Rice

Rice is Part of My History:

Rice has been part of my life for as long as I can remember — right back to when I was barely steady on my feet. Some of my earliest food memories come from watching it being cooked with care, patience, and purpose, long before I understood just how important it would become to the way I cook today.

I was taught by my mother, who was in turn, taught by her friends friends of Ugandan Asian descent, and the method was simple, honest, and full of wisdom. A whole chicken would go into a pot with spices, vegetables, and salt, gently boiled until perfectly cooked. Once cooled, the meat was carefully picked from the carcass, the stock strained and reserved — nothing wasted, everything respected.

That fragrant stock was then used to cook the rice, enriched with spices, the shredded chicken, roasted cashew nuts, sweet sultanas, and slices of hard-boiled egg. The result was deeply nourishing, aromatic, and comforting — rice that carried flavour, memory, and meaning.


Rice Done Properly

Rice should be a pleasure to eat — light, fragrant, and full of character. It should be worlds away from the sticky, overcooked mess so often served, or the lifeless microwave bags lurking at the back of the cupboard.

The truth is, rice isn’t difficult to cook. Once you understand it — how it behaves, how it absorbs liquid, how it responds to heat — making perfect rice becomes second nature. And once you get it right, you’ll never want to go back.

Later in this blog, I’ll show you how to make rice properly, every time. But before we get into technique, it’s worth taking a moment to appreciate the real star of the show itself — the grain, the history, and why it deserves far more respect than it usually gets.


Why Rice Matters: Our Choice of Sella Basmati

Rice is often treated as an afterthought — something to sit quietly beside a curry. At Fusion Valley Kitchen, we see it very differently. Rice is the foundation of the dish, the canvas that carries flavour, spice, and sauce. Get it wrong, and even the best curry falls flat.

That’s why we’re as particular about our rice as we are about our meat, vegetables, and spices.


What Is Sella Basmati?

We use Sella Basmati, a premium parboiled basmati rice prized across South Asia, the Middle East, and East Africa for both its performance and flavour.

When raw, Sella basmati has a distinctive golden hue, created by parboiling the grain in its husk before milling. This process locks nutrients into the rice and fundamentally changes how it cooks.

This rice is not something you’ll find in your local supermarket, you’ll have to order this online, or buy from a good Indian Grocer


Why We Choose It

Sella basmati isn’t just different — it’s better suited to the kind of food we make.

Key characteristics include:

 

  • Long, elegant grains that stay intact

  • A lightly nutty aroma

  • A firm texture that resists overcooking

  • Fluffy, separate grains once cooked — never sticky, never claggy

This makes it ideal for dishes with bold sauces and deep spice profiles, where rice needs to hold its own rather than disappear into the background.


Perfect for Rich, Slow-Cooked Dishes

Sella basmati truly shines alongside rich curries, biryanis, and pilafs. It absorbs flavour without breaking down, maintaining structure even when paired with slow-cooked meats, layered masalas, or aromatic oils.

Whether it’s soaking up a Durban-style curry, supporting a jewelled rice dish, or balancing a deeply spiced stew, this rice does exactly what it’s meant to do — carry flavour beautifully.


The Fusion Valley Approach

Like everything we cook, our choice of rice comes down to respect for ingredients and the finished dish. We don’t cut corners, we don’t use shortcuts, and we don’t treat any element as secondary.

Because great curry isn’t just about what’s in the pot — it’s about everything that comes with it.