RecipeTin Eats https://www.recipetineats.com/ Fast Prep, Big Flavours Wed, 05 Jul 2023 11:43:34 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.2.2 https://www.recipetineats.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/12/cropped-favicon@2x.png?w=32 RecipeTin Eats https://www.recipetineats.com/ 32 32 171556125 Risoni/Orzo Salad with Crispy Salami Bits https://www.recipetineats.com/italian-orzo-salad-risoni/ https://www.recipetineats.com/italian-orzo-salad-risoni/#comments Wed, 05 Jul 2023 06:00:00 +0000 https://www.recipetineats.com/?p=97511 Italian risoni/ orzo salad with crispy salami bitsRisoni /orzo salad, filled with an unapologetically generous amount of your new favourite garnish – crispy salami bits! There’s a good stack of bright fresh vegetables in here too, all tossed up in a tasty Italian Dressing. A new big, bold, statement pasta salad to fall in love with! The crispy salami bits! Meet the... Get the Recipe

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Risoni /orzo salad, filled with an unapologetically generous amount of your new favourite garnish – crispy salami bits! There’s a good stack of bright fresh vegetables in here too, all tossed up in a tasty Italian Dressing. A new big, bold, statement pasta salad to fall in love with!

Pile of Italian risoni/ orzo salad with crispy salami bits

The crispy salami bits!

Meet the star player in today’s line up – crispy salami. Literally just chopped up salami, fried in a pan until crisp. Think, bacon. With even more flavour!

Wait – what do you mean you’ve never fried up salami before??!!

OK, truthfully, I hadn’t either until I started down this “I want to make an interesting pasta salad!” warpath. A familiar state I find myself in pursuit of this (delicious!) life I have chosen sharing recipes with the world. 🙂

I had a vision of a pasta salad version of my Mega Italian Salad. I wanted big, I wanted statement, and I wanted something different to the usual “just add an Italian dressing and then you can call it an Italian pasta salad”.

Multiple iterations later – “mm, I mean, it’s fine but it’s just pretty ordinary, ya know?” – I arrived at today’s version. The crispy salami bits was the clincher!

Big bowl of Italian risoni/ orzo salad with crispy salami bits

Just briefly – orzo vs risoni

The little rice shaped pasta bits of pasta are a firm favourite. My pantry is never without multiple boxes! Called risoni here in Australia and orzo in most of the rest of the world (UK, US, Canada). But risoni is actually the correct name used in Italy because orzo means barley in Italian. And risoni is not made from barley, it’s made from flour like normal pasta!

So there you have it. Here in Australia, it’s labelled risoni in the mainstream grocery stores but in speciality grocers and Italian stores, I’ve also seen it labelled as orzo.

Risoni / orzo cooked
Italian risoni/ orzo salad with crispy salami bits ingredients

What you need for risoni / orzo salad

This is a big orzo / risoni salad filled with a medley of fresh vegetables, a handful of cheese, then tossed with an Italian dressing and the crispy salami bits.

1. Risoni / orzo

Find risoni /orzo in the pasta aisle, usually sold in small boxes. It costs around the same as spaghetti. Suggestions for alternatives below.

Italian risoni / orzo salad

Substitute with cooked rice of choice (use 1 1/2 cups uncooked rice) – white, brown, basmati, jasmine – or quinoa (directions here). Other little pasta will work too – like ditalini, the really small macaroni or the novelty shapes for kids (dinosaurs! alphabet!).

2. The add-ins

The add-ins for this recipe are inspired by everybody’s favourite Mega Italian Salad. But there’s lots of alternatives – go wild with salad add-ins of your choice! Even the crispy salami bits, as much as I harp on and on about them, can be substituted with bacon, ham, prosciutto, or anything else that’s crispy/salty. Or nuts!

Ingredients in Italian risoni / orzo salad
  • Salami – I use the deli pre-sliced rounds because I’m lazy and it means less chopping for me because the job is half done. Else, slice your own salami stick!

    Substitutes – As noted above, anything fryable that goes crispy will work great as a substitute. And if you prefer no meat, add a handful of roughly chopped pistachios, pine nuts, or sunflower or pepitas.

  • Tomato – I like using cherry tomatoes because they hold up better if keeping this for a few days. However, you can use 3 large tomatoes instead. Scoop out watery middle then dice the flesh.

  • Rocket/arugula – My leafy greens of choice for ease of use (grab handfuls and rip into smaller pieces) and also because it holds up best in leftovers. But other leafy greens will work fine, chop into small(ish) pieces.

  • Capsicum/bell peppers – For crunch! Cucumbers would make a great sub. Oh, and you don’t HAVE to use green capsicum! 🙂 Yellow or red will be fine too….

  • Red onion – Substitute with something similar for oniony freshness. 1 large green onion stem finely chopped, or 1 eschallot (US: shallot ie the baby onions), or 1/2 a white onion.

  • Olives – I like using sliced olives here for better dispersion, though I was tempted to use whole ones so you can big meaty bites of olives. You choose!

    Substitute with other briny things. I’m thinking: pickles, artichokes, fire roasted capsicum, other pickled veg. Just want something with tang to balance out everything else going on in this salad!

  • Cheese – What, you’ve never added a handful of shredded cheese into “rubble” type salads before? It’s so good! Instant flavour uplift. I used colby – a great all-rounder that works for melting in cheesy sauces (Mac & Cheese), on things (pasta bakes), on tacos, in burritos, in salads!

    Substitute with cheddar, monetary jack, pepper jack, gruyere, swiss etc. Not mozzarella (not enough flavour) and not parmesan (too much flavour!).

3. Italian dressing

This is the same dressing from my Mega Italian Salad, minus the parmesan cheese – because we’re using a big handful of shredded cheese instead.

Ingredients in Italian risoni / orzo salad
  • Extra virgin olive oil – The better the quality, the better your salad!

  • Red wine vinegar – Substitute with white wine vinegar or apple cider vinegar.

  • Dried basil and oregano – Substitute with an Italian herb mix or dried parsley.

  • Chilli flakes – Optional, for the tiniest hint of warmth.

  • Sugar – Just 1/2 teaspoon. Cuts through the vinegar so you can get away with using less oil.

  • Garlic – Fresh please! Jarred stuff barely resembles the real deal, and is also weirdly sour. So wrong!

