderabad, another family are making their version, on a more domestic scale, to feed a visiting group of children from a local orphanage. Raeeza Naeem and her sister cook their marinated lamb first in a pressure cooker, as their mother had taught them, before layering up the meat and rice in a pan. “The rice needs to be precooked, three quarters done for pakki biryani, a quarter done for kacchi,” Raeeza tells me, breaking a grain to show me the tiniest pin prick of white remaining in the middle of the otherwise cooked, translucent rice.
A few tablespoonfuls of saffron-scented milk and water go over the top, before Raeeza makes four deep holes in the rice with the handle of a wooden spoon and trickles a teaspoonful of oil in each. The lid goes on, weighed down with a heavy rock – “easier than all that dough business”, says Raeeza. She puts it on a high heat until steam starts to escape, before turning the heat down to a thread. How will you know it is done? “You can hear the tsk-tsk-tsk of the rice in the hot oil when the liquid is absorbed,” she says. Clearly its reputation as a complex dish is overblown. “Oh, yes. Our mother used to say, I can’t be bothered to cook, I’ll make a biryani.”
The rice whispers to us when it is ready, and the children and family sit on the white-sheet-covered floor to eat together. The rice, fragrant with costly saffron, and moist, delicate meat, is exquisite. It’s an important tenet of Islam, says Raeeza’s husband. “When you give, you have to give the best.”
As for me, I couldn’t say which I preferred, the pakki or the kacchi, but I do plan to make both, starting with Anand’s definitive version, which is right here for you.

Anjum Anand’s proper Hyderabad biryani recipe

SERVES
4
INGREDIENTS
Oil to fry
2 medium onions, finely sliced
1lb 2oz/500g pieces of lamb, lean pieces of leg with bone is ideal
16 green cardamom pods
6 cloves
2 x 2in/5cm cinnamon sticks
Handful chopped coriander
Handful chopped mint leaves
7oz/200g chapati flour or half wholemeal, half bread flour
1lb 2oz/500g good-quality basmati rice
1 small lemon
Large pinch saffron strands
4 tbsp whole milk
4 tbsp ghee or butter
Marinade
4 fl oz/110g plain yogurt
5 large cloves garlic, made into a paste
½oz/10g ginger, made into a paste
1¼-1½ tsp salt and ¼ tsp freshly ground black pepper
1 rounded tsp garam masala (good quality really helps)
½ tbsp green papaya paste (grated skin and flesh from a raw green papaya – optional but helps tenderise the meat)
½ tsp turmeric powder
½ tsp red chilli powder or to taste
¾ tsp black cumin seeds (shahi jeera)
2 tbsp lemon juice
METHOD
Heat 1½in deep oil in a medium-size saucepan and deep fry the onions slowly until just brown and crisp. Remove with a slotted spoon and place on kitchen roll. Reserve the oil.
Wash the lamb/mutton. Prick all over with the point of a knife and put in a bowl with all the marinade ingredients. Add 8 of the cardamom pods, 3 cloves and 1 cinnamon stick, half the coriander and mint, 2 tbsp of the onion oil and two-thirds of the onions, squidged in your hands (if the onions are still soft in places, don’t worry about it). Mix well. Leave to marinate, covered, overnight in the fridge or for a few hours.
When ready to cook, place the meat in the base of a heavy-bottomed pan and allow to come back to room temperature. Make a firm dough with the chapati flour and 150ml water, kneading until stretchy. Roll into a sausage as long as the diameter of the pan. Press it into the top edge of the pan where the lid will go.
Wash the rice in several changes of water and soak for 20 minutes. Meanwhile, place a large pot (about 5in) of water to boil with the remaining spices and herbs, onions and 2 tsp lemon juice. Season well; it should taste salty.
Heat the saffron in a dry pan until crisp and add the milk, bring to a simmer and cook for 1-2 mins. Take off the heat and add the ghee/butter.
Add the soaked rice to the water and bring back to a boil. Start timing it once it comes back to a boil. Meanwhile, place a bowl in the sink to catch some of the draining rice water. After two minutes, taking a spoon with holes in it, quickly take out 2-3 spoons of rice, allowing the excess water to drip out, and scatter straight over the meat. There needs to be just enough rice to cover the meat. Once the remaining rice has cooked for another minute (three minutes in total), drain it into the bowl in the sink. Scatter this rice over the rest.
Add 100ml of the rice water to the saffron pan, and evenly spoon over the rice. Press the lid down and place over moderate heat. After 7-8 minutes, some steam will escape. Let it steam for one minute, then turn the heat right down (level 2 on electric hob; on gas, use heat diffuser or cast-iron flat pan). After two minutes, squidge the dough back so no more steam escapes. Cook for 50 minutes. Turn off heat and allow to sit for 15 minutes. Serve with cucumber raita.

source with thanks:Riceplus Magazine

Amira Expands Distribution in the UK with Asda


Fri Oct 31, 2014 7:30am EDT
* Reuters is not responsible for the content in this press release.
Amira Expands Distribution in the UK with Asda
Amira Extends Agreement for In-Store and Online Distribution with Asda, a UK-Based Subsidiary of Wal-Mart
Amira Nature Foods Ltd (the “Company”) (NYSE:ANFI), a leading global provider of packaged Indian specialty rice, today announced that it has reached an agreement with Asda, a wholly owned division of Wal-Mart, to offer Amira’s branded products through its e-commerce platform, extending the previously announced partnership to sell Amira branded products in 256 Asda stores. Combined with its existing agreements with Asda, Morrisons, Tesco and Waitrose, Amira’s branded products now reach British consumers wherever they choose to shop, whether it’s in-store or online.
Asda is one of Britain’s largest supermarkets and operates as a multi-channel retailer through its physical stores and growing e-commerce platform. Asda reported in its most recent earnings results that its online market share has increased to 18.4% and that its Click and Collect program continues to drive e-commerce growth, attracting more than 20,000 customers per week. Click and Collect allows shoppers to purchase their items online and pick up their orders in their local Asda stores.
Commenting on the agreement, Karan A. Chanana, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of the Amira Group, said: “We are very excited to secure this partnership with Asda, which allows us to serve British consumers wherever and however they choose to shop. We will continue to focus on growing our distribution and are confident that the superior flavor of Amira’s premium basmati rice will become a staple for households across the U.K.”
Amira first entered the U.K. market with its branded rice products in June 2013 and has since secured agreements with major retailers Morrisons, Tesco, Waitrose and Asda. Today, the company’s assortment of premium basmati rice products reach a majority of British shoppers, providing luxurious gourmet products at an affordable price.
About Amira Nature Foods
Founded in 1915, Amira has evolved into a leading global provider of branded packaged Indian specialty rice, with sales in over 60 countries. The Company sells Basmati rice, which is a premium long-grain rice grown only in certain regions of the Indian sub-continent, under its flagship Amira brand as well as under other third party brands. Amira sells its products through a broad distribution network in both the developed and emerging markets. The Company’s global headquarters are in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, and it also has offices in India, Malaysia, Singapore, Germany, the United Kingdom, and the United States. Amira Nature Foods Ltd is listed on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) under the ticker symbol “ANFI.” For more information please visit www.amira.net.