Onigiri (Omusubi) revisited: An easier way to make Japanese rice balls, step by step

[Update:] See all kinds of onigiri on my new bento-only site, Just Bento.
[Another Update:] Check out the Onigiri FAQ for answers to most, if not all, your onigiri related questions!
[One more Update:] A few people are obviously not taking the time to read or follow the links suggested properly. Otherwise they would not keep asking the same question, or worse answering it wrong, over and over. So please let me repeat again:
The best rice to use for standard onigiri is the kind usually sold as Japanese rice or 'sushi rice'. It is NOT THE SAME as 'sticky rice' or 'sweet rice' or 'glutinous rice'. And no you cannot use jasmine rice for successful onigiri, the way onigiri are supposed to be! The right kind of rice, properly cooked, is not the same as the wrong kind of rice, cooked until mushy and pressed together in a gluey fashion. If you can't get a hold of Japanese rice for some reason, there are a few other rices that can be substituted. See Looking At Rice for a complete explanation. That should make things clear! (end Update)
One of the most popular entries on this site is the one about onigiri, or Japanese rice balls, which I wrote back in 2003. (A lot of people landed there searching for onigiri as portrayed in anime or manga, especially Fruits Basket...which is interesting.) It was one of the very early entries on the blog, and I gave the traditional way of making the onigiri: hot rice put on moistened and salted palms, which quickly turn red and sore because of the heat from the rice.
I've made hundreds of onigiri in the 3 years since I wrote that, because onigiri are such great portable meals for picnics, not to mention party food and late-night snacks. But let's face it, those red sore palms aren't too pleasant, and the rice grains do tend to stick all over the place. Also, portioning with the rice scooper can be a bit erratic unless you are an onigiri-making expert.
With ideas from several places including cookbooks, Japanese TV shows and my mother, this much neater method of making onigiri evolved. It requires no special molds or equipment. It ensures that all your onigiri are uniform in size. Your hands never get too hot and red. And, if you're going to bring them on a picnic or store them for eating a bit later, they're already conveniently pre-wrapped in plastic.
A word here from my mom about the most frequently asked question regarding onigiri: alternative fillings if you can't get a hold of, or don't like, the traditional fillings like umeboshi (pickled plums), tarako (salted cod roe), or katsuobushi (bonito flakes) with soy sauce. She says, "Onigiri isn't about the filling really. It's about enjoying the flavor of good rice." She has a point there. Use good rice, prepared properly, and the filling becomes secondary.
So, I present you... Onigiri 2.0 :).
Onigiri 2.0 (Easier, neater onigiri)
There are a lot of steps here, but once you have done a couple this way you will be turning out tons of rice balls in no time.
Equipment and ingredients needed:
- Sturdy plastic wrap that is not so thin that it will get weak when exposed to a little heat, or too thin that you spend more time un-sticking it form itself than using it. Saran Wrap is great, or Glad. (I used a green colored wrap for the sake of photographic clarity, but you can use clear wrap of course.)
- A small bowl or teacup that is the size you want your rice balls to be. I like to use small teacups so that the onigiri don't turn huge. For party-sized mini-onigiri you can use a sake cup or egg cup. The teacup used here holds about 2/3rd cup of liquid.
- A rice scoop or a spoon
- Properly cooked white or brown Japanese rice or "sushi" rice or uruchi-mai, NOT 'STICKY' RICE and definitely NOT JASMINE, LONG GRAIN OR OTHER RICE Please read the Looking At Rice post if you are confused about what kind of rice is best to use for onigiri.
- Salt, preferably in a salt shaker (or you can just sprinkle with your fingers)
- Water
- Fillings of your choice
Covers of your choice such as nori seaweed
Mise en place: Make ready your teacup, a cup or bowl holding some water, salt shaker, rice, rice scoooper, fillings, plate to put the finished onigiri, and plastic wrap roll. It's easiest to do this near the sink, if you have the space.
