How to Cook Perfect Brown Rice

This stovetop brown rice recipe yields perfectly fluffy brown rice, every time, with any variety. You'll never want to cook brown rice any other way!

266 Reviews
599CommentsJump to recipe

brown rice recipe

Repeat after me: No more mushy rice! No more mushy rice! I’ve been using this brown rice cooking technique for years, and it never fails.

A few reasons to love this recipe:

  • You don’t need a rice cooker or any special equipment (just a pot with a lid, and a kitchen stove).
  • You can use this technique on any type of brown rice (long, medium or short grain, as long as it’s not a quick-cooking variety).
  • It’s so easy to remember, you’ll never need to look up how to cook brown rice again.

brown rice before and after cooking

For this technique, you’ll boil your rice in an abundance of water for 30 minutes. Drain off the excess water, return the rice to the pot, cover, and let the rice steam for 10 minutes. Ta da! Perfect brown rice, every time.

I originally found this technique on Saveur, and I’m so thankful I did. Their recipe calls for 12 cups of water (that’s a lot) per cup of rice, and I’ve learned that it really only needs 6 cups.

However, you don’t actually have to measure the water as long as you’re using a large enough pot. If too much water evaporates during the cooking process, just add more and return the water to a boil. Your rice will still turn out perfectly!

Watch How to Cook Brown Rice

Print
Save this recipe!
Get this recipe sent to your inbox, plus get new recipes from C+K every week!
Please enable JavaScript in your browser to complete this form.

How to Cook Perfect Brown Rice

  • Author: Cookie and Kate
  • Prep Time: 2 minutes
  • Cook Time: 30 minutes
  • Total Time: 32 minutes (plus 10 minutes for steaming)
  • Yield: 3 cups 1x

5 Stars 4 Stars 3 Stars 2 Stars 1 Star 4.6 from 266 reviews

Print

Once you try this easy technique, you’ll never want to cook brown rice any other way. You can scale this recipe up or down as needed. The basic ratio is 1 part brown rice to 6 parts water, which yields 3 parts cooked rice. As written below, the recipe yields 3 cups cooked rice.

Ingredients

Scale
  • 1 cup brown rice (short, medium or long grain brown rice will work, as long as it’s not a quick-cooking variety)
  • 6 cups water
  • Salt, soy sauce or other desired seasonings, to taste

Instructions

  1. Bring a large pot of water to boil, using at least 6 cups water per 1 cup rice. Rinse* the rice in a fine mesh colander under running water to remove excess starch.
  2. Add the rice to the boiling water. Reduce the temperature as necessary to prevent overflow, but maintain a steady boil. Boil, uncovered, for 30 minutes.
  3. Drain off the remaining cooking water and return the rice to the pot. Cover the pot and let the rice rest, off the heat, for 10 minutes. Fluff, season as desired, and serve.

Notes

Recipe adapted from Saveur.

*Note on rinsing: I’ve forgotten to rinse my rice before, and the rice turned out almost as good. The cooked grains are a little more starchyโ€”you can see a thin layer of gluey starch at the bottom of the pot after steaming. If you’re in a hurry, skip the rinse.

Make it gluten free: Rice is gluten free, so just be mindful of your additions. Soy sauce, for example, is not gluten free (substitute certified gluten-free tamari instead).

Wild rice option: For wild rice, use 8 cups water and boil for 40 to 55 minutes, until tender but pleasantly chewy.

Nutrition

The information shown is an estimate provided by an online nutrition calculator. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionistโ€™s advice. See our full nutrition disclosure here.

5 Recipes Featuring Brown Rice

The following recipes feature this brown rice cooking technique. I have many more brown rice recipes here. You’ll find brown rice risottos, paella, mujaddara and more.

Homemade Thai red curry recipe with vegetables! So much better than takeout. cookieandkate.com

1) Thai Red Curry with Vegetables

Gluten free and vegan

“Made this yesterday following the recipe quite faithfully. Hubby said it tastes exactly like the red curry at our favorite Thai restaurant! This is a winner and will be bookmarked and made often! The details provided in the recipe such as time to cook at each step ensure that you can’t go wrong with the recipe. And so I would feel confident making this recipe for company too.” – Poornima

Kale black bean burrito bowls make a delicious, redeeming, vegan dinner that packs well for tomorrow's lunch. cookieandkate.com