Pouring dressing over Italian risoni/ orzo salad with crispy salami bits

How to make risoni/orzo salad

How to make Italian risoni/ orzo salad
  1. Dressing – Shake the dressing ingredients in a jar. Always my preferred method to make dressings because it really combines the ingredients well. Plus, useful storage!

  2. Risoni / orzo – Cook the pasta in a large pot of salted water per packet directions. Drain, rinse then toss in a little oil (to keep it from clumping) then cool.

How to make Italian risoni/ orzo salad
  1. Crispy salami – Chop the salami into small pieces. Then cook it in a non-stick pan like you do bacon until it’s crispy. No oil needed, it will fry up in its own fat!

  2. Drain on paper towels. It will get crispier as it cools. To preserve crispiness, keep it separate until just before serving.

How to make Italian risoni/ orzo salad
  1. Toss 1 – Toss all the salad ingredients together first without the dressing.

  2. Dress then toss again – Then pour the dressing over and toss again. Why I do this: because otherwise if you pour straight onto certain ingredients, like leafy greens, they tend to hog more than their fair share of the dressing. I’m looking at YOU, rocket!

    Tumble everything into a large serving bowl. Sprinkle with reserved salami then eat!

Italian risoni/ orzo salad with crispy salami bits in bowls ready to be eaten

Practical matters of Italian risoni/orzo salad

Some final words on this pasta salad!

  • Making ahead – If I’m making ahead intentionally (eg taking to a gathering), I’ll keep the components separate so it’s fresh and perky for serving. Especially the crispy salami! It does soften once it’s mixed through so keep it separate to preserve crispiness.

  • Shelf life once dressed – Still very good after 2 hours, good after 3 days. If I know I’m keeping it, I usually dial up the dressing slightly, and hold a little back so I can freshen it up with a little extra dressing.

  • Gluten free – As suggested above in the ingredients chatter section, switch the pasta for rice to make this gluten free. It’s literally perfect – similar size and shape.

  • Serve at room temp – If you made ahead or have leftovers, bring to room temp before eating. You’ll taste everything better than when fridge cold.

  • Eat with a spoon – Perhaps a strange point to finish on but this is a characteristic of this pasta salad that really appeals to me!! For some reason, I find it really satisfying that I can eat this pasta salad with a spoon. Convenience (eg multi-tasking: eat without taking your eyes off the TV, or in my case, moving around the kitchen while cooking something else) and the ability to scoop up and eat big mouthfuls of it.

Are you judging me? 😂

Love to know what you think if you try this recipe. Especially, of course, the crispy salami bits!! – Nagi x


Watch how to make it

Pile of Italian risoni/ orzo salad with crispy salami bits
Print

Italian Orzo Salad (Risoni) with Crispy Salami Bits

Recipe video above. The crispy salami bits are the hero here. The better bacon. Why aren't we putting crispy salami in everything??!
Tossed through a risoni/orzo salad inspired by my favourite Mega Italian Salad with lots of fresh vegetables and a good handful of cheese to keep things tasty. Excellent packed lunch, keeps well for days, love that you can eat it with a spoon. Serves 4 – 5 as a meal. Make this today, find another pasta salad for next week here!
Course cold pasta salad, Main
Cuisine Western
Keyword chicken pasta salad, orzo salad, risoni salad
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 15 minutes
Cooling time 30 minutes
Servings 5
Calories 612cal
Author Nagi

Ingredients

  • 250g / 8oz risoni / orzo pasta – 1 1/4 cups (Note 1)
  • 2 tsp salt , for cooking pasta
  • 2 tsp extra virgin olive oil

Salad add-ins (Note 2):

  • 250g/ 8 oz salami slices , chopped into 1.25 cm / 1/2" squares (Note 2)
  • 1 cup sliced kalamata olives (1 x 220g/7oz jar) – or other olives or briny things (Note 4)
  • 2 tightly packed cups baby rocket / arugula , torn by hand
  • 400g/ 14oz cherry tomatoes , quartered (2 1/2 cups)
  • 1 large green capsicum , cut into 1.25cm / 1/2″ squares
  • 1/2 red onion , finely diced
  • 1 1/2 cups (tightly packed) colby cheese , shredded into short strands (Note 5)

Italian dressing:

  • 1/3 cup extra virgin olive oil
  • 3 tbsp red wine vinegar (or white wine vinegar, sub apple cider vinegar)
  • 1 garlic clove , crushed using garlic press or grated using microplane
  • 1 tsp dried basil
  • 1/4 tsp red chilli flakes (optional)
  • 1 tsp dried oregano
  • 1/2 tsp sugar
  • 1 tsp cooking/kosher salt

Instructions

  • Cook pasta – Bring a large pot of water to the boil. Add salt and risoni/orzo, then cook per packet directions (usually ~10 minutes). Drain in colander, rinse, shake off excess water well. Transfer to large bowl. Toss with the olive oil then let cool.
  • Dressing – Shake in a jar.
  • Crispy salami – Put salami in cold large non-stick pan, with no oil. Turn onto medium high – as the pan heats up, the fat will melt so it cooks in its own fat. Cook for 3 – 5 minutes, stirring regularly, until light golden. Drain on paper towels. It will crisp as it cools.
  • Toss – Set aside 1/3 of the salami for topping. Put all remaining salad ingredients in with the risoni. Toss. Pour over dressing. Toss, toss, toss!
  • Serve! Tumble into serving bowl. Sprinkle with remaining salami. Divide between bowls. Eat with spoon! Best eaten at room temp, not fridge cold (can taste flavours better).

