Skip to main content

Steamed Japanese Rice

5.0

(-1)

This image may contain Food Lunch Meal Plant Dessert Ice Cream Creme and Cream
Photo by Peden & Munk

An easy stovetop method that is quicker than a rice cooker and yields tender, distinct grains that cling gently to each other? Read on.

Recipe information

  • Yield

    4 servings

Ingredients

2 cups Japanese short-grain white or haiga rice

Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Place rice in a large saucepan, add water to cover, and swirl rice with your hand (water will become cloudy). Drain through a fine-mesh sieve and return rice to saucepan. Repeat process until water is clear when mixed with rice (3 or 4 times). Drain rice a final time and cover sieve with a kitchen towel; let rest 15 minutes (this will help the grains hydrate evenly).

    Step 2

    Return rice to same saucepan and add 2 cups water. Partially cover pot and bring to a boil. Stir once, cover, and reduce heat. Simmer until water is mostly absorbed and rice is very fragrant and tender, 10–12 minutes. Remove from heat and let rest, covered, 10 minutes. Fluff rice with a large spoon, re-cover pot, and let sit 5 minutes before serving.

Read More
Scallion-infused oil, or pa gireum in Korean, is a fragrant way to upgrade a pot of rice.
Savory from chile, ginger, and cumin, these adai are a filling breakfast to power you through the day.
This classic Japanese comfort food is a combination of chicken and egg (oyako means “parent and child”) simmered in sweet-savory broth and served over rice.
Store-bought dumplings, fresh tomatoes, butter, and soy sauce simmer away for dinner in a flash.
The simplest flatbread you can make.
This assertive dressing is the perfect complement to tender, delicate steamed vegetables.
Khao niaow ma muang, or steamed coconut sticky rice with ripe mango, is a classic in Thai cuisine—and you can make it at home.
This plant-based twist on the classic Chinese chicken dish swaps in crisped crumbled tempeh and fresh fresno chiles.