2) Kale, Black Bean & Avocado Burrito Bowl

Gluten free and vegan

“I’ve made this twice now and love it! The lime juice-marinated kale totally converted me to eating raw kale! This is a perfect recipe to make for weekday lunches in the office because it’s easy to pack and reheat and leftovers taste just as great. Thanks!” – Lauren

Learn how to make vegetable fried rice—it's a fun and satisfying dinner recipe! Vegetarian and gluten free. cookieandkate.com

3) Extra Vegetable Fried Rice

Gluten free and easily vegan

“I made this last weekend and love love loved it so I’m making it again this weekend! My husband really liked it too, and it’s a tall order to get him to eat a lot of vegetables so this will be entered into our regular rotation for sure. So glad I found this blog, I’ve email subscribed and have just purchased your cookbook! Thanks Kate!!” – Julia

roasted brussels sprouts, crispy baked tofu and rice recipe

4) Roasted Brussels Sprouts and Crispy Baked Tofu with Honey-Sesame Glaze

Gluten free and vegan

“Another amazing recipe, perfect combination of sweet and spicy. I pitched this to my meat loving boyfriend as vegetarian general tso’s, and it worked! Every recipe I cook from this blog is so delicious – all I want to know is when is the Cookie and Kate cookbook release date! Thank you, Kate, your recipes have renewed my love of cooking and make breaking bread with loved ones even more special.” – Ailla

Super versatile kale salad recipe with an amazing green tahini salad dressing - cookieandkate.com

5) Anything-Goes Kale Salad with Green Tahini Dressing

Gluten free and vegan

“Thank you so much for this lovely salad, beautiful and delicious! The dressing is such a nice combination. Just the thing after a weekend of not-so-healthful eating.” – Wendy

More resources you might appreciate: 23 make-ahead breakfast recipes, 45 recipes that pack well for lunch and 20 simple weeknight dinners. You can shop my essential kitchen equipment here. Don’t forget to follow us on Pinterest for a steady stream of recipe inspiration!

Kate and Cookie

HELLO, MY NAME IS

Kathryne Taylor

I'm a vegetable enthusiast, dog lover, mother and bestselling cookbook author. I've been sharing recipes here since 2010, and I'm always cooking something new in my Kansas City kitchen. Cook with me!

Leave a comment

Your comments make my day. Thank you! If you have a question, please skim the comments sectionโ€”you might find an immediate answer there.
If you made the recipe, please choose a star rating, too.

Recipe rating 5 Stars 4 Stars 3 Stars 2 Stars 1 Star

Comments

  1. Ann kelley

    The Extra Vegetable Fried Rice is so delicious! I use it all the time. So grateful to have found it.

    1. Kate

      I’m glad you found it too, Ann! I appreciate your review.

  2. Mavis

    #cookieandkate
    Major fail on the brown rice, followed directions to a tee! Like porridge, I have tried so many recipes and was hoping this would work, however it did not. Love your other recipes, I give up on brown rice! Jasmine all the way, works every time!

    1. Kate

      Hi Mavis, I’m sorry to hear this. I have made this several Times without issues. Did you use a large enough pot? How long did you cook it?

    2. Christina

      Hard to believe. Works every time for me.

  3. nancy

    this is an easy and successful way to cook rice. plus rice is a high arsenic food, and this method will leach about 50% of the arsenic out of the rice – throw away the cooking liquid – according to the healthline web site, so likely the healthiest way to cook it as well. thanks for the recipe.

    1. Kate

      You’re welcome, Nancy!

  4. Stacy

    Iโ€™ve tried a bunch of different methods to cook brown rice over the years, and Iโ€™m always disappointed. It never cooks through, it takes forever, and I usually end up with some burnt on the bottom of the pot. I had to up my cook time to 40 minutes but this worked! Brown rice cooked perfectly with none stuck to the bottom of the pot. I did have to add more water at one point. I used this for your vegetable fried rice recipe and it was so good. My husband actually commented that this was the โ€œbest riceโ€ heโ€™d ever had with fried rice.

    1. Kate

      Hooray! I’m glad this worked for you. Thank you for your review, Stacy.

  5. Jim

    Thank you for this, most people donโ€™t understand about boiling rice and I think itโ€™s a perfect way to decrease starch. I was looking for the time frame, and I finally found it with your recipe, I also like the 10 minute steam at the end to let the red settle.

    1. Kate

      You’re welcome, Jim! Thank you for your review.

