Ohagi (to freeze-store for later)
- 1 raw rice : 1 1/2 rice cooker cup Sticky rice
- 1 raw rice : 1/2 rice cooker cup Plain rice
- 1 tsp Sugar
- 50 ml Salt water
- 400 grams Powdered koshi-an
- 120 grams Sugar
- 1 pinch Salt
- 3 tbsp Kinako
- 3 tbsp Sugar
- 1 pinch Salt
- Wash the sticky and plain rice together.
- Let soak in water for 1 hour.
- Once it's done soaking, move the rice to a rice cooker bowl, stir in the sugar, and fill water to the "white rice" line.
- Adding sugar prevents the sticky rice from becoming too hard.
- While the rice is cooking, prepare the anko.
- I used this particular powdered koshi-an this time.
- Combine the anko with the amount of water indicated on the package, add sugar, and heat.
- It will be fairly gooey at first.
- Cook until it's the desired thickness.
- Now prepare the kinako.
- The kinako-sugar ratio is 1:1, so prepare as much as you like to make.
- I made 3 tablespoons this time.
- Once the rice is finished, let steam for 10 minutes.
- Dip a rolling pin or similar rod damped with salt water to slightly mash the rice.
- Moisten a paper towel and wring out excess water.
- If you don't have paper towels, use cling wrap or a tightly wrung towel.
- Spread bean paste on the paper towel and place the rice on top.
- Grab enough rice for one ohagi from the rice cooker and cover the rest when not in use.
- You can eyeball the amount of bean paste and rice.
- It should look something like this.
- Use your fingers to gently stretch the bean paste completely around the rice.
- If the paper towel gets particularly dirty, wash, wring it out, and use it again.
- Since the kinako is just for sprinkling on the outside of the ohagi, they will end up slightly smaller than the ones wrapped in bean paste, so add a bit more rice to make the sizes similar.
- Wrap extra ohagi in cling wrap to prevent drying and freeze.
- These are covered in kinako, but when you defrost the ohagi, the kinako tends to melt, so I recommend defrosting first, then covering with kinako.
rice, rice, sugar, salt, sugar, salt, kinako, sugar, salt
Taken from cookpad.com/us/recipes/169396-ohagi-to-freeze-store-for-later (may not work)