Notes

1. Orzo/risoni – Little rice shaped pasta! Substitute with cooked rice of choice (use 1 1/2 cups uncooked rice) – white, brown, basmati, jasmine – or quinoa (directions here). Other little pasta will work too.
2. Salami – I use the deli pre-sliced rounds because I’m lazy and it means less chopping for me because the job is half done. Else, slice your own salami stick!
Substitutes – Anything fryable that goes crispy, like bacon, ham bits, prosciutto. Prefer no meat? Add a handful of roughly chopped pistachios, pine nuts, or sunflower or pepitas.
3. Vegetable notes:
– Tomato: sub with 3 large tomatoes, scoop out watery middle then dice the flesh
– Rocket/arugula: holds up best it keeping leftovers, I find. But other leafy greens will work fine, chop into small(ish) pieces.
– Capsicum/bell peppers: cucumber could be substituted. Oh, and you don’t HAVE to use green 🙂 Yellow or red will be fine too!
– Red onion: Sub 1 large green onion stem finely chopped. Or 1 escahllot (US: shallot ie the baby onions), or 1/2 white onion.
4. Olives – Sub with other briny things. I’m thinking: pickles, artichokes, fire roasted capsicum, other pickled veg. Just want something with tang to balance out everything else going on in this salad!
5. Cheese – Sub with cheddar, monetary jack, pepper jack, gruyere, swiss etc. Not mozzarella (not enough flavour) and not parmesan (too much flavour!). Try to grate short rather than long strands – you get more pieces to litter throughout!
6. Leftovers keeps well for 2 to 3 days. If intentionally making ahead, keep all components separate then toss and dress just before serving. In particular, the salami softens once tossed through so preserve crispiness by keeping it separate!!
Nutrition per serving assuming 5 servings.

Nutrition

Calories: 612cal | Carbohydrates: 46g | Protein: 20g | Fat: 39g | Saturated Fat: 9g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 4g | Monounsaturated Fat: 23g | Cholesterol: 42mg | Sodium: 2052mg | Potassium: 589mg | Fiber: 4g | Sugar: 5g | Vitamin A: 836IU | Vitamin C: 39mg | Calcium: 86mg | Iron: 3mg

More cold pasta salad recipes


Life of Dozer

Somebody get Prince Edward Dozer Maehashi I some sunnies, stat! The morning sun is blinding him!

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Beef chow mein – great mince/ground beef recipe! https://www.recipetineats.com/beef-chow-mein-noodles/ https://www.recipetineats.com/beef-chow-mein-noodles/#comments Mon, 03 Jul 2023 06:00:00 +0000 https://www.recipetineats.com/?p=97393 Bowl of Beef chow mein ready to be eatenHere’s a great beef mince recipe for you that’s quick to make, economical and full of hidden vegetables so it’s a complete meal – Beef Chow Mein! It’s the beef version of everybody’s favourite Chicken Chow Mein, made with the convenience of ground beef. Beef chow mein Here’s something new to try with that packet of... Get the Recipe

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Here’s a great beef mince recipe for you that’s quick to make, economical and full of hidden vegetables so it’s a complete meal – Beef Chow Mein! It’s the beef version of everybody’s favourite Chicken Chow Mein, made with the convenience of ground beef.

Bowl of Beef chow mein ready to be eaten

Beef chow mein

Here’s something new to try with that packet of beef mince you throw into your shopping cart every week! The beef is stir fried with chow mein sauce until it’s beautifully caramelised then tossed in a tangle of noodles and vegetables.

A neat trick in today’s recipe is to scramble up an egg with the beef. It makes the beef bits stick to the noodles better, with the added bonus of upping the protein.

Another bonus: chow mein actually has a vast amount of noodle-shaped vegetables hidden in the noodles. A carrot, 2 heaped cups of cabbage and a heaped cup of bean sprouts. That’s a good veg serving for a meal!

Serving Beef chow mein

What you need

Here’s what you need to make this:

Noodles & add-ins

Ingredients in Beef chow mein
  • Noodles – Chow mein noodles are sort of dry and crinkly, rather than oily and straight like hokkien noodles, lo mein noodles. But this dish can really be made with any noodles – or even spaghetti (yes really, who’s going to know once tossed in chow mein sauce??). Use the same weight.

  • Garlic – Rarely do Asian stir fries happen without garlic, and this one is no exception!

  • Beef mince – That’s ground beef to Americans. Any fat % is fine here though lean beef won’t caramelise quite as well.

    Other proteins – Any other mince will work just fine here. Chicken, pork, turkey, even lamb! Though bear in mind the sauce is quite intense flavoured to suit the beefy flavour of beef, so you won’t taste the flavour of white meats through the sauce.

  • Egg – We use this to scramble into the beef. Neat trick to make the beef stick to the noodles better with the added bonus of a free protein boost!

  • Green cabbage – Or Chinese cabbage. Finely sliced so it disappears into the tangle of noodles.

  • Bean sprouts – Excellent grab-and-throw-in vegetable option! STORAGE TIP: Keep bean sprouts in water in an airtight container. Change the water every couple of days. This will increase the shelf life of beansprouts 3x.

  • Carrot – Cut into thin batons. More noodle shaped vegetables so it all jumbles up together!

  • Green onion – We use 3 whole stems here. They are the onion in this dish, as well as some fresh green colour.

Chow Mein Sauce

The combination of sauces used in Chow Mein is common in Chinese dishes.

Ingredients in Beef chow mein
  • Soy sauces – We’re using both light and dark soy sauce in this recipe. What’s the difference? Dark soy stains the noodles a lovely warm mahogany colour as well as adding soy flavour. Light soy sauce provides the salt without overwhelming with soy flavour, and does not stain the rice. 

    Substitutions -You can use only light soy sauce or just an all-purpose soy sauce (ie bottle just labelled “soy sauce” without “light” or “dark” in front of it) instead of dark soy sauce. But you cannot use only dark soy sauce as the flavour is too strong! More on different types of soy sauces here.

  • Oyster sauce – A load of flavour, all in one sauce! It’s sweet and savoury and adds a neat flavour shortcut in dishes. Makes a regular appearance in Asian dishes, from Pad See Ew to Asian Glazed Salmon to Honey Pepper Beef to Supreme Soy Noodles. And Steamed Asian Greens with Oyster Sauce!

    Vegetarian oyster sauce is available these days, at Asian stores and some large grocery stores (Australia – there’s Ayam vegetarian oyster sauce at Woolies). Otherwise, hoisin is a good alternative. Slightly different flavour profile (hint of Chinese five spice) but similar savoury / sweetness.

  • Chinese cooking wine (Shaoxing wine) is an essential ingredient for making truly “restaurant tasting” Chinese dishes. Without it, the dish will be lacking something. Substitute with Mirin, cooking sake or dry sherry. 

    Non alcoholic sub – sub both the cooking wine and water with low sodium chicken broth/stock.

  • Cornflour / cornstarch (left out of photo – oops!) – For thickening the sauce so it clings to the noodles. It also makes the sauce lovely and glossy.

  • White pepper and sugar – For seasoning.


How to make Beef Chow Mein

Be sure to cook the beef well once you add the sauce to get it really nicely caramelised, for a free flavour boost!

