Umeboshi Ochazuke

I am a teaholic and a big fan of Japanese food, so I’ve always wanted to make Ochazuke (お茶漬け). Ochazuke is known as Japanese tea rice. It’s basically a bowl of Japanese rice with toppings. When ready to eat, just pour freshly brewed hot tea over the rice. This dish reminds me of our local rice porridge but in a prettier form.

Related Recipes:
See Also:

Umeboshi Ochazuke (Plum Japanese Tea Rice) Recipe

The version I am featuring today, umeboshi ochazuke (梅干お茶漬け), translates as pickled plum Japanese tea rice. With the strong sour-salty taste of the pickled plums, you don’t need a lot of toppings in the bowl, so it’s perfect for starters making ochazuke like me.

OCHAZUKE SHORT-CUT PREMIX PACKS

Ochazuke Premixes
I saw these ochazuke packs at Daiso (SG) and they were what spurred me to make ochazuke. The brand name translated to English is “Shirako-Nori”. You can buy such ochazuke premixes at the Japanese supermarkets. I tried all 3 flavours and I honestly can’t tell much difference among them. So my favourite will be the one with the purple packaging, because it is the original flavour and comes in 6 sachets instead of 4. It doesn’t matter to me that there isn’t salmon (red packaging) or nozawana wasabi (green packaging) because I prefer to use my own toppings anyway.

Ochazuke Premixes (Opened)
There are individual-sized sachets inside a pack, so they are really convenient. The sachet contains granules stock, shredded seaweed & that cute tiny rice crackers (bubu arare).

UMEBOSHI

Shiso Umeboshi (Pickled Plum)

I bought this shiso umeboshi (pickled dried plum) from Donki (SG). If you love salty-sourish foods, you will love this ingredient! Since the pickled plums have a strong flavour (predominantly sour & salty with a mild tinge of sweetness), the umeboshi can stand on its own in a bowl without many other toppings.

STEP-BY-STEP PHOTOS

Shiso Umeboshi (Pickled Plum) - Finely chopped.
Prepare umeboshi by removing the pit and then finely chop the plum flesh.

Japanese Tea Leaves Blend
Prepare some tea leaves in a tea pot. I happened to have a Yabukita tea blend at home which comes with added matcha powder, hence my tea is green. Usually the tea leaves you use will the hojicha type which is brown.

Umeboshi Ochazuke (Plum Japanese Tea Rice) Recipe
Add cooked Japanese rice in a bowl. I made Japanese short-grain rice with nutritious 16-grains which looks extra pretty. This was actually leftover refrigerated rice, I reheated it in the microwave with a bowl of water so this can be whipped up anytime.

Umeboshi Ochazuke (Plum Japanese Tea Rice) Recipe
Scatter the sachet of ochazuke mix onto the rice.

Umeboshi Ochazuke (Plum Japanese Tea Rice) Recipe
Add toppings – namely diced umeboshi, ikura fish roe, and sliced Japanese scallions. When you are ready, pour freshly boiled hot water to the tea pot and let the tea brew for 1 minute.

Umeboshi Ochazuke (Plum Japanese Tea Rice) Recipe
Pour some hot tea into the rice. Stir to dissolve the soup granules slightly.

Umeboshi Ochazuke (Plum Japanese Tea Rice) Recipe

Umeboshi Ochazuke (Plum Japanese Tea Rice) Recipe

It’s done! This was my pretty & pampering pick-me-up ochazuke WFH lunch special!

Umeboshi Ochazuke (Japanese Tea Rice) Recipe

This recipe use an ochazuke instant premix pack as a shortcut. You can also easily make the ochazuke mix yourself – recipe in the cooking note below.

Check out the ingredients and step-by-step photos on the previous page.

Ingredients:

You Also Need:

  • tea pot with filter sieve (or tea leaves put in a disposable tea bag)

Directions:

  1. Prepare the bowl. In a rice bowl, add the cooked rice. Sprinkle the ochazuke mix sachet evenly over the rice. Then top with umeboshi, ikura and scallions.
  2. Make the tea. Add tea leaves into the filter sieve of the tea pot. Pour boiling water into the tea pot and let it brew for 1 minute.
  3. To serve, pour 120ml freshly brewed hot tea over the rice. Stir gently to dissolve the granules and serve immediately.

Cooking Note(s)

  1. If you don’t have instant ochazuke mix, you can make your own ochazuke mix: 1/2 tbsp shredded seaweed, 1/2 tsp dashi granules & 1 tsp tiny rice cracker (bubu arare, which can be purchased from Japanese supermarkets).
  2. Eat this immediately, otherwise the rice will soak up all the broth in no time.