Rice cooker

I made dinner in my rice cooker last night.

… insert blinking-in-disbelief emoji face …

Let me repeat that.

I MADE DINNER. In my RICE COOKER. And no, not just the rice, mind you, the WHOLE DINNER.

(Well, except for the salads, but let's not split hairs.)

It may have been the greatest discovery of my year in food.

First things first, do you have a rice cooker? If not, GET YOURSELF ONE WHAT ARE YOU WAITING FOR FOR THE LOVE OF PETE. I like the Korean Cuckoo brand. (Berliners, the tiny Korean shop on Spandauer Damm just past Klausener Platz sells Cuckoo rice cookers.) My model is very simple – it only has a "warm" and "cook" setting. Nothing special, no bells and whistles. (Unlike my friend Joe's rice cooker, which SPEAKS TO HIM IN KOREAN for crying out loud.) I honestly can't say specifically why I find the rice cooker such a transformative appliance in the kitchen, but not having to worry about getting rice (and other grains) cooked perfectly has actually improved my cooking life in ways other appliances just haven't.

Now that that's out of the way, you can focus on getting DINNER COOKED IN YOUR FLIPPING RICE COOKER WHY AM I SO EXCITED. The recipe I used comes from Lucky Peach Presents 101 Easy Asian Recipes that my friend Florian loaned to me after I had dinner at his house a few weeks ago and had to restrain myself from swallowing the entire serving bowl of spicy celery salad in front of the other guests' horrified eyes. (While pregnant with Hugo, I craved crunchy, salty things, like tortilla chips and pretzel sticks. But this pregnancy has me wild-eyed over crisp vegetables and vinegar. In fact, I've eaten my weight in salad since May, literally guzzling the dressing out of the bowl when we're done. The other night, I actually found myself drinking olive brine from the jar. SO GOOD.)

The whole book is great -  it thoroughly demystifies various Asian grocery items, the goofy photo styling is funny and refreshing, and it's full of easy recipes for things you want to eat right now. Like "Economy Noodles", a simple Malaysian noodle dish that apparently takes about 7.5 minutes to make, hot-and-sour soup from Boston's Joanne Chang, char siu pork and miso-glazed eggplant (though I have yet to find Japanese eggplant in this fair city of mine), not to mention the spicy celery salad. But the recipe which is alone worth the price of the book is this one, for Miso Claypot Chicken (No Claypot), though of course you can make it in a Dutch oven if for some reason you still don't have a rice cooker. (GET ON THAT.)

For the No Claypot Chicken you make a really simple marinade of soy sauce, oyster sauce (which I replaced with hoisin sauce with spectacular results), Shaoxing wine, miso paste, salt, sugar, pepper and sesame oil. Into the marinade go sliced shiitakes and chunks of chicken thigh meat. While this sits for a minute, you put rice, water or stock and a single ginger slice in the rice cooker, then you scrape the chicken mixture on top of the rice and then put chopped scallions on top.

THAT IS IT! (I still can't get over it.)

One cycle of my rice cooker was enough to cook the meal completely – the chicken incredibly tender and moist, the mushrooms silky and fragrant, the rice sticky and savory and a deep mahogany brown on the bottom. Consistency-wise, it's sort of like the sticky rice filling of stuffed lotus leaves at a dim sum restaurant, and actually flavor-wise, too, except this meal is richer and more savory. We scooped out the steaming chicken and rice directly from the bowl and ate it with the aforementioned spicy celery and a cucumber salad with peanuts and cilantro.

Weeknight dinner jackpot!

Salads

Now tell me, good-people-who-already-own-rice-cookers: are you all doing a collective face palm because you've been making delectable meals in your rice cookers for years and I'm only now finally catching up? If so, what other dinnertime miracles await me? Give me your best rice cooker recipes, please!

Note: This post includes affiliate links and I may earn a commission if you purchase through these links, at no cost to you. I use affiliate links only for products I love and companies I trust. Thank you.

Miso Claypot Chicken (No Claypot)
Adapted from Lucky Peach Presents 101 Easy Asian Recipes
Serves 4

2 tablespoons soy sauce
1 tablespoon hoisin sauce
1 tablespoon Shaoxing wine
1 tablespoon white or red miso
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon sugar
1/2 teaspoon sesame oil
White pepper to taste
4 boneless, skin-on chicken thighs, cut into 1" pieces
8 fresh shiitake mushroom caps, thinly sliced, or 4 dried shiitakes, soaked, stemmed, and thinly sliced
1 cup jasmine rice, rinsed and drained
1 cup chicken stock or water
1 slice (¼" thick) fresh ginger
2 scallions, cut into 1" pieces

1. In a large bowl, whisk together the soy sauce, hoisin sauce, wine, miso, salt, sugar, sesame oil, and a few grinds of white pepper. Add the chicken and mushrooms and fold to coat.