1. Sauce & thickener

How to make Beef Chow Mein
  1. Sauce – Mix the soy sauces, oyster sauce, Chinese cooking wine, sugar and pepper in a small bowl. We’re going to use some to flavour the beef, then we will mix the rest with the sauce thickener (next step) to make the noodle sauce.

  2. Sauce thickener (cornflour slurry) – Mix the cornflour / cornstarch and water in a separate small bowl. This is what thickens the sauce so it coats the noodles, as well as making it shiny and glossy.

2. Making the stir fried noodles

How to make Beef Chow Mein
  1. Prepare the noodles per the packet directions then drain. I usually get the water boiling while I’m prepping the vegetables then cook the noodles when I start cooking. The chow mein noodles I get just call for soaking in hot water for 3 minutes. Some brands need to be boiled.

  2. Caramelise beef – Using a large non-stick pan, cook the garlic first to flavour the oil. Then cook the beef, breaking it up as you go, until you can no longer see raw beef.

    Then add the white part of the green onions and 1 1/2 tablespoons of the Sauce. We add the white part of the green onions first as it takes longer than the green part. Cook for another 2 minutes to get the beef nicely caramelised.

How to make Beef Chow Mein
  1. Finish sauce – Meanwhile, mix the cornflour slurry into the remaining sauce.

  2. Scramble egg – Add the egg into the pan then mix it through the beef, it will sort of scramble into the mixture. This is what makes beef stick to the noodles better!

  3. Keep cooking! – When the egg is mostly cooked, add the carrot and cabbage. Cook for 1 minute until cabbage starts to wilt.

  4. Sauce & noodles – Give the sauce a quick mix. Add the bean sprouts, noodles and sauce into the pan. Toss well for 1 minute or until sauce is dispersed through the noodles. Add green part of green onions. Toss for another 1 minute, then serve!

Freshly cooked Beef chow mein

So there you go! Stir fried noodles for dinner, relatively low effort and quick to make. Great way to get a noodle fix, very economical, and highly versatile – switch out the vegetables and proteins with what you’ve got or what you love.

Enjoy! – Nagi x


Watch how to make it

Bowl of Beef chow mein ready to be eaten
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Beef Chow Mein – great beef mince noodle recipe!

Recipe video above. The beef mince version of everybody's favourite Chicken Chow Mein – great way to cook up ground beef with noodles. Economical and no meat chopping required, with plenty of hidden vegetables so it's a complete dinner!
Scrambling up an egg with the beef is a neat trick to make the beef cling to the noodles better.
Course Mains
Cuisine Asian, Chinese
Keyword beef mince recipe, beef noodles, Chow Mein, ground beef stir fry
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 10 minutes
Servings 2
Calories 664cal
Author Nagi

Ingredients

Chow Mein:

  • 200g/ 7 oz chow mein noodles , or other thin yellow egg noodles or 3 ramen cakes (Note 1)
  • 1 1/2 tbsp canola oil
  • 2 garlic cloves , finely minced
  • 200g/ 7 oz beef mince / ground beef (any fat %)
  • 3 green onion stems , cut into 5cm/2″ lengths, white and green parts separated
  • 1 egg
  • 2 cups green cabbage , finely sliced (or Chinese cabbage)
  • 1 carrot , peeled, cut into thin batons
  • 1 heaped cups bean sprouts (~ 75g / 2 1/2 oz) (Note 5 – storage tip)

Chow Mein Sauce:

  • 1 1/2 tbsp light soy sauce or all-purpose soy sauce (Note 2)
  • 1 1/2 tsp dark soy sauce (Note 2)
  • 1 1/2 tbsp oyster sauce (Note 3)
  • 1 1/2 tbsp Chinese cooking wine (Shaoxing) (Note 4)
  • 1 1/2 tsp white sugar
  • Pinch white pepper

Sauce thickener:

  • 1 1/2 tsp cornflour / cornstarch
  • 3 tbsp water

Instructions

  • Sauce – Mix ingredients in a small bowl then set aside. Some is used to flavour the beef, then the rest for the noodles.
  • Sauce thickener (cornflour slurry) – Mix the cornflour / cornstarch and water in a separate small bowl.
  • Prepare noodles per packet directions then drain.
  • Cook beef – Heat the oil in a large non-stick pan over high heat. Cook garlic for 10 seconds, then add the beef and cook until you can no longer see pink. Add 1 1/2 tablespoons of the Sauce and the white part of the green onions. Cook for another 2 minutes to get the beef nicely caramelised.
  • Finish sauce – Mix the cornflour slurry into the remaining sauce.
  • Egg – Add the egg into the pan then mix it through the beef, it will sort of scramble. Egg makes the beef stick to the noodles better!
  • Cabbage & carrot – When the egg is mostly cooked, add the carrot and cabbage. Cook for 1 minute until cabbage starts to wilt.
  • Sauce & noodles – Give the sauce a quick mix. Add the bean sprouts, noodles and sauce into the pan. Toss well for 1 minute or until sauce is dispersed through the noodles. Add green part of green onions. Toss for another 1 minute.
  • Serve – Divide between bowls and serve!

Notes

1. Noodles – Chow mein noodles are sort of dry and crinkly, rather than oily and straight like hokkien noodles, lo mein noodles. But this dish can really be made with any noodles – or even spaghetti (yes really, who’s going to know once tossed in chow mein sauce??). Use the same weight.
2. Soy sauce – Light soy sauce and all-purpose soy sauce add salt but doesn’t add much soy flavour or colour. The dark soy sauce stains the noodles a brown colour and adds soy flavour. It’s intense so you don’t need much!
3. Oyster sauce – Sweet and savoury, adds depth of flavour to an otherwise simple sauce. Sub with vegetarian oyster sauce (available in some large grocery stores and Asian stores these days) or Hoisin (different flavour with hint of five spice but similar savouriness and sauce thickness).
4. Chinese cooking wine (“Shaoxing wine”) is an essential ingredient for making truly “restaurant standard” Asian noodles. Substitute with Mirin, cooking sake or dry sherry.
Non alcoholic sub – sub both the cooking wine AND water with low sodium chicken broth/stock.
5. Keep beansprouts submerged in water in an airtight container in the fridge. Change the water every couple of days. This will extend the shelf life 3x. Also, here in Australia, bean sprouts at Asian stores are much better quality than ordinary grocery stores!
6. Leftovers will keep for 3 to 4 days in the fridge. Will freeze fine but not ideal – noodles get a little soft.
Nutrition per serving. Serves 2 very generously – more like 2 1/2 servings. 🙂

