Best 7 Rice Balls With Salmon Filling Onigiri Recipes

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Indulge in a culinary journey to Japan with our delightful rice balls, also known as Onigiri. These bite-sized treasures, crafted from perfectly cooked Japanese rice, are a symphony of flavors and textures. Discover the art of shaping rice into triangular or round forms, the hallmark of Onigiri's iconic presentation. Embark on a taste adventure with our diverse fillings, ranging from classic salmon to tantalizing tuna mayonnaise and refreshing cucumber. Each recipe promises a unique gustatory experience, catering to a variety of palates. Whether you're seeking a quick lunch option, a delightful snack, or a delightful addition to your bento box, our rice balls are guaranteed to satisfy your cravings. Unleash your inner chef and join us in creating these exquisite Japanese treats in the comfort of your own kitchen.

Here are our top 7 tried and tested recipes!

SALMON ONIGIRI RICE BALLS (鮭おにぎり)



Salmon Onigiri Rice Balls (鮭おにぎり) image

How to make flavorful Japanese salmon onigiri rice balls (鮭おにぎり) made with salmon flakes fried in butter and soy sauce, then mixed with chopped spring onions and sesame seeds. (Makes 5-6 rice balls.)

Provided by Yuto Omura

Categories     Rice

Time 30m

Number Of Ingredients 7

600 - 660g cooked Japanese short grain white rice (300g / 2 rice cups before cooking. See here how to cook Japanese rice on the stove)
1 skinless salmon fillet (approx 100g)
1 tbsp soy sauce
2 tbsp spring onion finely chopped
1 tsp unsalted butter
1/2 tbsp white sesame seeds
2 sheets of nori cut into 5-6 strips

Steps:

  • Heat up a frying pan on medium and add 1 tsp unsalted butter.
  • Once the butter is melted, add the salmon filled to the pan and fry until it's cooked through and flakey.
  • Using a wooden spatula, break up the salmon into smaller flakes.
  • Add 1 tbsp soy sauce to the pan, mix with the salmon flakes and cook until liquid is gone.
  • Turn off the heat and transfer the cooked salmon flakes to a large heatproof bowl.
  • Add the cooked rice, 1/2 tbsp white sesame seeds and 1 tbsp of chopped spring onion to the bowl.
  • Mix well until the ingredients are evenly distributed through the rice.
  • Take approx 100-130g of the rice and shape it into a rounded triangle using your preferred method. (Make sure to sprinkle salt on your hands/plastic wrap/mold first. If using bare hands, submerge them in ice cold water and rub salt over them before shaping.)
  • Don't handle the rice for too long, quicker is better. Once you're happy with the shape, wrap it with nori.
  • Repeat steps 8-9 until you have 5-6 rice balls
  • Eat straight away or put in your lunch box with an ice pack. Best eaten the same day. (See note)
  • Enjoy!

RICE BALLS WITH SALMON FILLING (ONIGIRI)



Rice Balls With Salmon Filling (Onigiri) image

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).

Provided by Amy Kaneko

Categories     Breakfast     Lunch     snack     Rice     Salmon     Quick & Easy     Kid-Friendly     Small Plates

Yield Makes 4

Number Of Ingredients 4

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

Steps:

  • 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.
  • 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.
  • Variations:
  • 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.

ONIGIRI (RICE BALLS)



Onigiri (Rice Balls) image

Because Japanese rice balls are so easy to eat, they're often used in lunch boxes. Our Test Kitchen's onigiri recipe features tuna and a touch of wasabi. -Test Kitchen, Milwaukee, Wisconsin

Provided by Taste of Home

Categories     Appetizers

Time 40m

Yield 8 appetizers.

Number Of Ingredients 5

2 cups sushi rice, rinsed and drained
2 cups water
1 can (5 ounces) light water-packed tuna, drained and flaked
2 tablespoons reduced-sodium soy sauce
1/2 teaspoon prepared wasabi

Steps:

  • In a large saucepan, combine rice and water; let stand for 30 minutes. Bring to a boil. Reduce heat to low; cover and simmer for 15-20 minutes or until water is absorbed and rice is tender. Remove from the heat. Let stand, covered, for 10 minutes., In a small bowl, combine the tuna, soy sauce and wasabi. With wet hands, shape 1/2 cup rice into a patty. Place 1 tablespoon tuna mixture in the center. Shape rice around tuna to enclose filling, forming a triangle. Repeat with remaining ingredients. Serve immediately.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 203 calories, Fat 0 fat (0 saturated fat), Cholesterol 5mg cholesterol, Sodium 218mg sodium, Carbohydrate 40g carbohydrate (0 sugars, Fiber 1g fiber), Protein 8g protein.

