Maki Sushi Recipe - Love and Lemons (2024)

Fun & fresh maki sushi rolls made with brown rice, roasted shiitakes, cabbage, cucumber, avocado, and a tangy carrot-ginger dipping sauce.

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Maki Sushi Recipe - Love and Lemons (1)

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It’s sushi day! You might be wondering – why the heck would you roll sushi at home when it’s so much easier to order it at a restaurant? Because this maki sushi recipe is fun, affordable, and way more fresh than take-out sushi… but the best part is that you can get creative about what you choose to fill your rolls with. No more cucumber-only veggie sushi rolls!

These maki sushi rolls are filled with savory roasted shiitake mushrooms, avocado, cucumber, and red cabbage for crunch & color. There’s also a fun dipping sauce – the carrot ginger dressing from the Rainbow Kale Salad that I posted on Monday. If you make that salad and reserve just a bit of the dressing it makes for a yummy, fresh, and unexpected sauce for these rolls.

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What is Maki Sushi

Maki is simply a sushi roll with fish or veggies, and rice, rolled in seaweed.

How to Make Sushi Rice

While white rice is traditional, I opt for healthier short grain brown rice which works great. Here’s how to make it:

  1. In a medium saucepan, combine the rice, water, and olive oil and bring to a boil.
  2. Cover, reduce the heat, and simmer for 45 minutes.
  3. Remove the rice from heat and let sit, covered, for 10 more minutes.
  4. Fluff with a fork and fold in the rice vinegar, sugar, and salt. Cover until ready to use.

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Here’s how we roll:

Step #1 is to not stress out. Your rolls don’t have to be perfect. The first one might even fall apart, but even if it does you’ll pick up the pieces, smush them together and (hopefully!) enjoy eating it anyway. The second one will be better, and the third will be a breeze.

  1. Place a small bowl of water and a kitchen towel near your work area as your hands will get sticky.
  2. Place one nori sheet, glossy side down, onto a bamboo mat and press a handful of rice onto the lower two-thirds of the sheet.
  3. At the bottom of the rice place your toppings (see picture). Don’t overfill or it will be more difficult to roll.
  4. Use the bamboo mat to tuck and roll the nori. Once rolled, use the bamboo mat to gently press and shape the roll. Place the roll to the side, cut side down.
  5. Use a sharp chef’s knife to cut the sushi. Wipe the knife clean with a damp towel between cuts.
  6. Serve with soy sauce, tamari, or the carrot ginger sauce listed below.

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These are best enjoyed just after they’re rolled, but the dipping sauce and mushrooms can be made in advance to speed up the process. If you want to make this in advance (i.e. for lunch the next day) store whole, uncut rolls wrapped up in the fridge. This keeps the rice from drying out after the pieces are cut. Slice as you’re ready to eat.

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If you’re not a fan of mushrooms, give this option a try.

Happy rolling!

For more snacks and appetizer ideas, check out this post!

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Maki Sushi Recipe

rate this recipe:

Prep Time: 1 hour hr

Cook Time: 20 minutes mins

Total Time: 1 hour hr 20 minutes mins

Serves 2 (makes 3 rolls)

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Ingredients

Roasted Shiitakes

Carrot ginger dipping sauce

  • ½ cup chopped roasted carrots, about ¾ cup raw carrots
  • ⅓ to ½ cup water
  • ¼ cup extra-virgin olive oil
  • 2 tablespoons rice vinegar
  • 2 teaspoons minced ginger
  • ¼ teaspoon sea salt

Sushi rice

For the rolls

  • 3 nori sheets
  • 1 cup thinly sliced red cabbage
  • 3 long thin strips of cucumber
  • ½ avocado, sliced into strips
  • Sesame seeds, for sprinkling
  • Tamari, for serving
  • Pickled ginger, optional, for serving

Instructions

  • Prepare the roasted shiitakes: Preheat the oven to 400°F and line a large and small baking sheet with parchment paper. Toss the shiitake mushrooms with the olive oil and tamari and toss to coat. Spread in an even layer on the large baking sheet. Roast for 25 to 30 minutes or until browned around the edges. On the second sheet, roast the carrots for the dipping sauce.

  • Make the carrot ginger dipping sauce: In a blender, combine the roasted carrots, water, olive oil, rice vinegar, ginger, and salt and blend until creamy. Chill until ready to use and set aside the shiitakes until you're ready to roll.

  • Make the sushi rice: In a medium saucepan, combine the rice, water, and olive oil and bring to a boil. Cover, reduce the heat, and simmer for 45 minutes. Remove the rice from heat and let sit, covered, for 10 more minutes. Fluff with a fork and fold in the rice vinegar, sugar, and salt. Cover until ready to use.