Line the small bowl or teacup with a piece of plastic wrap that's big enough to hang well over the sides. Press the plastic down into the cup with your fingers.
Sprinkle the inside of the cup with a little water. Shake out the excess into the sink.
Sprinkle the inside of your wetted, plastic-lined cup with salt, turning the cup so the sides get sprinkled too. Shake out any excess salt.
Fill the cup with rice up to the brim. No need to press down; just fill it loosely.
Poke a hole in the middle of the rice, about halfway down in depth, with your finger.
Poke your filling of choice in the hole - about 1/2 a tablespoon or so. Here I have used traditional umeboshi.
Lightly press the rice over the filling.
Gather up the ends of the plastic wrap.
Twist and squeeze, pushing out any excess air. Twist tightly to form a ball. The squeezing is critical for ensuring that the salt sinks into the surface, and for making sure that the rice grains stick together enough so that the ball will not disintegrate when you bite into it.
At this point, if you just want round onigiri you can squeeze and press a bit and you're done! If you want triangular rice balls, you just need to squeeze a little differently.
Form an L shape with one hand and make three corners on the ball...
Use the other hand to turn the ball and squeeze back to front. Squeeze, turn, squeeze. Practice makes perfect!
And, here you have a perfectly shaped triangular onigiri.
If you're going to bring the onigiri on a picnic, just leave it in the plastic wrap, and bring along the nori separately; wrap the onigiri with the crisp nori just as you're going to eat it. If you're going to eat the onigiri right away, you can re-use the piece of plastic wrap for all the onigiri balls you make.
This method works marvelously for brown rice balls as well as white rice balls. Brown rice balls can be a bit tricky, since brown rice is not as sticky as white.
Non-traditional fillings redux
A lot of people ask about alternative fillings for onigiri. Basically anything that goes well with rice, is not too wet or oily, and is highly seasoned (read: quite salty) will work. There are several listed in the original onigiri article as well as in the comments. Remember that any filling you use must be well cooked. Here are some that have been successful for me to varying degrees:
- Anything flavored teriyaki-style: chicken, pork, beef, etc., chopped fine and cooked down a bit if too sauce-y.
- Chopped plain black or green olives. Salt cured ones work better than oil cured.
- Char siu pork, (there is a recipe for a simplified version at the bottom of this page) chopped up small. Don't use a fatty piece of pork though, or the fat will leak out to the surface of the rice ball, which is not only rather gross but will make the grains fall apart.
- Tiny little meat balls, well flavored with flavorings of your choice. Just salt and pepper do fine.
- Well drained pickles. Japanese style pickles may suite best but regular Western style pickles work quite well too.
Remember also that you can have plain onigiri, flavored only with salt, to bring along as the carb component of a portable obento lunch or picnic, to eat with other things like chicken wings, boiled eggs, little meatballs on a stick, or whatever strikes your fancy.
Yaki Onigiri (Grilled onigiri)

The rather burned looking onigiri on the top right in the photo above is a yaki onigiri, or toasted onigiri, made of brown rice (genmai). It's actually 'toasted' in a hot dry non-stick frying pan until the surface rice grains get brown and toasty, then brushed on both sides with soy sauce. This is a great way to revive onigiri that's gone a bit dry on the outside. You can put a little bit of sesame oil in the pan to add even more flavor. Brown rice onigiri is especially good as yaki onigiri, since the toasting really brings out the nutty flavor. You can also toast the onigiri in a toaster oven; toast first, then brush with soy sauce, and toast a bit more until your house smells like a giant rice cracker.
(A word of clarification here: What makes this method a little different is the use of both the cup and the plastic wrap: the cup helps you produce uniformly sized onigiri, which can be an issue for onigiri neophytes, and the plastic helps to avoid the red, sore hands. It's meant to be very beginner friendly. If you or your mother/aunt/wife/friend already uses a similar method, terrific! That's just confirmation that it works, isn't it? And, if you/your mother/etc. can whip out tons of onigiri without resorting to 'gimmicks', all the more power to you. )
Before asking a general question about onigiri, please check out the Onigiri FAQ page. Chances are your answer is already there!
