These savory stuffed rice balls are fun to make when you've got friends or kids to help! They're also super portable so you can make 'em and take 'em—great cold or room temp. You'll stuff seasoned rice balls with juicy dark meat chicken stir-fried with a gingery sauce, scallions, and sesame seeds. Then wrap in seaweed strips for yummy mess-free handling!
The quantities provided above are averages only.
Produced in a facility that processes eggs, milk, fish, peanuts, sesame, shellfish, soy, tree nuts, and wheat.
1 tablespoon
Sesame Seeds
(Contains: Sesame)
2.25 cup
Jasmine Rice
5 teaspoon
Rice Wine Vinegar
2 unit
Scallions
1 unit
Roasted Seaweed Sheets
3 ounce
Stir-Fry Sauce
(Contains: Sesame, Soy, Wheat)
10 ounce
Diced Skinless Dark Meat Chicken
Salt
Sugar
Cooking Oil
• In a medium pot, combine rice, 3 cups water, and ½ tsp salt. Bring to a boil, then cover and reduce to a low simmer. Cook until rice is tender, 15-18 minutes. • Keep covered off heat until ready to use in Step 3.
• While rice cooks, wash and dry produce. Trim and thinly slice scallions, separating whites from greens. • Open package of chicken* and drain off any excess liquid. Heat a drizzle of oil in a medium, preferably nonstick, pan over medium-high heat. Add chicken and scallion whites; cook, stirring occasionally, until chicken is browned and cooked through, 4-6 minutes. • Add stir-fry sauce, scallion greens, and sesame seeds. Cook, stirring, until sauce thickens and chicken is coated, 30-60 seconds. Turn off heat; set filling aside to cool for at least 15 minutes.
• Fluff rice with a fork. Add rice wine vinegar and ½ tsp sugar and gently stir to combine. • Crumble two roasted seaweed sheets over rice and stir to evenly combine until rice becomes slightly sticky. • Set rice mixture aside, uncovered, until cool enough to handle, at least 15 minutes (but no more than 1 hour!).
• While rice and filling cool, cut or tear remaining roasted seaweed sheets along perforation lines into 1- to 2-inch-wide strips. Cover seaweed strips with a dry kitchen towel.
• Once filling and rice are cool enough to handle, fill a medium bowl with warm water. Place pot with rice and pan with filling alongside. • Dip both hands in bowl of water (TIP: This will help prevent the rice from sticking to your hands—repeat as needed throughout the process!). Using both hands, form ⅓-½ cup rice into a ball, slightly compressing as you go (it doesn't need to be perfectly round). Place rice ball in one hand, then gently flatten into a 3½-inch-wide disk using the other. • Add about 2 tsp filling to center of rice disk. Using your fingers, gently fold rice up and around filling (like you're stuffing a meatball), adding another 1-2 TBSP rice on top as needed to help enclose filling. Shape and seal into a ball.
• Once filling is enclosed, gently form into a 2-inch-thick disk (TIP: Avoid flattening it too much!). Hold the disk in one hand; use your other hand to begin forming a triangle shape by pinching with your fingers. • Continue pinching and shaping the sides into angles, rotating the onigiri in your hands, until triangular in shape. TIP: Compact the rice without squeezing too hard. A gentle touch helps the onigiri hold its shape while keeping the rice tender. • Working one at a time on a clean work surface, wrap one seaweed strip around onigiri by placing onigiri in center of seaweed strip, then folding it up and over to other side. • Repeat Steps 5 and 6 until all rice and filling have been used. TIP: You may have seaweed strips left over. Store in an airtight container in a cool, dry place. We like crumbling them on top of rice bowls, stir-fries, and ramen!
• Serve onigiri immediately or tightly wrap each piece individually in foil or plastic wrap. Refrigerate up to 2 days; serve cold from the refrigerator or bring to room temperature (just don't let them sit out for more than 2 hours!).
Poultry is fully cooked when internal temperature reaches 165°.