You may have noticed that I have a slight obsession with perfect sushi rice but it is so important to get it right.

Perfect fluffy and sticky rice is the main ingredient to delicious sushi- get it right and you can shape it into a million different sushi rolls or nigiri; get it wrong and you might be picking it out of your teeth for weeks or watching your sushi disintegrate in your hands.

sushi oke, hangiri bowl

sushi oke, hangiri bowl

A couple of weeks ago I was singing the praises of a rice cooker which is the favoured cooking method of the Japanese (and they know their rice). However, for all you purists out there it will come as no surprise to learn that you need a few more tools to get the job right.

First things first, pop your rice and water in your rice cooker as per the instructions and leave it for 10-15 minutes to fluff up perfectly. Once it is done, the next step is cooling which is just as important as cooking. The Japanese use a Hangiri Bowl which is a traditional wooden bowl. It has a flat bottom and is usually about 30cm wide, though ones used in restaurants can be as big as a metre wide.

Once your rice is in the Hangiri you need to mix in the dressing. I have given you a recipe for this before but can be as simple as sushi vinegar and rice seasoning which comes in lots of varieties. How the dressing is mixed in is also important. Rather than stirring, the correct method is to slice through the rice using cutting motions with a flat bamboo paddle known as a shamoji.

Finally cover the rice with a a cloth (fukin as it’s known in Japanese or teatowel as it’s known in my kitchen) and leave it to cool right down. Now you can shape it into any type of sushi you want – gunkanmaki (warship sushi), maki rolls, nigiri – all you need now is some nori seaweed, wasabi, pickles and the topping of your choice.

Follow these simple steps and your rice will be perfect everytime and you can roll, ball, stick and mould in minutes.

sushi rice, rice cookerHow to cook rice

Learning how to cook rice is one of those things, it’s either too easy to worry about or for some cooking rice is a near impossibility.

If you’re totally unable to cook rice apart from boil in the bag then why not consider lumping up £20 for a expensive. rice cooker.

Check out our rice cooker info page for more details on rice cookers.

But for those of you a bit more confident here is a great way of how to cook rice in a pan on the stove top. Simple. Trust me; it’s not as hard as you think.

Never mind any of this measuring malarkey, the way how to cook rice is simple. Make sure the sushi rice is rinsed through in a sieve then place it in a reasonable sized pan, a larger pan to cook a larger amount of rice.
***tip, rice expands a lot, rice nearly doubles it’s size when cooked so choose the right pan and judge how much you need accordingly***

Put the sushi rice into the pan. Then fill the pan with water about 20mm above the top of the sushi rice. Place the pan on the stove on full heat with no lid on. Keep an eye on it because as soon as the water starts to boil turn the heat down to its lowest setting and put the pan lid on. What will happen now is the sushi rice will start to steam cook. It’s best to use a pan with a transparent lid as you want to cook the sushi rice in this way until all the water has steamed through the sushi rice and evaporated. If you lift the lid off you’re going to loose all that steam and the sushi rice will not cook properly. When it’s all evaporated check the sushi rice. It should be perfect!

Rice cooker

Keep experimenting with different amounts of water for different kinds of rice, once you have the knack of how to cook sushi rice you’ll wonder what all the fuss was about!

Get the best sushi rice is available in our sushi store



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