Update, September 2009: I am closing comments here, since the same questions keep getting asked over and over. Maybe there are too many comments for people to read through. Most if not all your onigiri questions are answered in the Onigiri FAQ. If they are still not answered, then ask your question over there. Thanks!






Always wanted
I’ve never actually gotten the chance to make or try Onigiri, or riceballs, but have always wanted to. With this teqnique, as well as all the great recipes, I believe I’ll be making some soon. I’ve actually had an idea for somewhat of a desert onigiri, just using the shape.
It’s really nothing more than fired icecream, rolled in confectionate sugar, and small faces and such added with sculpting chocolate.
Such a great tip.
Such a great tip. Preparation made easy for beginners. True, you can practically include anything on onigiry, but the magic is on the taste palate of the individual preparing it (them). Great blogsite….Ampaiiiii!
Alternative Shapes
You can also try:
Put cling wrap down.
Place cookie cutter (after rinsing it with cold water) on the cling wrap.
Press rice into cookie cutter with a spoon and flatten evenly.
Remove cookie cutter.
Voila! Onigiri with any shape of your choice (although rounded points work best). Great for kids’ lunches.
No More Burnt Hands
Why not buy onigiri molds?
Take the hot rice, scoop it into the mold, take the top of the mold, press and turn out the product.
To add filling, fill the mold halfway, make an indentation in the rice, add filling, add more rice to cover and fill, apply lid, press and turn out.
The molds come in your usual rounded triangle shape and other shapes such as hearts and stars which are really quite jazzy with a bit of food coloring.
Flavored rice
My 8 year old loves onigiri so much he once made a whole tray full and took enough to school to feed his friends — though they were smaller, the size of a first grader’s hands as opposed to those of an adult.
He does not care for fillings or shapes other than round or triangular, but he does like to cook the rice in either weak miso broth or weak chicken broth with soy sauce. With miso broth he then puts his hands in cold saltwater before forming the balls; with chicken broth he uses water with rice vinegar on his hands. Just thought I would pass that tip along.
very tasty
As a Chinese American, I’ve been shoveling down rice all my life. I used to think it was bland, but when I tried making onigiri, I realized how good plain old rice could be. ^_^
onigiri
wow - love this site - came here via the bento site …
i usually have home made sushi in my bento but sometimes make onigiri - i have a little rice mold thing that makes 5 small bite size logs at a time - and rather than a filling i chop up peppers - red, green, yellow - and mix them through the rice (sushi rice sold in my local supermarket - i’m in New Zealand) - i cook the rice fresh each morning in my microwave!
Great how-to recipe!
I used this method to make my very first onigiri, and it turned out great! I made a regular-sized one and a mini onigiri. Here’s a picture of the mini one: http://img225.imageshack.us/img225/2228/1001875si0.jpg (sorry the picture is bad, my sister took the new good camera. It looked much better than in the picture just to let you know). I didn’t take a picture of the regular size one though, I was too hungry. But it looked perfect & fabulous -if I do say so myself- and it tasted good too. I used the revised method until it got the part where you mold the ball into a triangle (I used the traditional method for that, because I found it much easier than using the revised method). Anyways, thanks for the recipe!
If only... Umeboshi
I’ve always wanted to try umeboshi, however it’s not exactly an easy thing for me to find. I’m in a small town in eastern Ontario, Canada. About an hour away from both Ottawa and Montreal, the latter having the larger population and so a greater asian presence….however I’ve yet to find umeboshi anywhere. Being incredibly shy, I can’t bring myself to ask anyone for help when visiting that area…this may sound ridiculous, but since all food markets in that area have non-japanese asians working I feel worried that I may offend or be ridiculed for asking for a japanese item… That certainly doesn’t help.