Nutrition

Calories: 664cal | Carbohydrates: 71g | Protein: 32g | Fat: 30g | Saturated Fat: 8g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 4g | Monounsaturated Fat: 14g | Trans Fat: 1g | Cholesterol: 149mg | Sodium: 1681mg | Potassium: 732mg | Fiber: 6g | Sugar: 11g | Vitamin A: 5473IU | Vitamin C: 39mg | Calcium: 100mg | Iron: 6mg

My noodle life


Life of Dozer

Visited our old stomping ground on the weekend – Bayview dog beach! Plenty of Dozer smiles that morning. 🥰

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Spicy Tuna Crispy Rice (Nobu) https://www.recipetineats.com/spicy-tuna-crispy-rice-nobu/ https://www.recipetineats.com/spicy-tuna-crispy-rice-nobu/#comments Fri, 30 Jun 2023 06:00:00 +0000 https://www.recipetineats.com/?p=97152 Spicy tuna crispy rice ready to be eatenThis Spicy Tuna Crispy Rice recipe is a shameless copycat of a signature appetiser at the trendy Nobu restaurant. Bite size crispy rice is served with tuna in a creamy spicy dressing. I love it. It’s expensive. So I copied it. And added a canned tuna option too. 🙂 Nobu copycat: Spicy Tuna Crispy Rice... Get the Recipe

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This Spicy Tuna Crispy Rice recipe is a shameless copycat of a signature appetiser at the trendy Nobu restaurant. Bite size crispy rice is served with tuna in a creamy spicy dressing. I love it. It’s expensive. So I copied it. And added a canned tuna option too. 🙂

Spicy tuna crispy rice ready to be eaten
Or toppings as finger food!

Nobu copycat: Spicy Tuna Crispy Rice

There’s no feel-good story behind today’s recipe. It’s just a blatant fact that I really love the Spicy Tuna Crispy Rice at Nobu* which is a signature starter of this globally renowned restaurant. But you pay through the nose for it – $30 for a very small serving. Here it is at Melbourne Nobu – top quality phone snaps! 😂

* In case you’re not familiar with Nobu, it’s a trendy modern Japanese restaurant founded by world-famous chef Nobuyuki Matsuhisa that is now global with a presence in major cities like New York, Tokyo, London, Dubai, Sydney. Won’t lie – I’ve had hits and misses in various cities. But overall, it’s very reliable. Firm favourite with celebrities.

Price aside, I don’t want to go to Nobu every time I want to have it. So I decided to copy it. It seemed like a simple enough recipe – and it is! Crispy rice topped with raw finely chopped tuna mixed with a creamy spicy dressing.

Pile of Crispy rice cakes
The crispy rice cakes. See separate recipe here.
Plate of Spicy tuna crispy rice
Platter with a mix of raw and canned spicy tuna on crispy rice cakes.

Nobu vs my version

At Nobu, the rice is served in small cube form which you stab with (fancy) toothpicks then dip into the tuna which is so finely minced it is like a spread. Based on the perfect golden colour on each side of the rice cubes, I suspect they are deep fried.

I’ve made my rice cakes flatter so they can be pan fried instead of deep fried, and pre-assembled with the toppings. I also do not have a dipping sauce because I’ve incorporated seasonings in the tuna toppings.

Plus, I’ve made a canned tuna version as well, as an option you make right now instead of going out to find sashimi-grade tuna! Think – canned tuna fillings in sushi rolls. It’s really tasty! This is the canned tuna version:

Spicy tuna crispy rice - canned tuna version
The canned tuna version. It’s like tuna sushi roll filling – really tasty!

What you need

Here’s what you need to make this Nobu copycat Spicy Tuna Crispy Rice.

1. Sashimi tuna or salmon – OR canned!

As mentioned above, the base recipe is a copy-cat of the Nobu version which is made with raw sashimi-grade tuna, Plus, I’ve created a canned tuna version too as an easier make it now version / those who can’t get or don’t like raw tuna. It’s like the canned tuna filling you get in sushi rolls – it’s really tasty!

Tuna for Spicy tuna crispy rice

Sashimi grade tuna – To make the raw tuna version, you will need to get sashimi grade tuna. This is tuna that is fresh enough, handled and stored in a manner suitable for eating raw. It is more expensive than tuna intended for cooking.

Common sashimi tuna types

  • Bluefin tuna – the frontrunner, most premium type. For flavour, colour and texture.

  • Yellowfin and bigeye tuna (ahi ahi) – The more common type that is more economical. It is softer, not as red.

Canned tuna – Tuna in oil is best. If using tuna in spring water, the mixture is a little drier so perhaps add extra mayo.

2. Spicy creamy dressing & assembling

Here’s what you need to make the creamy dressing and for assembling. The same ingredients are used for both, it’s just that you need more for the canned tuna (lots of little tuna bits = more surface area = more dressing required).

Ingredients in Spicy tuna crispy rice
  • Kewpie mayonnaise is a Japanese mayonnaise that has a smoother flavour than Western ones. Substitute with whole egg mayonnaise. Normal mayonnaise (ie not labelled “whole-egg”) is tangier / sweeter which will dominate the raw tuna version too much but ok for the canned tuna version.

  • Sriracha is a red Asian spicy sauce that has other flavours in it in addition to chilli, such as vinegar and garlic. Substitute with other spicy sauce of choice, but adjust quantity based on spiciness.

    Non spicy option – Ketchup!

  • Green onion – For nice green specks and a bit of freshness.

  • Sesame oil & seeds – For toasty sesame flavour!

  • Lemon – For the canned tuna version, I found a hint of extra tang was desirable. For the raw tuna version, fresh lemon juice made the dressing a little too loose so I stick with using the tang in sriracha.

  • Avocado – Optional (and not in Nobu’s version), but I really like how it adds an extra creamy element. If avocado is not in season or pricey, I’d skip it.

Crispy rice

All you really need for the crispy rice is sushi rice, oil for cooking and salt for seasoning. But it makes it extra tasty to flavour the rice with sushi rice seasoning – just rice vinegar and sugar.

