Friday 4 September 2015

Easy to make Milk Rice (Kiribath) in a rice cooker

Kiri bath literally translated is milk rice and is Sri Lanka's most famous festive dish without any debate.

The prominence of milk rice eaten at auspicious occasions may go back to the story of it being offered to Lord Buddha whose first meal after enlightenment was Kiri pidu offered to him by a village damsel called Sujatha. The venue of this is still a much visited stop by Sri Lankan Buddhist pilgrims to India.

Kiri bath is usually the first food fed to babies, is cooked at the auspicious time on New Years day to be the star of the New Year table; offered as Buddha pooja to Lord Buddha; fed by bridegrooms to brides at their wedding, a must at any auspicious event; even cooked on the first day of every month to bring luck which was a custom my mother and her mother before her practiced till their deaths and which I tend to follow - if I am not too busy to forget it even after living out of Sri Lanka for almost 4 decades.

Kiribath for breakfast fit for royalty with Fish Ambul Thiyal and Katta Sambal



Milk rice is similar and yet is different to the coconut rice served in other parts of Asia. It is not cooked in coconut milk from the beginning as coconut rice is and is moulded and flattened. It is one of the simplest dishes to make and is usually a major hit with my non Sri Lankan friends.

Milk rice is usually a breakfast dish but there is no reason why you cannot eat it for lunch or dinner as I do.

We Lankans eat Kiri bath with an assortment of side dishes such as seeni sambol (a kind of caramelised onion spiced with chilli, spices and cooked in tamarind and coconut milk with a little sugar added to it for that extra touch), Katta sambal or lunu miris, a hot concoction of ground salt, onion, chilli and Maldive fish (see my blog post on Katta Sambal), fish or meat curry or my favourite canned fish or Salmon curry. A sweeter version of Kiri bath is made by forming balls of milk rice moulded using either a tea cup or banana leaf to balls slightly elongated on both ends and with a sweet filling of Pani pol, cooked spicy filling made out of grated coconut and treacle or jaggery. Traditionally a bark from the Arecanut tree (puwak kola patha) was used for this but I don't know if they even exist now.
A diamond of Kiribath served with Katta sambal and fish Ambul Thiyal
 

I have recently modernised this dish by making Imbul kiribath stacks made with disks of milk rice with a layer of Pani pol in between. You can also make a savoury version using Katta sambal as a filling and that's the topic of another blog post when I get around to making them.

Now for my recipe for making it with or without a rice cooker.

A plate of Kiribath
 

Rice cooker version

Ingredients:
2 cups short grain, jasmine or Kiribath rice or even sushi rice (which are stickier versions of rice)
3 cups of water
1.5 cups thick canned coconut milk or coconut cream
1.5 tsp salt

Wash rice. Drain. Add the water and cook till done. Then add the coconut milk and salt and switch on back to Cook and cook till the milk is absorbed.

Spoon into a flat plate quickly and flatten out with the back of a spoon and shape  to form a flat raised mound, flattening the tops and sides alternately using either a banana leaf/folded piece of foil or wax paper. Cool and cut into squares or diamonds.

Serve with an assortment of side dishes such as Katta sambal, seeni sambal, fish or meat curry.

Stove top version

Ingredients:
2 cups short grain, jasmine or Kiribath rice or even sushi rice (which are stickier versions of rice)
3 cups of water
1.5 cups thick canned coconut milk or coconut cream
1.5 tsp salt

Wash rice well and place in saucepan with the water. Bring the water to the boil and cook rapidly till most of the water evaporates. Lower heat to very low and cover saucepan with lid and cook on very low heat for about 10 mts without opening the lid and the temptation to peek. Rice should be almost cooked.
Add the salt and coconut milk and cover and cook on low heat till cooked. Use the same method to flatten the rice on a plate.

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