  6. Heidi Manti

    Love it! Made the perfect brown rice recipe comes out perfect every time. Look forward for more recipes.
    Thank you
    Heidi

    1. Kate

      You’re welcome, Heidi!

  7. Charles

    Hi Kate,
    I am a fairly new cook, started at age 65 : > }

    I have been wondering – why so much water?

    I have been making 3 cups of brown rice in a 12 cup pot, this means about 1 rice to 3 1/2 cups water and it seems to come out fine.

    I am just curious and maybe other people are too!

    All the beswt,
    Charles

    1. Kate

      It helps give enough for different types and freshness of rice. I hope you try it!

      1. Jill

        Perfect every time. Thanks!

        1. Kate

          You’re welcome, Jill! I appreciate your review.

  8. Rebecca

    Love this recipe – foolproof!
    Question: would I use the same method for brown basmati rice?

    1. Kate

      It should work too. Let me know how it turns out!

    2. Sheila

      I’ve used mother in law’s 10 minute white rice hack for years (perfect rice on stove top in 10mins!). Love brown rice but seldom cook it A) takes too long to cook down and B) variable results … so, thank you for this recipe , I use it all the time now with even my picky husband enjoying brown rice without complaint!

  9. Rabia Noor

    Hey! I made brown rice using this recipe. I had given up on them but using your recipe I finally made it again. They taste good but took more than an hour. Thanks anyway!

    1. Kate

      You’re welcome, Rabia! I appreciate your review.

  10. John Bales

    Prior to coming across this article, I was using my computerized rice cooker which consistently overcooked brown rice, even following the steps in the manual to the letter. Using this simple method, my brown rice has turned out fluffy and perfect EVERY TIME! Cook your rice a few times using this method and you’ll find it’s committed to memory. Thanks again for printing it!

  11. Luis

    Mushy rice. Rice turned out mushy. I followed everything and boiled it for 30 minutes then left it for 10 off heat without water. Big gluey clumpy mess. I don’t know why the positive reviews. Ruined my food.

    1. Kate

      I’m sorry to hear that. What type of rice did you use? How big of container did you use?

  12. Lucy

    This works brilliantly!

  13. Ijeoama

    I hope to learn more Katie. Thank you!

  14. KT

    This didn’t work. I just made this.
    Still turned out to be mushy rice. Followed recipe to a T.

    1. Kate

      Hi KT, I’m sorry to hear that. Sometimes the size of pot matters. If it’s not big enough, this can still happen.

  15. Greg

    I’ve made this 3 times so far. 1st came out perfect. 2nd time it was like mush but I also cooked it a bit longer and heat on high. 3rd time close to perfect. The mushiness is starch. There is a fix that has worked very well. After the 2nd time, I turned on the hot water and got it very hot and rinsed it in a collander, put back in pan for 2 mins on low, 8 mins no heat, and it was perfect. Tap your collander on the pan and all rice will come out. I did the same the 3rd time. If you don’t want to use tap water, use filtered water heated to a boil in a teapot. I will now rinse it even if it turns out good, just to wash out the starch and make it fluffy.

  16. Michele

    I tried it for the first time and worked pretty well actually. I used a large pot than I thought I needed, to be safe, based on some of your feedback to other comments.

    Do you have the details on how to do this method for black rice?
    Thanks!!

    1. Kate

      Are you referring to wild rice?

      1. Michele

        No – referring to black or forbidden rice I eat it all the time.

        1. Kate

          I haven’t tried it with this method so I can’t say for sure. Sorry!

          1. Dan

            I use this method over and again and the brown rice has come out splendidly each and every time. Not sure about folks saying the rice is mushy. It has never been mushy for us. You definitely need a large enough pot. I wouldn’t skip the rinse either.
            Its soooo easy. Just like cooking pasta! Thank you Cookie and Kate! My kids love rice! I feel brown is somehow healthier. This makes it so easy!!!

  17. Sheila

    I’ve used mother in law’s 10 minute white rice hack for years (perfect rice on stove top in 10mins!). Love brown rice but seldom cook it A) takes too long to cook down and B) variable results … so, thank you for this recipe , I use it all the time now with even my picky husband enjoying brown rice without complaint!

    1. Kate

      That’s great to hear, Sheila!

  18. Norma

    Oh my goodness, what a difference it makes to cook brown rice this way! It came out fluffy and light. I’ll never cook brown rice any other way. Yet another winner of a recipe from Bookie and Kate. Thank you!