Ingredients in Crispy rice

See the separate crispy rice recipe for commentary on the ingredients.


How to make Nobu’s crispy rice with spicy tuna

The crispy rice cakes has been published as a separate recipe – because it’s deemed worthy as such! It’s really easy – cook rice, press in pan, chill to set, cut, pan fry.

So the steps below are for the topping and assembling.

1. Nobu spicy tuna topping

Tip: Raw fish is hard to finely dice because it is so soft. To make it (much!) easier, partially freeze the fish first to make it firmer. Just 30 minutes in the freezer.

How to make Spicy tuna crispy rice
  1. Partially freeze the raw tuna (or salmon) in the freezer for 30 minutes. This will make it much easier to cut.

  2. Cut into small 0.5cm / 1/5″ dice. To do this, I slice 0.5cm / 1/5″ thick pieces, then 0.5cm / 1/5″ strips, then dice.

  3. De-chill the fish for 20 minutes or so, so it’s not ice-cold. Sushi tastes best when at room temperature which is around 18C/65F. Small diced tuna will de-chill fairly quickly.

  4. Mix – Add the mayonnaise, sriracha, green onion, sesame oil, sesame seeds and salt. Mix gently to combine. Then refrigerate until required. But remember to aim for the room temperature for serving! Warm crispy rice cakes with ice-cold tuna isn’t ideal. 🙂

Creamy canned tuna topping

How to make Spicy tuna crispy rice
  1. Mash the drained canned tuna with a fork until it’s really fine. The finer the better.

  2. Add everything else and mix!

3. Assembling the crispy rice cakes

Nobu serves this as a DIY set up with cubes of rice that is speared with fancy toothpicks then dunked into the spicy tuna which is almost in paste-like form. I like to assemble for an easy finger food option.

Also, cubes of rice either need to be turned 6 times in a pan (what a pain!) or deep fried (what a pain!). Pan frying 2 sides of a flatter pieces is so much less effort!

  1. Cook the rice cakes after you’ve mixed the toppings. See directions in the crispy rice cakes recipe.

  2. Avocado – Place on a serving platter and top with avocado slices. You can either use 1 large, or fan out smaller pieces as I have done. You could also pipe on avocado sauce – a good option for speedy assembling if making big batches.

  3. Shape – Use 2 teaspoons to shape a mound of the topping into a “football” shape so it sticks together.

  4. Assemble – Place tuna on avocado. Sprinkle with sesame seeds, top with jalapeño. Repeat with remaining rice cakes. EAT!

Picking up Spicy tuna crispy rice
Overhead photo of Spicy tuna crispy rice

I see you making this for friends who come round for Saturday night drinks. Impressing the pants off your friends at book club. For your mum’s birthday lunch.

And just generally because you want to eat Nobu in the comfort of your own home, in trackies and your favourite slouchy t-shirt, and feel smug that it cost you around…oh I don’t know. About 80% less? At least!! – Smug Nagi x


Watch how to make it

Picking up Spicy tuna crispy rice
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Crispy rice with spicy tuna (Nobu copycat)

Recipe video above. A shameless copycat of a signature Nobu restaurant appetiser – crispy rice cakes with tuna or salmon in a creamy spicy dressing. Easy to make at a fraction of the cost – they charge $30 for a minuscule serving! Serve as a canapé, starter for dinner or as a main with an Asian side salad or smashed cucumbers.
The original uses raw tuna but I've also created a canned tuna version – think, sushi roll filling.
Course Appetizer, canape, Finger Food
Cuisine Asian, Modern Asian
Keyword crispy rice cakes, crispy rice finger food, nobu recipe, tuna canape
Prep Time 30 minutes
Cook Time 20 minutes
Rice chilling (minimum time) 4 hours
Servings 15 pieces
Calories 119cal
Author Nagi

Ingredients

  • 1 batch crispy rice cakes (15 pieces)
  • ONE topping of choice (below) – Nobu sashimi tuna or canned tuna
  • 1 avocado , cut into small thin slices (or make avocado sauce)
  • 15 jalapeño slices , thin, optional garnish
  • 1/2 tsp black sesame seeds , for garnish

Nobu spicy tuna (raw):

  • 225g / 7oz sashimi grade tuna , or salmon (Note 1)
  • 1 tbsp sriracha , adjust spiciness to taste (Note 2)
  • 4 tsp kewpie mayonnaise (Note 3)
  • 1 tsp sesame oil
  • 1/4 tsp cooking salt
  • 2 tbsp finely chopped green onion
  • 1 tsp white sesame seeds
  • 1/2 tsp black sesame seeds , divided

Creamy spicy canned tuna topping:

  • 360g/12oz canned tuna in oil , drained (Note 4)
  • 3 tbsp sriracha (Note 2)
  • 4 tbsp kewpie mayonnaise (Note 3)
  • 1 tbsp lemon juice (sub rice vinegar)
  • 1 tsp sesame oil
  • 1/2 tsp cooking/kosher salt
  • 1/4 cup finely chopped green onion
  • 2 tsp white sesame seeds , optional
  • 1 1/2 tsp black sesame seeds , divided

Instructions

  • Start the rice the day before or first thing in the morning – it needs minimum 4 hours to chill.
  • Make the toppings first, then refrigerate while you cook the crispy rice cakes.
  • Cook the crispy rice cakes and sprinkle with salt per the recipe.
  • Assemble – Place rice cakes on a serving platter. Pile on toppings – I use teaspoons to make football shapes then slide on. Sprinkle with black sesame seeds, top with jalapeño. Eat!

Nobu spicy tuna topping:

  • Freeze to firm – Place tuna in the freezer for 30 minutes to partially freeze – it's much easier to finely chop when slightly firm.
  • Cut into 0.5cm / 1/2" cubes – the smaller the better! Place into a bowl and let it de-chill for 20 minutes (not as nice ice-cold).
  • Mix – Add everything into the tuna and mix until combined.

Creamy canned tuna (sushi-roll filling style):

  • Place tuna in a bowl and use a fork to mash it up really finely. Add everything else and mix well.