SALMON RICE BALL (ONIGIRI) RECIPE BY TASTY



Salmon Rice Ball (Onigiri) Recipe by Tasty image

Here's what you need: rice, cooked salmon flakes, shiso leaves

Provided by Spencer Kombol

Categories     Lunch

Time 30m

Yield 1 serving

Number Of Ingredients 3

⅔ cup rice, cooked
2 tablespoons cooked salmon flakes
2 shiso leaves, julienned

Steps:

  • In a bowl, combine rice, salmon flake, and shiso.
  • Wet your hands with water and shape rice into a circle.
  • Place into the bento box.
  • Enjoy!

Nutrition Facts : Calories 326 calories, Carbohydrate 59 grams, Fat 3 grams, Fiber 0 grams, Protein 10 grams, Sugar 0 grams

JAPANESE RICE BALLS (ONIGIRI)



Japanese Rice Balls (Onigiri) image

Easy Japanese rice balls with spicy salmon filling

Provided by costcokitchen

Categories     Main Course     Snack

Time 20m

Number Of Ingredients 11

1 sheet nori (cut into 2-inch-wide strips )
6 oz Kirkland Signature Wild Alaskan Pink Salmon (1 can)
3 tbsp Japanese kewpie mayo
3 tbp Sriracha sauce
1/2 tbsp masago (Capelin fish roe)
Furikake seasoning, black sesame seeds, and additional masago for topping (*optional)
1 bowl water (for dipping hands)
3 cups cooked short grain white rice
1 tbsp rice wine vinegar
1/2 tbsp sugar
1/2 tsp sugar

Steps:

  • Add rice wine vinegar, sugar, and salt to cooked rice and mix. Set aside.
  • To a small bowl, add canned salmon, kewpie mayo, Sriracha sauce, and masago. Mix until well combined.
  • If using an onigiri mold: Add 2 tbsp rice into the bottom of the mold. Add 1 tbsp of the spicy salmon filling in the center of the rice then top with another layer of rice. Press down with the lid then flip and gently push the center of the mold to release the onigiri.
  • If using your hands: Wet the palms of your hands and fingertips with water to prevent the rice from sticking. Scoop about2 tbsp of rice onto the palm of your hand and gently flatten it out. Add 1 tbsp of spicy salmon filling to the center and add another 2 tbsp of rice over it, then lift up the edges of the bottom rice layer to form a large ball. Once a ball is formed, use your hands to shape the ball into a triangular shape. You can press the ball into the corner of a rectangular Tupperware container to achieve the triangle shape.
  • Once your onigiri is formed, wrap the bottom center with a strip of nori. Garnish the sides with sesame seeds or Furikaki seasoning as desired. Simply add the seeds or seasoning to a small bowl and roll the sides of the onigiri so they stick.

ONIGIRI (RICE BALLS)



Onigiri (Rice Balls) image

Provided by Food Network

Categories     appetizer

Time 2h10m

Yield About 8 triangles

Number Of Ingredients 8

1/2 pound salmon fillet
4 cups uncooked, short-grain rice
5 3/4 cups water
2 sheets dried nori seaweed, or pre-toasted nori sheets
2 large pickled plums, pits removed and coarsely chopped
1/4 cup dried bonito flakes
1 1/2 teaspoons dark soy sauce
2 tablespoons black sesame seeds, toasted

Steps:

