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Glorified Rice Recipe

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This recipe for Glorified Rice is from The McKenny Family Cookbook Project, one of the cookbooks created at FamilyCookbookProject.com. We'll help you start your own personal cookbook! It's easy and fun. Click here to start your own cookbook!


Category:
Category:

Ingredients:  
Ingredients:  
1 cup white rice, uncooked
1 cup water
1 cup pineapple juice, see notes
8 ounce Cool Whip, softened
1 cup miniature marshmallows, plain or multicolored
15 oz fruit cocktail, (1 can) drained and juice kept (see notes)
8 oz crushed pineapple, (1 can) drained and juice kept (see notes)
maraschino cherries, for garnish (optional)

Directions:
Directions:
In a large saucepan over medium heat, add rice, pineapple juice (or juice from the canned fruit), and water. Follow box instructions for cooking rice. Drain any excess fluid, then allow rice to cool completely.
In a large bowl, add cooked rice, Cool Whip, miniature marshmallows, fruit cocktail, and crushed pineapple. Use a spatula to gently mix the ingredients until thoroughly combined.
Chill prepared salad for 2-4 hours or until completely chilled.
Serve immediately with maraschino cherries as garnish.

Personal Notes:
Personal Notes:
My neighbor here in Rutherfordton asked me if I had ever had "glorified rice" and I was like..never heard of it....She's from Illinois and she said this is a traditional dish, so I looked it up.

“They glorified Mary…we glorified rice.” This quip is the title of Suzann Nelson and Janet Martin’s humorous book about the Lutheran and Catholic cultures of the Upper Midwest. Besides serving as a paean to the Scandinavian immigrant communities of the region, the title highlights one of Minnesota Lutheran cuisine’s most popular contributions: glorified rice.

A variation on rice pudding made by combining cooked rice, fruit (usually canned pineapple), mini marshmallows, and whipped cream or Cool Whip, glorified rice is part of the broader Midwestern tradition of whipped topping–based sweet salads and desserts. When Scandinavian immigrants came to the Upper Midwest in the mid-1800s, they brought their taste for gelatinous textures such as lutefisk and creamy rice pudding with them. They also encountered native food cultures and crops, including wild rice, a staple of the Ojibwe people, who were the original inhabitants of the region.

As a result of these diverse influences, some recipes for glorified rice call for wild rice, and some, in keeping with Scandinavians’ use of gelatinous ingredients, instruct cooks to add Jell-O to the rice mixture and shape it in a mold. Most contemporary recipes, however, use white rice and ditch the gelatin in favor of a fluffy, creamy whipped cream or Cool Whip pudding.

As with other Midwestern Cool Whip mixes, glorified rice occupies an enigmatic territory between dinner and dessert. According to cookbook author Amy Thielen, glorified rice’s customary church potluck placement is after the savory items (including savory Jell-O salad), but before the desserts and coffee, making it a quintessential second-trip-down-the-buffet-line food.

 

 

 

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