How to Make Rice Flour at Home - Swasthi's Recipes (2024)

Learn How to make Rice Flour at home with my easy step by step guide. Whether you eat gluten-free or not, you got to try homemade Rice Flour because it’s pure and adds great texture to your everyday foods. Use it in Snacks, bakes, steamed dishes, Rice Pudding, pancakes and many more. Once you try it, you will find yourself reaching out to it more often. You also have the option to use it for your beauty needs! Make your own pure organic face pack, face scrub and body scrub with this homemade rice flour.

How to Make Rice Flour at Home - Swasthi's Recipes (1)

Rice flour is the secret ingredient in those tempting crunchy Pakora & Murukku, Crispy cutlets & patties , gluten-free pancakes & cakes. All-purpose flour, gram flour (besan) and rice flour is what most home cooks and bakers turn to when they need an ingredient that works every time.

What is Rice Flour?

Rice flour is nothing but fine powder you get form grinding raw rice. White rice is the standard when it comes to rice flour while you do have milled brown rice and flour made from glutinous or sticky rice.

It can be milled at different levels – coarse, semi coarse, fine or super fine. Coarsely ground rice is usually considered rice powder, while the flour called for in most recipes refer to the fine and super fine varieties.

Rice flour is a staple in Asian cuisine, especially in South Indian, Chinese, Japanese and Korean cuisines. Of course, there are many starches that work. But you’ll find rice flour in a lot of recipes from binding and thickening to breading and baking.

For one; rice flour doesn’t add its flavor to the dish like gram flour or chickpea flour or any nut-based flours. Like all-purpose flour, rice flour blends in with the dish, and you never taste or notice it.

Secondly, If you are trying to avoid or reduce refined flours like all-purpose flour or cornstarch, rice flour is the way to go! A lot of recipes work well with this substitution.

Homemade vs store bought

Since rice flour is a staple part of the Asian kitchens, it was always easily available in India and other South-east Asian countries. Asian cuisines are now enjoyed at a global level in the past few decades. With home cooks wanting to try out recipes from different cultures, this flour is sold in major grocery stores in US and Europe.

Then why homemade?

I am not a big fan of the store bought flour option because the rice is never washed before milling. The second reason is the flour could be sprayed with harmful chemicals for better shelf life. We do not have an option to rinse the flour any time!

So nothing can beat homemade rice flour – Zero additives, pure & fresh! Moreover it is very easy to make.

Store bought flour is often available in large packs of a pound or more. A recipe may only require a small amount of this flour. Store-bought flour can prove to be an expensive and unwanted purchase, as you can grind the minimal amount fresh and right in your home kitchen.

You can use a mixer grinder, coffee grinder or high-speed blender to make a batch of this flour at home. If you use a lot of flours in cooking, then a home grain mill is a good option to have.

Uses

If you regularly cook or bake Asian savories and sweet dishes, you have recipes that call for rice flour in some capacity. Sometimes, only a few tablespoons are needed. Some recipes have this starchy flour as the main ingredient, and substitutions don’t really work well.

You can use this flour to thicken sauces, gravies and soups. You can use it as a binder for certain cooked or baked recipes. It acts as a good breading agent. It provides a nice color and crunch to baked and fried savories and desserts.

If you’ve ever eaten a Murukku, chakli, Modak, appam, Akki Rotti (rice flour roti) or certain dosa varieties like Wheat dosa, Rava dosa or Oats dosa, you know that rice flour is one of the main ingredients. Without this ingredient, that particular dish would never taste the same.

It is also used in smaller quantities to make popular Indian snacks and savory foods like cutlets, patties, pakoras, pancakes and vegetarian kebabs .

Fresh flour is what make the Chinese snow skin mooncakes or the Japanese mochi desserts so tasty. How can we forget those Indian and Chinese style dumplings, noodles & Phirni?.

What kind of rice should you use?

