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  2. A simple recipe for onigiri, or Japanese rice balls, with ...

    www.aol.com/news/simple-recipe-onigiri-japanese...

    1 ½ cup Japanese rice, cooked to fluffiness Three umeboshi salted Japanese plums (available at Asian food stores; for smaller umeboshi, use one for each rice ball) Two sheets of dried nori seaweed

  3. Onigiri - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Onigiri

    Shio-musubi, or plain rice balls made only with salt. Usually, onigiri is made with boiled white rice, though it is sometimes made with different varieties of cooked rice, such as: Okowa or kowa-meshi: glutinous rice cooked or steamed with vegetables; Sekihan: rice cooked with red azuki beans; Maze-gohan: rice cooked with various preferred ...

  4. Nori - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nori

    The dry seaweed is used to pick up rice balls without getting the hands sticky. Senbei (rice crackers) sometimes contain a piece of nori as well. Strips or small sheets of nori are used as garnish for noodles, soups, and rice dishes. Flakes of nori are used in furikake seasonings, to be sprinkled over rice or added to onigiri. Very small flakes ...

  5. Norimaki - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norimaki

    Norimaki + Sushi = Makizushi. Norimaki (海苔巻) are various Japanese dishes wrapped with nori seaweed, most commonly a kind of sushi, makizushi (巻き寿司). [1]Other than makizushi, onigiri (おにぎり, rice balls), sashimi, senbei (煎餅, rice crackers) and chikuwa (竹輪, bamboo ring) are also regarded as norimaki if they are wrapped with seaweed.

  6. List of rice dishes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_rice_dishes

    Glutinous rice balls with a peanut and muscovado filling Moa: West Bengal, India. Moa is a small sweet and crispy ball made of puffed rice and jaggery. It originated from South 24 Parganas district of West Bengal. Moa'amar: Egypt: Rice with milk and chicken soup. A sort of rice made by adding milk and chicken soup to the rice and letting it ...

  7. Sticky-Rice Dressing Recipe - AOL

    www.aol.com/food/recipes/sticky-rice-dressing

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  8. Do We Always Have To Rinse Rice? Our Food Expert Explains - AOL

    www.aol.com/always-rinse-rice-food-expert...

    The soaking step isn’t a necessary or useful method for varieties like arborio, glutinous (or sticky) rice, and any brown or black rice with the hull still in tact. But for any other type of ...

  9. Rice ball - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rice_ball

    Rice balls Zongzi, opened with filling (left) and still wrapped in bamboo leaves (right) Onigiri. A rice ball may be any kind of food item made from rice that has been shaped, condensed, or otherwise combined into a ball shape. Rice balls exist in many different cultures in which rice is eaten, and are particularly prevalent in Asia. Rice balls ...