2. Combine the rice, stock, and ginger in a rice cooker or a small Dutch oven.
 
For a rice cooker: Scrape the chicken mixture and all of the marinade on top of the rice. Scatter with scallions. Cover, start the rice cooker, and cook until the cycle is done. Open the lid and check the chicken for doneness. Depending on your model, the chicken may need a couple more minutes to cook through. If it does, set the rice cooker for another cycle, press start, and check again in 5 minutes.
 
For a Dutch oven: Place over medium heat and cook for 5 minutes, until just simmering. Reduce the heat to low and cook until all the liquid is absorbed and the chicken is cooked through, about 25 minutes. Fluff the rice, scraping up the crust from the bottom of the pot.
 
3. Scoop out and serve by the bowlful, or eat it straight out of the rice cooker.

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75 responses to “Lucky Peach’s Miso Claypot Chicken (No Claypot)”

  1. Shannon Avatar
    Shannon

    Luisa, this looks so great. I ordered the cookbook, as I want to make more Asian dishes at home (I prefer Chinese to Thai as the smell of fish sauce makes my stomach turn). I need to order a rice cooker – do you know which model would be closest to yours? I get overwhelmed with all the choices….induction heating, pressure, stainless steel eco, etc.
    Thanks again and your blog makes me so happy – from a long-time reader.

    Like

  2. Susan Avatar
    Susan

    Wait. “Other grains”??? Please please please tell us more!

    Like

  3. Christine Avatar
    Christine

    Can’t wait to make this!! I have an InstantPot, which is just an electric pressure cooker, and it makes excellent rice along with all other things pressure cooked. I wonder if pressure cooker recipes can easily be manipulated to work in a rice cooker? I should think somebody’s on this already…

    Like

  4. Luisa Avatar

    Thank you – your comment made ME happy! 🙂 My exact model isn’t on the website (because I think mine is old – I bought it over 4 years ago and I’m pretty sure it’d been sitting in the shop for a while), but this is pretty much the closest thing: https://www.cuckoomallusa.com/cr-0331.html

    Like

  5. Miriam Avatar
    Miriam

    Hi Luisa, would a slow cooker produce a similar result?

    Like

  6. Luisa Avatar

    Ha! Well, besides white rice, it also does brown rice perfectly. And quinoa! Perfect quinoa! I’ve used it for barley with good results. I’ve heard steel-cut oats do wonderfully in it, but haven’t tried yet myself. I don’t like using the rice cooker for millet, for some reason…

    Like

  7. Smithereens Avatar

    Wow, this is the one that might save my back-to-school season!! Thanks for the idea, I had no clue you could do that much with a rice cooker.

    Like

  8. Luisa Avatar

    I don’t have a slow cooker, so I really can’t say. If you don’t have a rice cooker, you can make it in a Dutch oven instead.

    Like

  9. Sirena Avatar
    Sirena

    I just picked up an instant pot as well and am psyched to try this! If you do and wanted to report back that would be great :-)!

    Like

  10. Lynn Avatar

    This sounds SO delicious (despite the mushrooms, which, despite my Mum’s hopeful assurances, decades long, I have never learned to like) (that said, I’m sure I’ve eaten Asian mushrooms on holiday, and not minded at all). If I try it in my slow cooker, I’ll let you know how it goes.
    If you love crisp and sour, and endlessly flavourful, may I suggest limeandcilantro’s Gaw-bi-Thoke, a cabbage salad that is pretty much heaven on earth? I make it twice a week, with sweetheart cabbage, I skip the dried shrimp but follow his recipe to the letter, and I really do think you’d like it. 🙂

    Like

  11. Linda Avatar
    Linda

    This sounds soooo delish. Would you pls share the salad recipes with us? (I’ll order the cookbook but it won’t come for a week or so 🙂

    Like

  12. Yvette Jansen Avatar

    I love this book! I haven’t got it right here, but there is a recipe for stir fried fiddlehead fern in it, and it’s ridiculously delicious (although I made it with asparagus, because I don’t have the fiddlehead ferns.) This claypot chicken is very good too!

    Like

  13. Tara Avatar
    Tara

    That char Sui pork with the asparagus is 👌🏼. Gonna have to try the clay pot chicken! Congrats on baby #2! I craved all the carbs with my second baby and all the sour with my first. 😍

    Like

  14. Robin Avatar
    Robin

    I love my rice cooker too! I have a zojirushi one, similarly simple, and it is the BEST. I confess, I haven’t used it for cooking much more than plain grains – I worry about cleaning it properly although maybe it wouldn’t be a big deal. I’m vegetarian and with you completely on the pregnancy cravings – sour and savoury, all the way – so I’d love that celery salad recipe. I’ve eaten a ton of sauerkraut this pregnancy, straight out of the jar. So good.