There are three common varieties of rice – white, brown and sweet/ sticky rice. You have the fragrant ones like basmati or jasmine and uncommon varieties like red or black.

Flour from white rice like sona masuri is used to make murukku/chaklis, dosas and appams. Other short grain white riceflour like ponni goes into pancakes, puddings, baked items, breading and desserts.

Basmati or jasmine rice can be used for all other recipes that need rice flour.

Flour from sticky rice works in specific dishes that benefit from the binding properties of this rice. Mochi, noodles, mooncakes and rice cakes need sticky rice flour. Swapping this with regular riceflour won’t work as the textures are different.

How to make Rice flour (Stepwise photos)

Prepare rice

1. I always feel it is important to rinse rice well before use, even if it is organic rice. However feel free to skip this step if you don’t care about the dust and pesky residue on the grains. Add 1 cup rice to a large bowl.

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2. Pour water. Rub the grains and rinse the rice well a few times. Do not let the grains soak up in water.

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3. Drain to a colander and shake off a few times to remove the excess water. Spread the rice and leave it for 5 mins in the colander.

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4. Transfer to a clean cotton cloth and pat dry.

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5. Here you have 2 options. The first option is to spread the rice on the cloth and leave it to air dry or fan dry. To quicken the process you may sun dry too. Rice grains should become crunchy.

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6. The second option is to dry roast the rice on a medium heat for 2 to 3 mins, stirring often. Then reduce the heat to low and roast until crunchy. Do not turn the flame high as we don’t want the grains to discolor and turn brown. This roasting step just takes about 6 to 7 mins, depending on the kind of pan used.

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Make flour

7. Cool the rice and add it to the grinder jar.

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8. Run the grinder until the rice grains are powdered fully. Depending on the recipe you want to use it for, grind to a super fine or fine or coarse flour.

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9. Place your sieve over a large wide bowl and transfer the flour to the sieve. If you want super fine flour, use a fine flour sieve.

If you don’t have a super fine flour sieve, tie a thin muslin cloth/ cheese cloth over the rim of a large bowl. Pour 1/4 cup flour each time over the cloth and pass it through the cloth. We follow this method to make baby cereal. This method works well even for brown rice flour.

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10. Grind the left over coarse grains again until all of them are used up to make fine flour. I didn’t have any coarse rice particles so didn’t have to grind again.

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Store rice flour in a air tight glass jar for 2 months at room temperature or in the fridge for an year or longer.

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Benefits of Rice Flour

You’ve seen that rice, and by extension, rice flour is gluten-free and can be combined with other flours to make variety of dishes that require wheat.

Rice like most grains comes with numerous nutrients. It is a source of protein & some amount of fiber. You’ll find decent amounts of selenium, niacin, copper, phosphorus, vitamin E and calcium too. Particularly the whole grain kind, can boost your immunity as it contains zinc, magnesium and other essential minerals.

It contains choline, a compound that can protect your liver from damage including cancer. Phytic acid extracted from rice is used in products that treat skin conditions like acne and pigmentation.

On the other hand, wheat flour has better amounts of folate and antioxidants.

Faqs

Is ground rice same as rice flour?

No! Ground rice is a vague term to say rice that has been ground. It may be ground to broken rice, rice semolina, coarse rice powder or flour. But rice flour means coarse or fine flour.

Can I make rice flour without soaking rice?

Yes, just rinse the rice, drain, pat dry completely with a cloth. Spread and dry completely until the grains become crunchy. Then powder this to flour in a blender or coffee grinder.

How do I make rice flour manually?

Rice flour can be made manually from rice grains using a stone mill grinder.

What rice is used for rice flour?

You can use any kind of rice to make flour depending on what you want to use it for. Use sona masuri rice for murukku, chakli, use basmati or jasmine rice for snacks like pakora, cutlets, pancakes etc.

Can you make rice flour with basmati rice?

Yes you can use any kind of basmati rice. Aged, new, brown or white basmati rice, all work well.

