Fried Rice
Fried Rice with Crab
Kao pat Bpuu
Anything Rice
One of my favorite meals was made by finding some leftover meat or fish and some cooked rice, and tossing them in a skillet with whatever caught our fancy. When you're good and hungry, a mixed-up quick meal tastes every bit as good as any long pot [long-cooked dish]. And you don't have to wait.
Corn Furikake Fried Rice
The first thing you should make with sweet summer corn.
Basil Fried Rice
With minimal prep time and a faster cook, this basil fried rice recipe with crispy onions, ginger, and fresh chiles should be in your weekly summer rotation.
Cajun Shrimp Fried Rice
This Cajun shrimp fried rice is a quick and easy delight, packed with vibrant vegetables including a blend of bell pepper, onion, and garlic.
Masala Rice
Warm spices, a spritz of lime juice, and 10 minutes are all you need to serve a brighter, flavor-spiked side of rice.
Coconut and Turmeric Fried Rice
Sweet dates and nutty coconut make this sunny fried rice right at home at your brunch table.
Kimchi Fried Rice With Broccoli
Broccoli florets get lots of love, but this sizzling flavorful dish is all about those stalks and leaves (also: kimchi).
Garlic Fried Rice
This is one of those times when just a few ingredients pay out big, resulting in a rice dish that bursts with garlic flavor.
Crispy Rice With Ginger-Citrus Celery Salad
To get the best texture, evenly distribute the rice in your pan and gently press down to flatten it. Don’t touch until you hear it crackle!
Thuppa Anna
Chitra Agrawal took flavor inspiration for this simple dish from her mother’s home state of Karnataka in South India, where thuppa means “ghee” and anna means “rice” in Kannada, the local language.
Cornbread Stuffing Fried Rice
Think outside the Thanksgiving leftover sandwich box and make this crispy, crunchy, can’t-stop-eating it dish.
Broccoli and Egg Fried Rice
A pan full of veggie-packed fried rice is one of the easiest and most satisfying weeknight dinners we know of.
Fried Rice With Spring Vegetables and Fried Eggs
Any cooked rice or grain will work in this stir-fry, but for best results make sure they are completely cooled—overnight is ideal.
Pastrami Fried Rice
This is going to seem like a lot of oil, but you really need it to a) crisp up the rice and b) make it seem like fried rice and not a rice pilaf. To that end, you can’t use freshly cooked (meaning, still warm and moist) rice for this recipe. If you do, it will get gummy in the pan and won’t crisp. Day-old rice is ideal, or you can quickly dry out a just-made batch. Spread rice on a sheet tray and put in a low oven 5–10 minutes. Let air-dry for about 1 hour and up to 5. Seems nitpicky, but worth .…
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