I’ve looked online for some, however I’ve only found one store which shipped only to the United States. I was wondering if there were online stores that you were aware of that would ship to Canada, or maybe better advice as to how I could go about finding some in those stores… Would they maybe have an alternate name?
I’m also embarrassed by the fact that being a french canadian, my love for Japanese culture did start with the discovery of Japanese animation… I’m very glad to have found your post, however.
umeboshi in Montreal
There are many stores that sell umeboshi. The only store I know of dedicated to Japanese food is Miyamoto (http://www.sushilinks.com/miyamoto/index.html) in Westmount, but there are many Asian groceries that have a lot of japanese food. Fruits du Parc, in Galeries du Parc at the corner of Parc and Prince Arthur is a good one. There’s a decent Japanese/Korean place in NDG on Sherbrooke, I think near Grand Blvd. There are several in Cote des Neiges I think, though I don’t know that area so well. and of course, Chinatown will have some stuff, though there isn’t a huge Japanese presence there. There’s also a Japanese Cultural Center (http://www.geocities.jp/jcccmcanada/ though the web site seems to be down just now).
Thank you!
Thank you very much! I’ll try to track those places down when I’m in that area next time! I really appreciate this!
i don't know
The last time I was in Canada was…hmm, more than 10 years ago, so I don’t really know I’m afraid. But I’ve thrown out the question to readers…hopefully someone out there knows! (post here)
Don’t be shy at a store though…they want to sell you stuff, who cares if it’s Japanese! :)
And nothing wrong with getting to like something through anime…I got to like Switzerland a long time ago via an old anime series of Heidi! :)
I know what I'm eating tomorrow!
Thank you so much for this post! I visited Japan a few months ago, and became addicted to those pre-packaged onigiri in convenience stores. When I came home, I had no idea how to make them, but I had the same idea about the cup. Saran wrap would have definitely helped!
Instead of proper onigiri, I ended up with a cup of loosely packed rice with some soy-sauced, drained, canned salmon, and some crumbles of toasted nori—which wasn’t bad, but it wasn’t onigiri.
I…also didn’t know that you had to use hot rice…at least it was Japanese rice!
onigiri
I love this recipe on the quick and easy Onigiri recipe. Tried it this morning after work and loved it. Also froze it and used your plastic wrap method for storing cooking rice. So far so good. Seeing that this was the 1st time for me to make Onigiri I was impressed with the ease of making it. Had a few tonite at work and they were very good. Tried stuffed with tuna salad, chili and mango today. That was all I had at the house since have not been to the store in a few days.
Did have a question for you. Now, thanks to you, I have learned how to store rice and premade Onigiri. Would like to know if you have a certain way to store Sushi. I have tried the refridge and it gets really hard. Since most of the time I try to make my meals the day before it would be nice to know a way to store it to keep it as fresh as possible as well.
Thanks for everything
sushi rice
Actually sushi rice is a tricky thing to store. Because vinegar and salt have penetrated the rice grains, they tend to get pretty hard and lose that moistness pretty fast when cooled. A lot of companies in Japan have made attempts at selling good frozen or refrigerated sushi, with no success so far. (A supermarket here tried, and I think still does, sell frozen sushi, but I tried it once and it was horrible.) It’s okay at room temperature so if you mix it in the morning and have it for lunch it’s fine. I guess you can experiment with wrapping it in saran wrap while still warm and freezing it, though I can’t guarantee it will work.
I just did a quick surf around some Japanese food sites, and the consensus seems to be that freezing or refrigerating sushi rice is not a very good idea. I’ve seen some suggestions to just use leftover sushi rice as fried rice or in a porridge/soup.
sushi rice
Thank you Maki,
I had figured as much. Have been doing searches as well with not much luck on sushi storage. Every time I have tried it tastes like the supermarket sushi here in Texas, the taste and texture is bad.
Thanks again for all your info, love the website please keep it up
Interesting website
Wow, you have an interesting website!