Is rice flour better than cornstarch?

Cornstarch (corn flour) is primarily used as a thickener, binder and for breading items. Riceflour works well too, but it is much more versatile. This flour functions much like whole wheat or all purpose (refined flour) in many dishes. Both of these flours are healthier options.

Cornstarch has a distinctive starchy flavor to it if you haven’t cooked the dish for long enough. This is not the case with white riceflour, this flour is also considered to be healthier than cornstarch, particularly brown rice variant.

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Recipe Card

How to Make Rice Flour at Home - Swasthi's Recipes (19)

How to make Rice Flour at Home

5 from 33 votes

Making rice flour at home is super easy! You can use it in so many recipes like pakoras, cutlets, pancakes, patties, soups and many more.

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For best results follow the step-by-step photos above the recipe card

Prep Time5 minutes minutes

Cook Time8 minutes minutes

15 minutes minutes

Total Time28 minutes minutes

Servings1 cup

AuthorSwasthi

Diet : Gluten Free, Vegan

Ingredients (US cup = 240ml )

  • 1 cup rice (masuri, ponni, basmati, jasmine or any)
  • water

Instructions

Prepare Rice

  • Add rice to a bowl and pour water. Rub the rice well and discard the water.

  • Repeat the rinse a few time, 3 times. Drain to a colander. Shake off gently to remove the excess water and leave it in the colander for 5 mins.

  • Transfer to a absorbent cloth and pat dry.

  • Spread the rice and let it air dry on the cloth until crunchy. Or alternately add it to a pan and roast the rice on a medium heat for 2 to 3 mins. Later reduce the heat and roast until crunchy. It takes about 6 to 7 mins.

How To Make Rice Flour

  • Cool and add to a grinder jar. Grind in intervals of 1 minute until the rice grains are ground to a fine powder. If you want coarse flour you can instead pulse the rice in the grinder.

  • Place a fine flour sieve over a large mixing bowl and transfer the flour to the sieve.

  • Sieve the flour and add the coarse grains if any to the grinder. Grind again.

  • If your grinder is not powerful enough, grind the sieved flour again. This gives you very very fine flour.

  • Store rice flour in a air tight dry glass jar at room temperature for 2 months. You can refrigerate for an year or more.

Notes

  1. You can basically use any kind of rice to make flour. But each kind works differently in recipes so it is good to use the same kind called for in your recipe.
  2. Nutritional values are for 1 cup flour.

Alternative quantities provided in the recipe card are for 1x only, original recipe.

For best results follow my detailed step-by-step photo instructions and tips above the recipe card.

NUTRITION INFO (estimation only)

Nutrition Facts

How to make Rice Flour at Home

Amount Per Serving

Calories 685Calories from Fat 9

% Daily Value*

Fat 1g2%

Saturated Fat 1g6%

Polyunsaturated Fat 1g

Monounsaturated Fat 1g

Sodium 9mg0%

Potassium 216mg6%

Carbohydrates 150g50%

Fiber 2g8%

Sugar 1g1%

Protein 13g26%

Calcium 53mg5%

Iron 2mg11%

* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2000 calorie diet.

Tried this recipe?Mention @SwasthisRecipes or tag #swasthisrecipes!

© Swasthi’s Recipes

How to Make Rice Flour at Home - Swasthi's Recipes (20)

About Swasthi

I’m Swasthi Shreekanth, the recipe developer, food photographer & food writer behind Swasthi’s Recipes. My aim is to help you cook great Indian food with my time-tested recipes. After 2 decades of experience in practical Indian cooking I started this blog to help people cook better & more often at home. Whether you are a novice or an experienced cook I am sure Swasthi’s Recipes will assist you to enhance your cooking skills. More about me

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How to Make Rice Flour at Home - Swasthi's Recipes (2024)

FAQs

How much rice flour from 1 cup of rice? ›

You'll need uncooked rice (either white or brown), a blender, a coffee grinder or food processor. A good rule of thumb to follow is that 1 cup of rice yields about 1 12 cups of rice flour.

