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  2. It's not as world-famous as ramen or sushi. But the humble ...

    www.aol.com/news/not-world-famous-ramen-sushi...

    Spam and egg onigiri costs 300 yen ($1.90); the one adorned with several types of “kombu,” or edible kelp, called “Dashi Punch X3,” costs 280 yen ($1.80). “Onigiri is the infinite universe.

  3. Onigiri - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Onigiri

    Yaki-onigiri, grilled until sides are brown. Yaki-onigiri (焼きおにぎり "grilled onigiri") are first shaped by compacting white rice, then grilling it until brown, then coating with soy sauce or miso, and finally broiling it. Yaki-onigiri is also sold commercially as frozen food. Miso-onigiri (味噌おにぎり) is mainly in eastern Japan.

  4. Okowa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Okowa

    The ingredients used for making okowa rice balls include glutinous rice (short-grain), sesame oil, dashi, soy sauce, mirin, salt, ginger, chopped mushrooms and carrots, sweet potato, chestnuts, spring onions, cooked fish, and a sheet of nori. [7]

  5. Tumpeng - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tumpeng

    Tumpeng in a cone. The cone-shaped rice is surrounded by assorted Indonesian dishes, such as urap vegetables, ayam goreng (fried chicken), ayam bakar (grilled chicken), empal gepuk (sweet and spicy fried beef), abon sapi (beef floss), semur (beef stew in sweet soy sauce), teri kacang (anchovy with peanuts), fried prawn, telur pindang (boiled marble egg), shredded omelette, tempe orek (sweet ...

  6. Jumeok-bap - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jumeok-bap

    Jumeok-bap (주먹밥; lit. "fist rice"), sometimes jumeokbap, is a Korean rice dish made from a lump of cooked rice made into a round loaf the shape of a fist. [1] [2] Rice balls are a common item in dosirak (a packed meal) and often eaten as a light meal, between-meal snack, street food, or an accompaniment to spicy food.

  7. Onigiri senbei - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Onigiri_senbei

    Onigiri senbei (おにぎりせんべい) is a Japanese rice ball ("Onigiri")-shaped, soy sauce-flavoured senbei. It was produced by Masuya.(マスヤ)

  8. Unadon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unadon

    Una-don was the first type of donburi rice dish, invented in the late Edo period, during the Bunka era (1804–1818) [5] by a man named Imasuke Ōkubo [] [5] of Sakai-machi (in present-day Nihonbashi Ningyōchō, Chūō, Tokyo), and became a hit in the neighborhood, where the Nakamura-za and Ichimura-za once stood.

  9. Donburi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Donburi

    Unadon. Unadon (鰻 丼, an abbreviation for unagi + donburi, "eel bowl") is a dish originating in Japan. It consists of a donburi type large bowl filled with steamed white rice, and topped with fillets of eel (unagi) grilled in a style known as kabayaki, similar to teriyaki.