I stumbled upon it for the first time and find it very interesting. I think the kids will like the Onigiri very much. I shall definitely give it a try and it is beef and vegetable stew with dumplings this weekend. It is the most perfect food for these wintry days.
Rice
Hi! I live in a small Russian town in Siberia so I was sure that it will be absolutely impossible for me to find exotic japanese rice or something like risotto rice here. But when I looked at the picture of uruchi-mai I immediately recognized that very type of rice that is the most wide-spread in our region :) I’m so glad ‘n I i’m going to try and make my first onigiri right away!
Thank you so much for this blog! Japanese culture is one of my greatest interests but I’m just a beginner in the sphere of cooking on the whole, let alone Japanese cuisine :) Your comments are so helpful and information is structured so clearly - that’s amazing!
how kneeded is the nori?
im wondering because i dont have any at home and i want to make some soon.
Thank you! My first onigiri in two years!! and in France!!
Thank you so much for the Onigiri 2.0 version. It worked very well for me. I am so happy to discover your site.
I am English but living in the south of France…there is a small section on Japanese food in the local supermarket, but it is very limited.
I travelled for three months in Japan and loved everything about it there; especially the food. My favourite was natto! I haven’t found it here though…or in the UK. Here’s hoping.
Thank you again. I look forward to popping into your site now and again for more Japanese food tips.
Best wishes,
Tara
Dango
I know this has nothing to do with what any of these other comments are about, but do you think you could tell me how to make bocchan dango? I have to make something for school again, and I cant find the recipe anywhere. Also, thank you for telling me haw to keep my rice good back in May of 07. I had forgotten to write a response. Thanks.
hmm, I’ve never tasted
hmm, I’ve never tasted bocchan dango myself so I don’t think I can re-create it. (Unless I’ve eaten something myself I don’t even want to attempt to try to re-create it, obviously!)
thanks
Oh, thanks anyway. I’ll just have to try to find a book or something.Thank you.=)
dango 2
Actually, do you think I can just take a plain dango recipe and add the flavor and colorings myself?
http://theanimeblog.com/2007/02/01/japanese-recipe-natsu-furutsu-dango/
This website has a recipe for plain dango in it. Could I just use that?
Oh, and what is mochiko?
Thanks for listening to all my ridiculously annoying questions.
Looks great!
I love Japanese sweets. I’ve got to try this!
Again, I have never had
Again, I have never had bocchan dango so I don’t know how they taste…but I don’t think that the color just comes from food coloring. Actually ‘dango’ is a generic term for a dumpling, so there are many different sweet dangos out there…
Mochiko is sweet rice or glutinous (mochi rice, it’s not actually sweet as in sugary sweet). You can find it at Japanese grocery stores sold as mochiko.
Nice! I’ve always wanted
Nice! I’ve always wanted to try to make my very own Japanese meal! Guess this will be the first step, eh? Onigiris are so cute!
Here is something
OK, after reading all the comments about fillings, i have to tell you guys about something quite different but tasty. I like to make something called Military Hoagies at home. The are not sandwiches, but rather a special mixture of ham and stuff toasted on one side of a loaf of French bread. i wanted to try this mixture with the Rice Balls (onigiri).
Items
What i do is get the ham out and mash it around with the sour cream first. make sure that you have no lumps of Ham anywhere. Then mix in the rest of the seasonings. there is no cooking required for this filling for the onigiri. (except for the fact that you need to cook the rice, lol) To make the Military Hoagies, just get a loaf of fresh French bread and cut about 2/3 in slices. then place them on a cookie sheet close to one another. then spoon out the filling on one side, then sprinkle the cheese on top. set the oven to broil at 350 to 400 and let them set for about 5 min, or until the cheese melts and browns just a little.
Rice
This is a great way to make it, but my place doesn’t sell short grain rice except for medium. Can I use medium grain rice instead of short grain?
If it’s like the 2nd rice
If it’s like the 2nd rice pictures in this article, yes!