Kateh (Absorption Method)

کته

The everyday Persian rice method — simpler than chelow but still with perfect tahdig.

Persian RiceBeginner30 min7 / 7
1

Why It Matters

Kateh (کته) is how most Iranians cook rice on busy weeknights. Instead of the elaborate parboil-and-steam method (chelow), you simply cook the rice in measured water that gets fully absorbed.

The result is slightly stickier, more substantial rice — and yes, you still get tahdig.

2

What You Need

  • Heavy-bottomed pot with tight lid
  • Rice (washed and optionally soaked)
  • Water
  • Salt
  • Oil or butter
  • Kitchen towel for lid
3

The Method

Step 1: Measure Your Ratio

The key to kateh is the water ratio:

For soaked rice: 1 cup rice : 1.25 cups water

For unsoaked rice: 1 cup rice : 1.5 cups water

Step 2: Combine Everything

Add to your pot:

  • Rice
  • Water
  • 1 teaspoon salt per cup of rice
  • 1 tablespoon oil per cup of rice

Stir once to distribute.

Step 3: Bring to Boil

Place over medium-high heat. Bring to a boil, stirring occasionally to prevent sticking.

Step 4: Cover and Reduce

Once boiling and most surface water is absorbed (you'll see small holes forming), reduce heat to lowest setting.

Wrap lid in a towel and cover tightly.

Step 5: Steam

Cook for 25-30 minutes on lowest heat.

Do not lift the lid.

Step 6: Rest and Serve

Remove from heat. Let rest covered for 5 minutes.

The rice will be tender throughout with a golden tahdig on the bottom.

4

Signs of Success

  • All water absorbed, no wet spots
  • Rice is tender and fluffy
  • Grains stick together slightly (this is normal for kateh)
  • Golden tahdig forms on bottom
  • Pleasant toasted aroma
5

Common Mistakes

MistakeResultFix
Wrong water ratioMushy or crunchyMeasure precisely
Stirring after coveringGummy riceOnly stir before covering
Heat too highBurnt bottom, raw topUse lowest setting
Lifting lidSteam escapesTrust the timing
No oil in waterSticking, no tahdigAdd oil from the start
6

Kateh vs Chelow

AspectKatehChelow
Time30 minutes1+ hour
StepsOne potBoil, drain, steam
TextureSlightly stickyFluffy, separate
EffortMinimalMore involved
TahdigYesYes
Best forWeeknightsSpecial occasions

Pro Tips

  1. Soaked rice is better — even 30 minutes helps
  2. Heavy pot matters — thin pots burn easily
  3. Gas stove tip — use a diffuser for even heat
  4. Make it fancy — add saffron water and butter at the boil stage
  5. Leftover kateh — makes excellent fried rice the next day