  • Sprinkle the salmon fillet with salt and let stand for 2 hours.
  • Meanwhile, wash the rice thoroughly in cold water 30 to 60 minutes before cooking and let drain in colander. Place rice and water in a heavy, tightly covered saucepan over medium-high heat. When water just begins to boil, turn the heat to high and let it come to a vigorous boil. Reduce the heat to low and cook until all the liquid is absorbed by the rice, about 12 to 13 minutes. Turn off the heat and let the rice stand, covered, for 10 to 15 minutes. Using a flat wooden spoon or rice paddle, fluff the rice with a cutting motion. Stretch a towel under the lid and cover tightly to keep warm until ready to use.
  • Toast the nori sheets over a high gas flame, and cut crosswise into 1-inch wide strips, or use pre-toasted nori.
  • Mix the bonito flakes with the soy sauce. Rinse the salt off the salmon, pat dry, and grill for 3 to 5 minutes. Use a fork to break the salmon into small pieces.
  • Wet your hands with salted water to keep the rice from sticking to your hands. Cup one hand and place a handful of rice, about 1/2 cup, in your hand. Make an indentation in the rice and tuck in one of the fillings: a teaspoon of soaked bonito flakes, a few flakes of salmon, or a few pieces of pickled plum. Close the rice over the filling and mold it into a triangular shape. Mold the rice firmly, pressing just hard enough to hold it together. Set the rice triangle down on one of its sides and cover the top peak with a strip of nori, shiny side out, like a roof. You can also make cylindrical shapes and wrap the nori around the middle. Sprinkle sesame seeds over the rice shapes. These are great lunch treats.

ONIGIRI - JAPANESE RICE BALLS



Onigiri - Japanese Rice Balls image

Onigiri are Japanese rice balls. They're fun to make and are a staple of Japanese lunchboxes (bento). You can put almost anything in an onigiri; try substituting grilled salmon, pickled plums, beef, pork, turkey, or tuna with mayonnaise.

Provided by Li Shu

Categories     Side Dish     Rice Side Dish Recipes

Time 1h10m

Yield 4

Number Of Ingredients 7

4 cups uncooked short-grain white rice
4 ½ cups water
1 cup water
¼ teaspoon salt
¼ cup bonito shavings (dry fish flakes)
2 sheets nori (dry seaweed), cut into 1/2-inch strips
2 tablespoons sesame seeds

Steps:

  • Wash the rice in a mesh strainer until the water runs clear. Combine washed rice and 4 1/2 cups water in a saucepan. Bring to a boil over high heat, stirring occasionally. Reduce heat to low; cover. Simmer rice until the water is absorbed, 15 to 20 minutes. Let rice rest, for 15 minutes to allow the rice to continue to steam and become tender. Allow cooked rice to cool.
  • Combine 1 cup water with the salt in a small bowl. Use this water to dampen hands before handling the rice. Divide the cooked rice into 8 equal portions. Use one portion of rice for each onigiri.
  • Divide one portion of rice in two. Create a dimple in the rice and fill with a heaping teaspoon of bonito flakes. Cover with the remaining portion of rice and press lightly to enclose filling inside rice ball. Gently press the rice to shape into a triangle. Wrap shaped onigiri with a strip of nori. Sprinkle with sesame seeds. Repeat to make a total of 8 onigiri.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 744.4 calories, Carbohydrate 159.4 g, Fat 3.3 g, Fiber 6.1 g, Protein 14.4 g, SaturatedFat 0.6 g, Sodium 160.4 mg, Sugar 1 g

Tips:

  • Choose the right kind of rice: Japanese short-grain rice is the traditional choice for onigiri. Avoid using brown rice or instant rice, as they will not produce the same sticky texture.
  • Cook the rice perfectly: Follow the package instructions for cooking the rice. Once it is cooked, let it cool slightly so that it is easier to handle.
  • Use high-quality ingredients: Fresh, high-quality ingredients will make your onigiri taste better. Choose sashimi-grade salmon, ripe avocado, and crisp cucumber.
  • Season the rice with vinegar: This is a traditional step that gives onigiri its characteristic flavor. Use a good quality rice vinegar and make sure to mix it into the rice thoroughly.
  • Wet your hands before handling the rice: This will prevent the rice from sticking to your hands and make it easier to shape the onigiri.
  • Use a variety of fillings: Onigiri can be filled with a variety of ingredients, including cooked fish, vegetables, and pickled items. You can also add a drizzle of soy sauce or mayonnaise for extra flavor.
  • Wrap the onigiri tightly: This will help to keep the rice and filling together and prevent the onigiri from falling apart.

Conclusion:

Onigiri is a delicious and versatile snack or meal that can be enjoyed by people of all ages. With a little practice, you can make perfect onigiri at home. So next time you're looking for a quick and easy meal, give onigiri a try!

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