The pressure builds and you start counting down minutes until you eat. You got your sealing ring on, the lid locked down tight, and that little valve set. That feeling when the pressure starts to build is kinda like the kitchen's heartbeat, you know it means tasty stuff’s cookin.

While the pressure cooker does its thing, you can almost smell the sesame oil mixing with the chicken and ginger. You might spot the steam start to hiss as the timer ticks down. It’s that quiet moment where you’re both patient and eager for the quick release.
When the timer finally hits zero, you start the slow release or sometimes a quick release if you’re hungry, letting the pressure drop. The lid comes off and dang, that smell gets you. You recall the juicy, browned chicken mixed with savory tamari just waiting in that rice cocoon. Y’all, this is gonna be a great meal!
The Truth About Fast Tender Results
- Pressure cooking gets the chicken tender real fast.
- You don’t lose much moisture, so the meat stays juicy.
- The sealing ring traps all the flavors in.
- Ground chicken cooks evenly without fuss.
- Quick release means you control doneness well.
- Natural release helps keep rice fluffy and moist.
- This method cuts your usual cooking time by a lot, heck yeah.
All the Pieces for This Meal
- 1 teaspoon sesame oil
- 3⅓ ounces ground chicken
- 1 tablespoon tamari soy sauce
- 1 tablespoon sake or dry white wine
- 1 teaspoon sugar
- ½ teaspoon grated ginger
- 4 cups cooked Japanese rice
- 4 strips nori seaweed
- Water to rinse your hands while shaping onigiri (not an ingredient but helps!)
These ingredients come together in a way that feels simple but tastes super fresh. The sesame oil adds that nutty, warm flavor while the tamari soy sauce and sake give a nice depth and a little sweetness with the sugar to balance it out. Grated ginger gives a touch of zing you’ll notice right away.
Japanese rice is key. It’s sticky and soft, perfect for shaping into those triangle rice balls you’re after. Nori wraps not only add flavor but give you a handy grip when you munch. You’ll see, these pieces fit together like a little jigsaw of yum.

How It All Comes Together Step by Step
Step 1: First, you heat that teaspoon of sesame oil in a pan over medium heat. You gotta let it get warm but not smoking hot or you’ll lose the flavor.
Step 2: Then toss in your ground chicken and cook it up, stirring often, until it’s browned and cooked through. Smelling that start to get good is half the fun.
Step 3: Next add the tamari soy sauce, sake, sugar, and grated ginger. Give it a good stir and let it simmer 2 to 3 minutes until the liquid’s mostly soaked up. Then, you remove it from heat and let it cool a bit so it’s easier to handle.
Step 4: While the chicken mixture cools, wet your hands with some water so the rice doesn’t stick. Scoop about half a cup of cooked Japanese rice and flatten it a bit on your palm.
Step 5: Spoon a little bit of that chicken mix right into the center of your rice. Then carefully fold the rice over it, shaping it into a triangle and pressing gently but enough to hold its shape.
Step 6: Last but not least, wrap the bottom of each onigiri with a strip of nori seaweed. Repeat with all your ingredients, then either eat right away or wrap ’em up for later.
Easy Tweaks That Make Life Simple
- Use leftover cooked chicken if you got some handy instead of cooking fresh.
- Swap sake with a splash of dry white wine or even mirin if you want.
- Buy pre-cooked Japanese rice packs to save a step.
- Shape your onigiri with plastic wrap if you don’t wanna get rice stuck on your hands.
- Make a batch of chicken filling ahead and refrigerate for a day or two.
These shortcuts don’t mess with your yummy result and save you time. You’re gonna love how easy this comes together and still feels homemade.
That First Bite Moment
When you take that first bite, you notice how the warm rice softens against your lips. The chicken inside is tender with a slight sweet and salty kick that surprises you in the best way. You recall the ginger’s gentle zing cutting through the richness just right.
There’s a satisfying texture from the slightly crisp nori wrapping your fingers and your taste buds. You spot the way the triangle shape feels nice in your hand, like a little gift you made yourself. It’s simple but totally comforting.
You eat slow, savouring every mouthful, feeling how the flavors and textures just work. Y’all, these Chicken Onigiri totally make you wanna keep cookin and trying new fills next time. It’s food that hits you right in the soul with no fuss.

Smart Storage That Actually Works
If you don’t eat all your onigiri right away, you gotta keep ’em fresh for next time. Wrap each rice ball tightly in plastic wrap to prevent drying out. Then put ’em in an airtight container.
Store in the fridge and try to eat within 24 hours. When you want to eat again, let ’em come to room temp or warm ’em gently in the microwave with a cup of water nearby to keep rice moist.
For a longer storage, freeze wrapped onigiri individually. When you’re ready, thaw at room temp or use your microwave on low power. This way, you still get that good soft texture, no problem.
Your Most Asked Questions Answered
- Can I use white rice instead of Japanese rice? You can but Japanese rice is stickier and holds the shape better for onigiri.
- Do I have to use sake? Nope, dry white wine works just fine as a substitute.
- What’s the sealing ring for? It keeps your pressure cooker airtight which lets pressure build safely inside.
- Can I freeze these onigiri? Yes, just wrap 'em individually and freeze. Thaw before eating.
- Should I do a quick release or natural release? For filling like this, quick release works to stop cooking quickly and keep the chicken juicy.
- How sticky should rice be? It’s gotta be sticky enough to hold shape but not mushy. Cook it like Japanese sushi rice style.

Chicken Onigiri (Japanese Rice Balls)
Equipment
- 1 Mixing bowl Large
Ingredients
Main ingredients
- 1 teaspoon sesame oil
- 30 ounces ground chicken
- 1 tablespoon tamari soy sauce
- 1 tablespoon sake or dry white wine
- 1 teaspoon sugar
- 0.5 teaspoon grated ginger
- 4 cups cooked Japanese rice
- 4 strips nori seaweed
Instructions
Instructions
- Heat sesame oil in a pan over medium heat until warm but not smoking.
- Add ground chicken and cook, stirring often, until browned and cooked through.
- Add tamari soy sauce, sake, sugar, and grated ginger. Stir and simmer for 2-3 minutes until liquid is mostly absorbed. Remove from heat and let cool.
- Wet hands with water. Scoop about ½ cup rice and flatten in palm.
- Place small spoonful of chicken mix in the center of rice.
- Fold rice over filling and shape into a triangle, pressing gently to form.
- Wrap bottom of onigiri with a strip of nori seaweed.
- Repeat process with remaining ingredients. Eat immediately or wrap for later.




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