    1. Kate

      You’re welcome, Norma! I’m delighted you enjoyed it.

  19. t

    I had read that using a 12:1 ratio for cooking rice (and using a pressure cooker) significantly reduces arsenic, and anti nutrients like lectins and phytic acid, so I tried that but it was to mushy. So then I figured I could under cook it and finish with steaming for the best of both worlds…so I came to the same conclusion through trial and error.

    I don’t measure either I just cover with a few inches of water and use a rice steamer net to lift it out and put into steamer tray easily.

  20. Leslie Warren

    My new favorite way to cook brown rice! You’re so right. It turns out perfect every time :))

    1. Kate

      Great to hear you enjoyed it, Leslie! I appreciate your review.

  21. CD

    I tried this rice recipe, and it turned out way too wet and all stuck together. It was edible, but my family likes their rice fluffy and this was too wet to fluff.

    1. Kate

      I’m sorry to hear that! Did you use a large enough pot?

  22. Melliny Lamberson

    I tried your perfect brown rice today using only 1/2 cup rice, as an experiment. I had let the rice sit overnight in 5 cups water, as I had read this is the most effective way of getting arsenic out of brown rice, then proceded with your recipe, cutting the recommended water by half since it was only 1/2 cup rice. I had tried this soaking overnight method before, and after cooking, it was mush. So I was pretty sure my experiment with your recipe would be mush too. It was perfect! Even after all that soaking! I am so pleasantly amazed! Thank you for putting healthy recipes out there for us.

  23. Judi

    Thank you for this way of cooking brown rice! Use it every time I make it! Delicious!

  24. Lindy Ost

    I have made brown rice the way you described 3 times except that I kept the lid on. I just read the recipe again and you suggest to keep the lid off. Is there a reason for the lid off? I was happy the way it turned out with the lid on, so I am curious. I am cooking it now with the lid off. Thanks!

    1. Kate

      Hi Lindy, I find it helps make the rice less mushy.

      1. Lindy

        Ahh, makes sense. Thanks!

  25. Max

    Iโ€™ve made this twice, both times in the same large pot (plenty of room to boil)and both times it turned out so mushy. I have a induction stove, could that be making a difference?

    1. Kate

      I’m sorry to hear that. I’m not sure that should matter. Was your rice old?

  26. Celeste

    I just want to share for anyone who comes across this technique that this is the best way to cook brown rice. If you are rinsing your rice (which you should!) then itโ€™s no more work in terms of cleaning up. The lundberg short grain rice tastes so much better than traditional methods. And itโ€™s faster! The best.

    1. Kate

      Great to hear, Celeste!

  27. MaryAnne Glazar

    Definitely a keeper, and I can freeze small portions in glass jars so there’s always “instant rice” on hand when I want it!

    1. Kate

      Great! Thank you for your review, MaryAnne.

  28. Varsha Shah

    I love your recipes .My husband is on Keytruda (cancer treatment) Vegan diet was suggested by our Diet consultant and itโ€™s working good!

  29. Erin

    Can you salt the water?
    I tried your method to cook rice purchased from a bulk bin with no cooking directions. I used extra water and the biggest pot I own. I followed your directions and tasted the rice after draining the liquid at the 30 minute mark. It was cooked through without the 10 minutes of steaming. I imagine every type of rice is a little different and how high the flame is makes a difference.

  30. paul

    Hi Kate, thankyou for sharing this recipes, however the rice does not look properly cooked as you can still see the grain through the translucency of the rice. When eating it the rice will have nutty feel to it. To correct me can you please tell me which rice you are using and i will try this out myself as you are aware each type of rice cooks differently. I will make this recipe and tell you what I think. I actually have a different techniques to this. i wash rice first put rice in boiling water let the rice come to a full boil and then simmer with lid on for about 30 minutes and then I wash the rice again to get all the starch out and then put the rice back into a clean pot and on a low heat the excess water in the rice from blanching heats up and turns into a steam then drys out, this is the bit where fluffing the rice up with a 3 pronged fork helps, not use a spoon or it can easily turn to mush. Any way I have tried so many different techniques of cooking rice. So on that note please tell me what rice you used so I can recreate your recipe.

  31. Shelia Rasch

    I was hesitant to try this recipe. I usually cook rice in my Instant Pot or on top of stove! At the end I added a pat of butter and salt. My hubby loved it also!

