I don’t have a rice cooker, so naturally, I use my instapot to make rice. But when I make rice and beans, I also use the instapot to make beans… so I’m toying with the idea of just doing rice and beans in the same instapot at the same time… thoughts?
Before I got my rice cooker (I actually posted about it in the old lemmy.world version of this community) I would make rice in the IP also and I have multiple inserts so I’d make the rice, put aside then make the beans.
Few thoughts I guess
If you’re using dry beans and white ricen it will be beans and congee.
If you soak beans, then you probably need to cook it with brown rice so the timings line up (22 min).
If you’re using skinned lentils like red lentils (brown lentils w/o skin), moong dal (mung beans skinned and split), toor dal (pigeon peas skinned and split) then you can make that dry with white rice and that would be kitchari
I think a rice cooker is a really valuable, easy, cheap and effective addition to have and don’t recommend people deny themselves the advantages of automation. If it weren’t for my soy milk maker, instant pot, small 40 dollar air fryer, rice maker, dish washer, and various blenders I would not be able to feed myself in the time I have lol
Okay, thanks. This is a good summary. It really seems like a rice cooker would be a worthwhile investment. I just don’t have any more cupboard space!! I’ve been resisting for a while. But my rice and bean consumption has just been climbing. Spend your money where you spend your time, right?
A second instapot insert is an interesting idea as well. Do you know if they stack neatly?
I’ve experimented with this a little as my rice and bean consumption has also risen dramatically in the last few years. When using canned beans, it’s easy to just add rice and either water, stock, or undrained cans of diced tomatoes(and always onion!) and pressure cook it all together.
When making the beans from dry, I’ll just pressure cook for 30 min after soaking all night, then add the other ingredients and pressure cooker another 10-15 minutes, depending on type of rice. I’ll usually simmer it for awhile after the pressure releases. It’s a staple in our house! Mix up the seasonings and/or hot sauces and it’s so satisfying.