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Sushi rice press for rice cakes.
Has anyone used these? Have a recommendation for one?
I've been having luck with rice cakes for 6+ hours on the bike but they're all super crumbly.
I've tried putting it in a pan and squashing it down with another pan. It works better but still not great.
Also, if you have hints on on-bike rice cakes that'd be effin wonderful!
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Re: Sushi rice press for rice cakes.
I assume you've read the Feed Zone Portables book and are following some of the recipes?
Mentioned in the book is the use of a specific type of rice, Calrose rice I believe. Perhaps you'll have better luck with a different type of rice.
What helped me was taking the pan off the burner roughly 5 minutes before the rice was fully cooked. Check the rice for doneness, then put the lid back on and let sit for 5 minutes. Perhaps you need to vary that time from 5 minutes.
You may need more water than specified. Find out what works for YOU and for that you'll have to experiment as recipes can be more guidelines than absolutes.
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Re: Sushi rice press for rice cakes.
Musubi maker. There are other choices out there. No endorsement on this one, just the first hit on the search.
Ko Craft Musubi Makers
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Re: Sushi rice press for rice cakes.
https://www.amazon.com/Japanese-Bamb.../dp/B072KL1QND
bamboo sushi roll mat
Your problem is probably using the wrong kind of rice. Basmati, Jasmine, thai mai are all too long grained and not sticky enough.
You need a shorter grained rice. Calrose will probably work. If you live near a Japanese grocer, try to buy Koshihikari which is the most popular rice type in Japan.
https://www.amazon.com/Koshihikari-R.../dp/B008H19NWA
Are you making Lim Cakes?
Sick of Sweet? Try Savory Bacon and Egg Rice Cakes
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Re: Sushi rice press for rice cakes.
Addendum: While you're experimenting, I'd suggest making 1/2 recipes so failures aren't as expensive. I find an 8x8" dish works perfect.
And if you're looking for recipes and haven't a copy of Lim's and Thomas' book, Feed Zone Portables, get it.
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Re: Sushi rice press for rice cakes.
I used the Lim cakes for my last brevet season. The worked great and were a welcome change from the sweet drek I had been using. The Calrose or Kokuho rice worked well for me. After about 10 hours in a handlebar bag they do get a bit crumbly but short of that they held up fine and even broken were great fuel for these long rides.
Guy Washburn
Photography >
www.guywashburn.com
“Instructions for living a life: Pay attention. Be astonished. Tell about it.”
– Mary Oliver
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Re: Sushi rice press for rice cakes.
Koshihikari Rice and a musubi press were the ticket. I need to fine-tune my cooking process but I'm so much closer. Thanks!
To make things more bar like I'll probably wrap things in nori but i have a bit more experimenting to do.
Now the real question is this: If I make this stuff on the Thursday I fly to Kansas and I check them in an insulated bag w/ice will they keep until Saturday? I suspect that they will be bricks by then.
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Re: Sushi rice press for rice cakes.
Make the rice ball a little bigger. Immediately wrap in saran wrap. It should stay moist and not become a brick. It only gets hard if it dries out. I've kept onigiri for a couple days. Its fine
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Re: Sushi rice press for rice cakes.
Originally Posted by
vertical_doug
Make the rice ball a little bigger. Immediately wrap in saran wrap. It should stay moist and not become a brick. It only gets hard if it dries out. I've kept onigiri for a couple days. Its fine
Thanks!
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Re: Sushi rice press for rice cakes.
THE ONIGIRI FIELD GUIDE: A Comprehensive Guide to Eating Convenience Store Onigiri
When I was in Japan, we'd just stop by the Lawson Convenience store and pick up some Onigiri. If you are in LA, just swing by a Japanese Grocer or Korean for that matter, and you can probably pick up some pre-made wrapped onigiri. It'll will keep for a few days when you are in Kansas. I'd skip the salmon, and just get the UMEBOSHI which is a onigiri with a pickled plum (sour) in the center. Just put in refrigerator and I am sure it will keep for 3 days or so.
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Re: Sushi rice press for rice cakes.
Pickled plum (sour) is putting it rather mild Mr. Doug. Sticky rice in a baggie got me thru many a ride, but in Hawaii a Spam Musubi is the total ticket. Salty, fat for the long haul, and plenty of carbs. They will stick to your ribs and are available at every 7-11 on the Islands. And sometimes they are even fresh.
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Re: Sushi rice press for rice cakes.
I was hoping to ease him into the spam part a little more gently.
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Re: Sushi rice press for rice cakes.
Our downstairs neighbor who is a Japanese chef (and is Japanese) told me to put an onigiri in the microwave for 30 seconds if they are a bit old. "Restores" the rice a bit. But toss the fish ones if they are old for obvious reasons.
I like the kombu onigiri, but I like more kombu in it than most prefab onigiri has. Umeboshi plum is good as long as it is good umeboshi and not stuff that has gone old and mega-briney.
Last edited by j44ke; 04-30-2019 at 07:05 PM.
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