White Sakura Mochi (Cherry Blossom Rice Cakes)
- 350 grams Mochi rice
- 200 ml Water
- 2 tbsp White sugar
- 25 grams x 8 Cherry blossom flavoured adzuki bean paste (or normal adzuki bean paste)
- 8 Salted cherry leaves
- Rinse the rice, then add to the rice cooker and fill with water up to the mark for cooking 1 rice cooker cup of rice.
- Add sugar and stir well.
- Press Start on the rice cooker.
- You don't need to soak the rice beforehand.
- Weigh and divide the cherry blossom an into 25 g portions.
- You can use tsubu-an or koshi-an.
- Rinse the salted cherry leaves gently and soak in water to desalt for about 15 minutes.
- Rinse the leaves again and carefully pat dry with paper towels.
- After the rice is cooked, divide it into 8 portions.
- Moisten your hands, then take one portion of the rice and squeeze it several times to gently squash the rice grains.
- Shape into flat rounds and place the anko on top.
- Wrap the anko with the rice.
- Be careful not to burn yourself because it will be quite hot!
- If it sticks to your hands, moisten your hands again with water.
- Try to completely cover the adzuki paste with the rice.
- You can also place the rice on a piece of cling film first and press it into a flat round with a plastic spatula.
- In this way your hands will remain clean.
- Shape the rice balls into ovals.
- Wrap the oval-shaped rice with cherry leaves and serve Instead of cherry leaves, you can also use kinako or sesame seeds to coat the rice.
- For a change, you can also put the rice inside and cover it with anko for an inside-out version.
- This time, I used sakura-an.
- The contrasting pink and white makes these look so pretty.
- If you coat the rice with plenty of kinako (roasted soy powder) after step 9, they are called kinako ohagi.
- Children love them!
- !
rice, water, white sugar, adzuki bean paste, cherry leaves
Taken from cookpad.com/us/recipes/168779-white-sakura-mochi-cherry-blossom-rice-cakes (may not work)