And to not derail this thread into a discussion, let me share an actual recipe for Red Mexican Rice.
It's super simple, and you don't need any exotic ingredients. Also, if you do it correctly, I'm almost certain you'll love it.
So, ingredients...
For the sauce:
- 2 or 3 medium-sized tomatoes.
- 1 garlic clove.
- 3/4 of a medium-sized white onion.
- 1 tablespoon of salt. If you have access to smoked salt with pepper, use half of it (or less if the pepper is strong) and 3/4 of a tablespoon of regular salt.
- 1/2 cup of chicken broth. You can instead use a Knorr chicken broth cube... crappier and unhealthy, but it gets the job done in an emergency.
- The juice of half a small lemon (I think they're called limes in the US).
Put everything in a blender and blend until you have a homogeneous liquid. This will be your sauce.
For the rice:
- 2 cups of rice (I use "super extra" type rice which is sold by La Merced, Valle Verde or just the local one).
- 100g of peas.
- 100g of minced carrots.
- 100g of minced potatoes.
- 1/4 of minced white onion.
- Oil.
The procedure:
- Wash the rice until the water is clear. If the rice is chunky, and you know it needs longer cooking times, leave it in water for an hour.
- Spread the rice in a towel and leave there it until it's completely dry. You can leave it in direct sunlight.
- Once it's completely dry, in a wide, big pan, pour a decent amount of canola oil or whatever you have around as long as it's not olive oil. Turn on the heat to the maximum and wait a couple of minutes. Throw a rice in the oil... if it sizzles, it's time to toss all the rice in there. Make sure every bit is shinny and covered in oil and keep moving it until every rice grain looks slightly golden... avoid burning them or leaving them pale.
- Toss the peas, carrots, potatoes and onion in there and keep moving.
- Once the onion looks clear, toss 70% of your sauce and move the rice around. Every grain of rice should be covered in the sauce.
- Keep doing this until the rice soaks up the liquid of the sauce.
- Add water and/or chicken broth to your blender cup (which should still have the remaining 30% of the sauce) until you reach the 4 cup mark. Turn it on so you have a uniform liquid again.
- Toss this mixture to your rice and with a fork, move it around, making sure you don't have clumps and the rice is evenly spread across the pan. Once you achieve this, DON'T move the rice anymore.
- When you see boiling bubbles form, turn the heat to the minimum, put the lid on the pan, and set a timer for 12 minutes.
- Once the timer ends, DON'T you dare open the lid or move the pan around. Set another timer for at least 15 minutes more.
- Open the lid and, with a fork, gently "comb" the rice around. It should be fluffy, separated and well cooked.
¡Listo! You'll end up with something like this: