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Ready Rice

It’s called “ready rice” for a reason: Microwave it for less than two minutes, right in the package it comes in, and it’s ready to eat. No question it’s fast, but does it taste good?

Top Pick

WinnerMinute Ready to Serve White Rice

These parboiled grains “held up without clumping” and had an “al dente” bite. Tasters liked the “toasted buttery flavor.” This brand “does not taste precooked.”
Style: Long grain, parboiledPrice at Time of Testing: $2.19 for 8.8 oz (25 cents per oz)
These parboiled grains “held up without clumping” and had an “al dente” bite. Tasters liked the “toasted buttery flavor.” This brand “does not taste precooked.”
Style: Long grain, parboiledPrice at Time of Testing: $2.19 for 8.8 oz (25 cents per oz)

What You Need to Know

It’s called “ready rice” for a reason: Microwave it for less than two minutes, right in the package it comes in, and it’s ready to eat. No question it’s fast, but does it taste good? Is it acceptable as a last-minute side dish? We tasted five national brands of white ready rice: three long grain, one medium grain, and one blend of long- and short-grain rice.

Long-grain rice contains the most amylose, a starch that makes rice less sticky when cooked, a quality our tasters preferred. Our two favorites, both long grain, were parboiled, also known as “converted” (Uncle Ben brand’s trademarked term for parboiled). This precooking process steams rice kernels in their husks and gelatinizes the starches, which makes the grains firm, smooth, and less sticky. Parboiling also turns rice light tan, which we noticed but didn’t mind.

Two brands tasted “plasticky.” Both add glucono delta lactone (GDL), which forms gluconic acid in water to lower the pH and prevent bacterial growth as well as lower the gelatinization temperature of the rice so it cooks quickly and evenly. Unfortunately, GDL also produces a sour, metallic taste.

Our winning ready rice did not add GDL and had a leg up in the flavor department: It was the only brand to add salt and had the most fat per serving, a likely source of its “buttery” taste. It's fluffy and fast, but also nearly three times as expensive per serving as conventionally cooked rice. Will we quit making rice the usual way? No, but our winner was a surprisingly close second choice in a blind taste-off in which we sampled the five ready rices alongside regular long-grain rice; we’d consider keeping our winning ready rice in the pantry for busy weeknights.

03:18

Cook's CountryReady RiceWatch Now

Everything We Tested

Recommended

WinnerMinute Ready to Serve White Rice

These parboiled grains “held up without clumping” and had an “al dente” bite. Tasters liked the “toasted buttery flavor.” This brand “does not taste precooked.”
Style: Long grain, parboiledPrice at Time of Testing: $2.19 for 8.8 oz (25 cents per oz)
These parboiled grains “held up without clumping” and had an “al dente” bite. Tasters liked the “toasted buttery flavor.” This brand “does not taste precooked.”
Style: Long grain, parboiledPrice at Time of Testing: $2.19 for 8.8 oz (25 cents per oz)

Not Recommended

Nishiki Grain Rice Specially Selected

While sticky sushi rice certainly has its place, this product “bordered on mushy.” We also disliked its “plasticky” flavor and “smell of preservatives.”
Style: Medium grainPrice at Time of Testing: $2.39 for 7.4 oz (32 cents per oz)
While sticky sushi rice certainly has its place, this product “bordered on mushy.” We also disliked its “plasticky” flavor and “smell of preservatives.”
Style: Medium grainPrice at Time of Testing: $2.39 for 7.4 oz (32 cents per oz)

Minsley Organic Cooked White Rice Bowl

This “clumpy” rice formed “a nearly impenetrable mass” and had a slew of bad flavors, from “musty” to “sour wet dog.”
Style: 50% long grain, 50% short grainPrice at Time of Testing: $1.85 for 7.4 oz (25 cents per oz)
This “clumpy” rice formed “a nearly impenetrable mass” and had a slew of bad flavors, from “musty” to “sour wet dog.”
Style: 50% long grain, 50% short grainPrice at Time of Testing: $1.85 for 7.4 oz (25 cents per oz)

Seeds of Change Tapovan White Basmati Rice

This “strawlike” rice, by far the most expensive in our lineup, was “like eating grass.” Its “rough and spindly” grains felt “parched.”
Style: Basmati, a type of long grainPrice at Time of Testing: DISCONTINUED
This “strawlike” rice, by far the most expensive in our lineup, was “like eating grass.” Its “rough and spindly” grains felt “parched.”
Style: Basmati, a type of long grainPrice at Time of Testing: DISCONTINUED

Ben's Original Long Grain White Ready Rice

The "assertive rice flavor" was "too much" and bordered on being "stale." Even worse was the "bouncy" texture, reminiscent of "cafeteria" rice.
Price at Time of Testing: $3.89 for 32 ounces
The "assertive rice flavor" was "too much" and bordered on being "stale." Even worse was the "bouncy" texture, reminiscent of "cafeteria" rice.
Price at Time of Testing: $3.89 for 32 ounces

*All products reviewed by America’s Test Kitchen are independently chosen, researched, and reviewed by our editors. We buy products for testing at retail locations and do not accept unsolicited samples for testing. We list suggested sources for recommended products as a convenience to our readers but do not endorse specific retailers. When you choose to purchase our editorial recommendations from the links we provide, we may earn an affiliate commission. Prices are subject to change.

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