You Especially Want To Eat These If You Live Overseas! Soy Sauce Rice Crackers

The rice crackers my family brings me from Japan are delicious, but I still want to eat rice crackers in between their visits... We can buy them out here, but they're expensive. I referred to several sites to come up with this. The last microwaving step idea came from the fact that Chinese shrimp crackers can be cooked that way...and it worked.
I used generic rice flour which is easier to get overseas, rather than joshinko rice flour. It absorbs water differently from joshinko flour I think.
Be sure to do Step 9. Brush the sauce on 2 to 3 times until the crackers are as flavored as you want them to be. Recipe by Mon*chou-chou*
You Especially Want To Eat These If You Live Overseas! Soy Sauce Rice Crackers
The rice crackers my family brings me from Japan are delicious, but I still want to eat rice crackers in between their visits... We can buy them out here, but they're expensive. I referred to several sites to come up with this. The last microwaving step idea came from the fact that Chinese shrimp crackers can be cooked that way...and it worked.
I used generic rice flour which is easier to get overseas, rather than joshinko rice flour. It absorbs water differently from joshinko flour I think.
Be sure to do Step 9. Brush the sauce on 2 to 3 times until the crackers are as flavored as you want them to be. Recipe by Mon*chou-chou*
Steps
- 1
Add the boiling water to the rice flour and mix with a fork. Add the water little by little while adjusting the texture of the dough.
- 2
When the dough is cool enough to handle, knead it well.
- 3
Form into golfball-sized balls.
- 4
Flatten the balls with your hands. Steam for about 30 minutes.
- 5
Smash up the steamed rice patties with a mortar and pestle until smooth. This is easier to do if you don't cover the pestle.
- 6
Knead the dough well with your hands.
- 7
Form into pingpong sized balls. Sandwich between 2 sheets of parchment paper or plastic film and roll out thinly. I rolled them out to about 2 mm thickness.
- 8
Leave them to dry for about 5 days. Turn them once every day. I left them to dry for 7 days this time.
- 9
Dry them out in a 50 °C oven for an hour. My oven actually doesn't go as low as 50 °C, so I "bake" them at 60 °C for 40 minutes.
- 10
The traditional way is to cook them on a grill, while brushing them with sauce.
- 11
But I cut corners. Microwave the rice cakes for about 50 seconds at 1000 W. They'll puff up like this. If it looks like they're burning, turn the microwave off immediately.
- 12
They look and taste just like rice crackers without sauce. I was so happy when I discovered this.
- 13
Brush the surface with sauce and leave the crackers to dry on a rack. it's really cutting corners, but they are rice crackers. Real rice crackers...
- 14
The crackers do soften a bit because of the sauce. If that bothers you, let them dry out very very well on a rack.
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