Notes

Makes 15 pieces 4 x 6.5cm/ 1.5 x 2.5″ (crispy rice dimensions).
1. Tuna or salmon – As the fish is served raw, please ensure you get sashimi grade tuna which is extra fresh, handled and stored in a manner suitable for eating raw. It will be labelled as such at the shops. You can also get frozen sashimi grade fish these days. It’s snap deep-frozen at -60C and suitable for eating raw. I’ve gotten it from Japanese supermarkets in Sydney (Tokyo-mart, Northbridge).
2. Sriracha is a red Asian spicy sauce that has other flavours in it in addition to chilli, such as vinegar and garlic. If you’re worried about spiciness, start with less (top up with more mayo) then add add more later if you’re brave! Non spicy option – Ketchup!
Substitute with other spicy sauce of choice, but adjust quantity based on spiciness.
3. Kewpie mayonnaise is a Japanese mayonnaise that has a smoother flavour than Western ones. Substitute with whole egg mayonnaise. 
4. Canned tuna – in oil is best. Springwater tends to be a little dry.
5. Leftovers – Once assembled, rice cakes will soften within an hour. The raw tuna topping should be eaten within an hour once out of the fridge, though will keep in the fridge for the day. Canned tuna topping mixture will keep for several days. Makes a little more than you need – eat leftover as dip or on sandwiches!
Nutrition per rice cake (15 pieces)

Nutrition

Calories: 119cal | Carbohydrates: 4g | Protein: 4g | Fat: 9g | Saturated Fat: 1g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 1g | Monounsaturated Fat: 2g | Trans Fat: 0.001g | Cholesterol: 6mg | Sodium: 161mg | Potassium: 109mg | Fiber: 1g | Sugar: 0.4g | Vitamin A: 357IU | Vitamin C: 2mg | Calcium: 6mg | Iron: 0.3mg

Life of Dozer

Crispy rice cake size context.

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Crispy rice https://www.recipetineats.com/crispy-rice/ https://www.recipetineats.com/crispy-rice/#comments Fri, 30 Jun 2023 05:59:00 +0000 https://www.recipetineats.com/?p=97136 Crispy rice cakes on a plateCrispy rice is just rice that’s packed in a pan, cut then pan fried until golden and ultra crispy. Can’t-stop-eating-them good! Munch on them plain like chips, or use as a base for toppings to make modern Asian-style canapés – like Nobu’s Spicy Tuna Crispy Rice. Crispy rice cakes These are the base for the... Get the Recipe

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Crispy rice is just rice that’s packed in a pan, cut then pan fried until golden and ultra crispy. Can’t-stop-eating-them good! Munch on them plain like chips, or use as a base for toppings to make modern Asian-style canapés – like Nobu’s Spicy Tuna Crispy Rice.

Draining excess oil from Crispy rice cakes

Crispy rice cakes

These are the base for the Nobu copy-cat Spicy Tuna Crispy Rice recipe that I also published today. But everyone who’s tried the plain crispy rice cakes declared them so good, they insisted they should be published as a separate recipe. So here it is!

Hand holding crispy rice

Ingredients

All you really need to make crispy rice cakes is rice, oil for frying and salt for seasoning. However, the rice is tastier if you add sushi rice seasoning which is just sugar and rice vinegar. Especially if you plan to serve these as plain snacks with no toppings.

Ingredients in Crispy rice
  • Sushi rice – Find this type of rice labelled as such alongside other rice at the grocery store. It’s a short grain type of rice that is stickier than other types of rice, so the rice sticks together to make the rice balls for sushi.

    For the same reason, it’s the best type of rice to make rice cakes! Other rice types won’t stick together as firmly so the rice cakes won’t cut as neatly or fry up as golden and crispy. Medium grain rice should work nearly as well (because it’s fairly sticky too) but I don’t recommend trying this with long grain rice, brown rice, wild rice or basmati rice.

  • Rice vinegar – An Asian vinegar made from….wait for it….rice! Smoother and milder than plain white vinegar, this is used to flavour rice to make sushi. As noted above, it can be skipped but it makes the rice cakes tastier.

  • Sugar – Also for seasoning the rice.

  • Salt – For sprinkling on the cooked rice cakes. I use 3/4 teaspoon. It will seem like a lot for the amount of rice cakes but they can take it! They are like potato – they take more salt than you think. Also, some salt falls off when you turn them to sprinkle the other side.

Rice for Crispy rice

How to make crispy rice cakes

You simply cook rice, press in a pan, cool to make it solid, cut, then pan fry until golden. Then munch away!

1. Cook and flavour rice

No need to rinse. Use the right amount of water. And don’t peek! My full rice-making rants here.

How to make Crispy rice
  1. Cook rice – Place rice and water in a small pot (no lid) over medium high heat. Once it’s bubbling, put the lid on and turn down to medium low. Cook for 13 minutes or until water is absorbed – no peeking!

  2. Rest for 10 minutes with the lid on.

  3. Sushi rice seasoning – Mix the vinegar and sugar together until the sugar dissolves.

  4. Fluff – Pour seasoning over the hot rice. Fluff with a rice paddle or rubber spatula. The rice will absorb the flavour as it cools in the pan.

2. Press and cut

For really crispy rice cakes, be sure to press the rice in firmly.

How to make Crispy rice
  1. Press – Place a sheet of baking/parchment paper on a 20cm/8″ square pan. Scrape the hot rice into the pan and spread evenly. Cover with another piece of paper and press the rice in very firmly, concentrating on the corners and edges. The rice should be around 1.25cm / 1/2″ thick.

  2. Weigh down (recommended) – For best results, place something flat on top then weigh it down with 4 or 5 x 400g/14oz cans. I used a second pan that is the same size.

    Weighing down the rice packs the rice together more tightly as it sets in the fridge. This means you can cut neater pieces and they will crisp up better. It’s also just generally really irritating when you get little loose bits of rice in the pan when you’re frying up the rice cakes!

  3. Cool – Fully cool, then refrigerate overnight (minimum 6 hours). As it cools, the rice will stick together and become a solid slab you can lift up and cut.

    Speedy option for the impatient: Put the rice in the fridge until it’s fully cool (around 1 hour), then freezer for 1 hour (edges will semi-freeze, centre should be perfect), then back in the fridge for 1 hour (to thaw edges). Warning: Do not let the rice freeze fully, it will become loose and wet when it thaws so not suitable for rice cakes!

  4. Cut – Lift rice out using paper overhang. Wet the knife blade (neater cuts). Cut rice into desired shapes. I do 15 rectangles for the pictured Nobu Crispy Rice with Spicy Tuna (5 strips, then each into 3). Smaller and more would make great snacking options, albeit lots of turning in the pan!

