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Rice Balls With Salmon Filling (Onigiri)

4.2

(6)

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Photo by Aubrie Pick

Before heading into work in Tokyo, I often stopped at a little stand where an elderly woman sold nothing but rice balls. Onigiri is a quintessential Japanese food: made by moms for breakfast, lunch boxes, and picnics. It is the ideal handheld food (the nori wrapper keeps the sticky rice from getting all over your hand).

Tip

Experiment with fillings. Try tempura shrimp, chicken salad, codfish roe, Japanese pickles, tunafish with mayo, or cooked and crumbled tsukune.

Recipe information

  • Yield

    Makes 4

Ingredients

1 teaspoon salt
1 cup warm cooked rice
4 teaspoons cooked flaked fresh salmon or flaked canned salmon
2 sheets yakinori, halved

Preparation

  1. Step 1

    In a shallow bowl, dissolve the salt in 1 cup water. Dip your hands into the salted water, then grab 1/4 cup of the rice. Using your hands, shape the rice into a small, fat triangle, then use your thumb to create an indentation in the center. Place a teaspoonful of the salmon in the hollow, dampen your hands lightly again, and pat the rice over the hollow to encase the salmon. Repeat to create 3 more rice balls.

    Step 2

    Dry your hands thoroughly. With the pointed end of the rice triangle facing the ceiling, wrap the nori around the bottom of each triangle, leaving the point showing between the open ends of the nori. Eat right away, or pack in your lunch box for later.

  2. Variations:

    Step 3

    Yaki Onigiri (Grilled Rice Balls):
    These rice balls have no filling or nori. Instead, once compactly formed, they are brushed with soy or miso and broiled until they are crispy and chewy on the outside and soft on the inside. As they are broiling (or grilling), evenly drizzle both sides of each triangle with 1 teaspoon soy sauce or brush with 1 teaspoon white miso. Broil, turning once, until both sides are very browned. Do not allow them to burn; especially watch the miso, which can burn quickly. These onigiri are delicious hot.

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From Let's Cook Japanese Food! by Amy Kaneko, copyright © 2017. Reprinted by permission of Weldon Owen. Buy the full book at Amazon.

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