  32. Davetta

    Iโ€™m in love with this recipe!!!
    Followed directions exactly as given. Rice was perfect.
    Have a question, if I double the recipe do I double the 30min cook time and 10min rest time?
    Thank you for sharing your recipe.

    1. MarshaG

      No, don’t double the time. As long as you cook in an adequate size pot, it should cook fine. Also…be sure your rice is pretty fresh. I never buy a larger amount than I’d use in two months. I’ve made the mistake of cooking rice or beans that had sat in the pantry, maybe years and it never cooked completely.

  33. Dellis

    Omg, what a winner. Turned out perfectly. Just saved me a rice cooker purchase as disappointed with my other methods since turning vegan 11 months ago and eating brown rice for the first time. Light fluffy. Very happy. Thankyou

  34. Shae

    This recipe creates perfect rice! I’ve made it twice now and each time the result is perfect texture and flavour. I’d nearly given up on rice after so many years of it turning out mushy. This restored my faith in rice, thank you!

    1. Kate

      You’re welcome, Shae!

  35. Tommy

    Love your site!

    You say to add water if thereโ€™s not enough.

    How much is enough water? Should the rice be submerged completely the whole time? When do I add more?

    Thanks!

  36. Sue

    Perfect rice every time. I will never bother doing it any other way. Thank you.

  37. Terri V

    I tried this method for brown rice and it worked great! I have used this method for white rice (see Laura Caulder’s recipe here https://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/this-is-not-rice-pilaf-1960089) with success so I decided to give this a try. Here are some tips that might help:
    1) I use a heavy pot like Le Crueset or Staub
    2) treat the rice just like pasta, plenty of water and test for doneness (check after 25 minutes depending on how much you are making and every 5 minutes there after )
    3) if you need to add water, make sure the water is hot/boiling so you don’t slow the cooking down
    Thank you for the recipe!

  38. Deborah

    I’m told I am an excellent cook, even before I went vegan, which has been 15 years now. The only thing I knew I couldn’t cook and my family wouldn’t eat, is my rice. I just came across your method of cooking brown rice and WOW! It’s not mushy, gloopy, soggy or trash worthy. I wish I would have known this years ago. I have to tell you I will never make rice any other way. Thank you for this recipe method. I will definitely be making more recipes including rice and my family thanks you!

  39. Tina

    Scaled down for 1/2 cup raw rice and used about 3-4 cups water initially. Added more boiling water when water was running low in pot. Best brown long grain rice Iโ€™ve made yet!

  40. Hannah A

    Wanted to try cooking brown rice for the first time. I was wary of the commentors who said their rice was mushy. After 30 mins, the rice was tender to my liking. I drained and let it sit on the (off, but still hot) burner to steam off the last of the liquid while serving. Not covered, just sitting open.
    Used brown basmati rice that I just bought from the store. Pretty big pot, lots of water.
    Not sure why I didn’t need the steaming step, but I’ll take it! Nice and lightly chewy rice.

  41. Kelly

    Is there a way to modify this method for white rice? My brown rice comes out perfect every time, but I have never been able to cook white rice without it boiling over.

    1. Cookie and Kate

      Hi Kelly,

      You might be using a pot that is too small or cooking on too high of heat. Try using a larger pot and be sure to simmer, not boil, when cooking white rice. Hope that helps!

  42. vickie

    I haven’t heard of the brand you use. Do they use talc?
    I use Mahatma, because they don’t, at least didn’t before, use talc to coat the rice and then must be rinsed off before cooking (talc has been connected to stomach cancers in the past).

    I’m not a big brown rice fan, don’t like the toughness, so maybe this method will help that. I mix white and brown to cut down on that.

    Thanks for all the great recipes.

  43. Leslie Ferrara

    BRILLIANT!!!

  44. Greg Livingston

    Can I use chicken broth instead of water?

    1. Cookie and Kate

      Hi Greg, yes, you can do that.

  45. Joy

    Can you cook Barley the same way you cook brown rice?

    What other grains can we cook in this way?

    1. Cookie and Kate

      This is my method for cooking barley, from this recipe: “Another thing Iโ€™ve learned about cooking whole grains is that their cooking time varies, sometimes even from the time listed on the bag. I just mixed two cups of uncooked, hulled barley with six cups of water (a 1:3 ratio), let it come to a boil, and then simmered it, covered, for a little less than an hour.”