Gazzip said:
davedotco said:
Use white arborio rice, reasonably common in the uk, this is used to make rissoto.
The grains are smooth, round and uniform in size, giving a consistent 'pack' and density throughout and will damp resonances across a broad range of frequencies. Do not, under any circumstances, use long grain types such as basmati.
If you have Italian speakers such as Sonus Faber or Opera, use carnaroli rice if you can find it, a little more expensive, but worth it.
I’m not sure whether I used too much water when cooking it, but I can only get a couple of spoonfuls of the arborio variant in to my stands before the openings get bunged up. Is this normal, because basmati fluffs up nicely and is easier to spoon in?
Basmati stays fluffed up even when inside the stand, this leaves air gaps and a lack of consistency in density. The result is uneven damping so the stand will have multiple resonances, rather like applying a 'comb' filter to the bass, in extreme cases this can lead to one note bass.
The approved method is to use a cooks 'icing bag' with a suitable nozzle, a simple circular one (not a fancy shape) with a hole about the size of a pencil is about right, the rice should still be warm, to aid mobility.
Top Tip: Do not be tempted to use 'Black Ravioli' pads between the speakers and the stands,
the mixing of rice and pasta is not to be recomended.