What kind of rice is used for rice flour? ›

Rice flour is made from milled (finely ground) rice. It can be made from either brown rice or white rice. The flavor of rice flour is neutral and is considered hypoallergenic and easily digestible.

Do you have to wash rice before making rice flour? ›

Yes, just rinse the rice, drain, pat dry completely with a cloth. Spread and dry completely until the grains become crunchy. Then powder this to flour in a blender or coffee grinder.

Is it cheaper to make your own rice flour? ›

Over time, if you grind all of your own rice flour, you will save money, no doubt.

Is rice flour just powdered rice? ›

Rice flour is simply ground rice. Nothing else. Differences between rice flours depend on what kind of rice is featured: Regular rice flour can be ground from long-, medium-, or short-grain rice (what's enjoyed daily in grain bowls and on rice plates).

Is rice flour healthy? ›

Because it is rich in selenium and magnesium, rice flour has a natural antioxidant action that prevents the oxidation of fat cells. It can play a role in managing LDL cholesterol levels, and can therefore help to prevent cardiovascular diseases, such as atherosclerosis, heart attack and stroke.

Does rice flour make things crispy? ›

Rice flour and cornstarch work particularly well because they fry up crispier than wheat flour. They also absorb less moisture and fat during the frying process, making the products less greasy. This is why rice flour is often used when making tempura because it produces a very thin and crispy, dry crust.

Can rice flour replace all-purpose flour? ›

Rice Flour

All types of rice flour can be used as a substitute for all-purpose flour, but there are various types of rice flour that yield slightly different results. Brown rice flour is the rice equivalent of whole-wheat flour. It has a full flavor and a bit of a gritty texture.

How to get Korean glass skin naturally at home with rice flour? ›

🥣Combine 1-2 tbsp rice flour, 1 tbsp honey and 2-3 tbsp. milk. 👼Use the thin paste to massage your face gently. 💦After applying the paste for 10 to 20 minutes, wash it off with cold water.

Can I apply rice flour on my face? ›

A. You can use rice powder face packs after you have cleansed your face. Use it once or twice a week by mixing it with ingredients like curd, rose water, honey, and turmeric. Rice flour face packs have the power to remove dark spots and ensure an even-toned complexion.

Does rice flour go bad? ›

Rice flour is a great gluten-free flour with a long shelf life, but it can still go bad. Properly stored in a cool, dry place, unopened rice flour can last up to 2 years, while opened rice flour may last around 6 to 12 months or longer if kept in the fridge or freezer.

Does rice flour need baking powder? ›

Tips for Cooking and Baking with Rice Flour

Remember that rice flour does not rise as well as gluten-containing flours, so you may need to add extra leavening agents or use a smaller pan size.

Why do you soak rice flour? ›

Soaking at room temperature for a short period of time greatly increased the yield of wet-milled rice flour; the yield increased from 47% with no soaking time (i.e., 0 min) to 87% after 15 min of soaking. From 30 min onwards, the yield basically stabilized at values of 90% and greater.

How do you make rice flour without a mill? ›

To make rice flour, start by putting 1-2 cups of any kind of rice in a blender. You can use more rice than that, but only blend 1-2 cups at a time so your blender doesn't clog. Next, cover the blender and grind the rice until it has a fine, powdery consistency.

Is ground rice the same as rice flour? ›

Ground rice and rice flour are unfortunately not interchangeable. Although they are both made from crushed rice, rice flour is much finer than ground rice and they cook differently, so if ground rice is used in baking it will have a slightly gritty texture.

How do you convert all-purpose flour to rice flour? ›

Also, because rice flour absorbs more moisture, according to www.foodsubs.com, more liquid may need to be added to the recipe. If you don't add more liquid, the site recommends substituting only 7/8 cup (14 tablespoons) of rice flour for each cup of all-purpose flour.

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