  • Assemble the maki sushi rolls. Place a small bowl of water and a kitchen towel near your work area as your hands will get sticky. Place one nori sheet, glossy side down, onto a bamboo mat and press a handful of rice onto the lower two-thirds of the sheet. At the bottom of the rice place your toppings (see picture). Don’t overfill or it will be more difficult to roll. Use the bamboo mat to tuck and roll the nori. Once rolled, use the bamboo mat to gently press and shape the roll. Place the roll to the side, cut side down. Repeat with remaining rolls.

  • Use a sharp chef’s knife to cut the sushi. Wipe the knife clean with a damp towel between cuts.

  • Sprinkle with sesame seeds. Serve with the dipping sauce, tamari, and pickled ginger, if desired.

Notes

*If using a rice cooker, use 1½ cups water and omit the olive oil.

To store your rolls overnight, store them uncut, wrapped in plastic wrap, in the fridge. This helps keep the rice from drying out. Slice as you're ready to eat.

Maki Sushi Recipe - Love and Lemons (2024)

FAQs

What is the difference between sushi and maki roll? ›

Sushi refers to food made with cold boiled rice moistened with rice vinegar and shaped into bite-sized portions. Maki is a type of sushi that is made by rolling the rice around strips of vegetables or raw fish and then slicing the resulting tube into bite-sized pieces. It comes from the Japanese word maku "to roll up."

What is maki made of? ›

What Is A Maki Roll? A Maki (Makiushi) is a traditional sushi roll that consists of fish, vegetables, rice and rolled up in a seaweed. The sushi roll will sometimes include various sauces and the meat can be either cooked or raw.

Why is maki so expensive? ›

There are a number of reasons that can make sushi expensive, but most often, it's the cost of raw ingredients. There is a huge amount of labor involved in making sushi, and this labor is usually paid by the piece. This is why there are some great deals on sushi, but the quality of the food is usually poor.

What is the hardest part of making sushi? ›

While sushi-making overall isn't excessively difficult, some aspects can pose challenges, especially for beginners. One of the trickiest parts is achieving the perfect sushi rice consistency, as it requires precise measurements and the right cooking technique.

What is the difference between California maki and maki? ›

"The difference between California Rolls and Maki-zushi is the way it's rolled. The California Roll has the sushi rice on the outside with the nori on the inside. A Maki roll has the sushi rice on the inside with the nori on the outside.

How many pieces of sushi are in a maki? ›

The roll is formed with the help of a bamboo mat, called a makisu. The typical roll order is made up of a roll as described above, cut into six or eight pieces.

Why do people call maki sushi? ›

Maki or Makizushi is the old name for sushi. More precisely, maki refers to rolled sushi rice, where 'sushi' means rice seasoned with vinegar. Moreover, maki sushi can be balled into a cylinder with a thin strip of cucumber, soy paper, cabbage, and omelet despite the traditional nori sheets.

What is maki sushi in English? ›

Its real name is Makizushi

However, “sushi's” real name is Makizushi, or “Maki.” Maki refers to “rolled” sushi rice. The rice is rolled in a sheet of dry seaweed, called “nori.” It could occasionally be wrapped using other media, such as omelet, thin cucumber, and even soy paper.

What is the yellow thing in maki? ›

Or maybe you've seen a bright yellow center in a sushi roll and weren't sure what it was or what it's called. Put most simply, oshinko (meaning, "fragrant dish" in Japanese) is a variety of Japanese pickled vegetable, tsukemono.

What is sushi with rice on the outside called? ›

Uramaki. The term uramaki is, in many ways, as much of a general term as makizushi. Essentially, an uramaki roll is any sushi roll that has been turned “inside out,” with the rice on the outside and the nori on the inside wrapped around the ingredients – which is almost every sushi roll served in the United States.

What do you call the orange in California maki? ›

The mysterious orange balls on sushi do have a name: tobiko. This translates to flying fish roe, which is used in Japanese cuisine and commonly in sushi. Tobiko are small fish eggs in comparison to salmon roe, for example. But Tobiko is larger than masago, which is capelin roe.

What is the trick to rolling sushi? ›

Once your ingredients have been placed, tuck your thumbs underneath the makisu and place your fingers on the opposite side of the ingredients. Then roll your mat and nori towards your fingers and apply pressure. Be sure that the rice rolls completely over the ingredients and there isn't anything sticking out.

Should you dip maki in soy sauce? ›

Soy sauce is a great way to give a little umami addition to sushi. However, it shouldn't overpower the taste of the fish or rice. Lightly dunk your sushi fish-first into the soy sauce. Avoid getting the rice in the sauce, as it will soak up too much salt and detract from the flavor of the sushi.

References

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