3. Cooking:

How to make Crispy rice
  1. Pan fry – Heat about 1/4 cup of the oil in a large non-stick pan over medium high. Place in half the rice cakes – they should sizzle gently. Lower heat to medium. Cook for 4 minutes until really golden and crispy. Turn and cook the other side for 4 minutes.

  2. Salt – Remove onto a paper towels lined plate. Sprinkle each side with salt while hot.

  3. Keep cooking – Add remaining oil and cook remaining rice cakes.

  4. Serve as snack (you won’t be able to stop!) or use as a base for canapés. See the separate recipe for the spicy tuna topping I also shared today which is a blatant Nobu restaurant copy-cat. See next section for more topping suggestions!

Crispy rice cakes on a plate

How to serve crispy rice cakes

Serve them plain for snacking or add toppings to make irresistible appetisers.

Serving plain

Eat like potato chips! You won’t be able to stop. I probably wouldn’t say no to some kind of dip either – French Onion Dip immediately comes to mind.

Topping suggestions

As noted above, I’m sharing this crispy rice cakes recipe as a base for a creamy spicy tuna topping to make a copycat of a signature Nobu restaurant appetiser, Spicy Tuna Crispy Rice (raw or canned). However, given the flavour of the rice cakes is fairly neutral rather than specifically Asian, there’s stacks of topping options! Here’s some ideas that come to mind:

I’d love to hear your suggestions! What will you top these with? – Nagi x


Watch how to make it

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Crispy rice

Recipe video above. Crispy rice is just rice that's packed in a pan, cut then pan fried until ultra golden and crispy. They make a great snack just as they are – you will DEVOUR a whole pile – or a base to make irresistible appetisers. Think – modern Asian canapés topped with spicy tuna (Nobu style!), tuna poke, egg or chicken salad sandwich filling, ceviche or salmon mousse!
Course Appetiser, canape
Cuisine Asian
Keyword crispy rice cakes
Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 30 minutes
Cooling 6 hours
Servings 15 pieces 4 x 6.5cm/ 1.5 x 2.5″
Calories 68cal
Author Nagi

Ingredients

  • 1 cup sushi rice (Note 1)
  • 1 1/2 cups water
  • 1/3 cup canola oil (vegetable, peanut or other neutral oil)
  • 3/4 tsp cooking / kosher salt , for sprinkling rice cakes (Note 2)

Sushi seasoning:

  • 1 tbsp rice vinegar (Note 3)
  • 1 tsp caster sugar (Note 3)

Instructions

SUMMARY RECIPE

  • Cook rice, rest, pour over seasoning, fluff. Press firmly into 20cm/8" lined pan, weigh down. Cool, fridge overnight (min 6 hrs). Cut into 15 rectangles, pan fry 4 min each side, sprinkle with salt.

FULL RECIPE

  • Sushi seasoning – Mix together until sugar dissolves.
  • Cook rice (Note 4) – Place rice and water in a small pot (no lid) over medium high heat. Once it's bubbling on the edges and the middle is rippling, put the lid on and turn down to medium low (or low for strong stoves). Cook for 13 minutes or until water is absorbed.
  • Rest – Remove from heat then rest for 10 minutes with the lid still on.
  • Season – Remove lid. Pour over sushi seasoning. Fluff rice with rubber spatula.

Press, cool, cut:

  • Press – Place a sheet of baking/parchment paper on a 20cm/8" square pan. Scrape hot rice into the pan and spread evenly. Cover with another piece of paper and press in very firmly.
  • Weigh down (recommended, Note 5) – For best results, place something flat on top (2nd same size pan is ideal) then weigh down with 5 x 400g/14oz cans.
  • Cool – Fully cool, cover with cling wrap, then refrigerate overnight (min 6 hours). Speedy option: Fridge uncovered until fully cool, cover, freeze 1 hour, fridge 1 hour.
  • Cut – Lift rice out using paper overhang. Wet the knife blade (neater cuts). Cut rice into 15 rectangles (5 strips, then each into 3).

Cooking:

  • Pan fry – Heat about 1/4 cup of the oil in a large non-stick pan over medium high. Place in half the rice cakes – they should sizzle gently. Lower heat to medium. Cook for 4 minutes until really golden and crispy. Turn and cook the other side for 4 minutes.
  • Salt – Remove onto a paper towels lined plate. Sprinkle each side with salt while hot.
  • Keep cooking – Add remaining oil and cook remaining rice cakes.

Serving:

  • Serve as snack (you won't be able to stop!) or a base for canapés.
  • Topping suggestions – Spicy tuna (Nobu copycat), tuna poke, salmon mousse, crostini toppings.

Notes

1. Sushi rice – Find it labelled as such alongside other rice at the grocery store. It’s a short grain type of rice that is stickier than other types of rice, making it ideal for making rice balls for sushi. For the same reason, it’s the best type of rice to make rice cakes. Other rice types won’t stick together as firmly so the rice cakes will be a bit more crumbly and untidy looking.
2. I know this seems like a lot but these can take a lot of salt. Use less if you doubt me then add more later when you realise you need it!
3. Seasonings for sushi rice. They can be skipped but it makes the rice cakes tastier, and in the spirit of crispy sushi rice!
4. Rice cooking – Use a pot ~17cm/7″ wide. Not much larger else the rice doesn’t have enough depth = risk of burning base. No need to rinse the rice if you bought it in packs at the shop, the rice will be fluffy cooking it my way and with the right water/rice ratio. If you insist on rinsing the rice, reduce water by 2 tablespoons (to account for water logged in the rice).
5. Packing the rice in tightly makes the rice cakes firmer so you can cut neat squares, plus they are crispier. Weighing down while cooling is best, but still ok if you just press the rice really tightly with your hands. If you don’t, then they will crumble on the edges when you cut and fry. Not fatal, but annoying – and not quite as crispy.

Nutrition

Calories: 68cal | Carbohydrates: 3g | Protein: 0.2g | Fat: 5g | Saturated Fat: 0.4g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 1g | Monounsaturated Fat: 3g | Trans Fat: 0.02g | Sodium: 118mg | Potassium: 1mg | Fiber: 0.1g | Sugar: 0.3g | Calcium: 1mg | Iron: 0.02mg

Life of Dozer

This is his sitting up straight look-how-good-I-am food scavenging position. It’s highly effective!

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