    Like

  15. Sara Stegmann von Pritzwald Avatar
    Sara Stegmann von Pritzwald

    My rice cooker turns plain old dry beans into the softest buttery beans imaginable. Added to that, the push the button and walk away aspect is what I like the most! No more scorched pans, just amazing.
    I cannot wait for your book to be released to the world! I married a German and love to surprise him with things from home.
    Congratulations with your second child!

    Like

  16. Eliz Avatar
    Eliz

    This looks fabulous and I know my family would love it. Do you think it would still work if you doubled it? My people eat a lot!

    Like

  17. Luisa Avatar

    Ooh that sounds delicious, thank you for the tip!

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  18. Luisa Avatar

    Can’t wait to try it. And thank you!

    Like

  19. Luisa Avatar

    TELL ME MORE. What water:bean ratio do you use? How long does it take? Amazing! And thank you!

    Like

  20. Luisa Avatar

    If you have a big enough rice cooker, I don’t see why not. A 6-cup one…

    Like

  21. Annabel Avatar
    Annabel

    I did a “proof of concept” run with this in my InstantPot using the rice cooking setting last night. Because I was missing some ingredients, I had to fudge around some but I tried to keep to the proportions of liquid to rice to chicken to seasonings with my substitutions. And, mostly, it worked! Everything into the InstantPot in the order described in the recipe, lid on, pushed the “Rice” button, and off it went. I think it took about 30 minutes, but I forgot to time it – sorry!
    The family was dubious about the crusty rice at first, but it all disappeared off the plates. I thought the rice was just a little on the dry side, but whether that was because I had to make some substitutions or because the InstantPot cooks differently from a rice cooker, I don’t know. All in all it was tasty and easy, and if you have an InstantPot instead of a rice cooker, give it a go!

    Like

  22. Wendy Avatar
    Wendy

    You have inspired me to try other things in our rice cooker (which is 10 years old and the second we’ve owned together)! Such a wonderful way to eat–especially–for warm summer months. Mazel tov on your news. So wonderful. With my first girl, I ate a ridiculous amount of spicy Korean radish salad. Would not touch a pickle, but ate that salad constantly! Looking forward to more news and your cookbook.

    Like

  23. Katie Avatar
    Katie

    The Lucky Peach cookbook is the BEST! It’s well worth purchasing! It’s the cookbook I’ve been most excited to cook from and had the most consistent success in recent memory. I’ve cooked a ton of recipes from each chapter and still have lots of recipes on my to-cook list (including this one).
    Hugo is just about 6 weeks older than my son Gus and now my baby #2 is due about 6 weeks after yours. Very fun 🙂 Good luck with the pregnancy and preparing for the family transition.

    Like

  24. Judith Ross Avatar

    I just forwarded this to my husband, the gadget king. Yes, we have a rice cooker. It took me a while to warm up to the thing. And then I discovered that it was the perfect way to make oat groats or steel cut oats the night before. You just put in the oats and water, plug it in without pushing down the “cook” lever and go to bed. A hot breakfast is ready when you get up.
    Sadly, our rice cooker, along with the rest of our kitchen is in storage until we find our next home — probably Portland, Oregon. Once we are there and that Pod is unloaded, this East Coast woman is going to have another reason to love her rice cooker.
    Thank you!

    Like

  25. Karen Avatar

    Rick Bayless’ latest cookbook “More Mexican Everyday: Simple, Seasonal, Celebratory” has a number of complete meals made in a rice cooker (like this one: http://www.epicurious.com/recipes-menus/rick-bayless-20-minute-mexican-style-risotto-rice-cooker-recipe-article), which inspired me to invest in one. I love using my rice cooker for whole grains like wheat berries and faro.

    Like

  26. Amit Avatar

    WOW . Looks Amazing . cant wait to Try this . Never Tried in a Cooker . Will Try and Post a Feedback .

    Like

  27. Jordyn Avatar
    Jordyn

    Life changing! This was so, so good and so, so easy! I’m about to head back to work after a year-long maternity leave and have been searching for quick, healthy, “real food” dinners – this one is a keeper! Have owned a rice cooker for years and never realised it could be used for more than just rice.
    I doubled the amount of chicken thighs and added a bit more hoisin and soy to increase the liquid a bit. Subbed rice wine vinegar for the Shaoxing wine and it worked out fine.

    Like

  28. Luisa Avatar
  29. Luisa Avatar
  30. Luisa Avatar

    Oh, how neat – love to hear about other families with “bigger” age gaps. 🙂

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  31. Luisa Avatar

    Wonderful, thank you so much!

    Like

  32. Luisa Avatar

    So glad you liked it! All the best with your return to work!

    Like

  33. Damo Avatar

    Looks delish! My mum makes risotto in her rice cooker, I’ll have to let her know about this one so she can give it a go. Thanks x

    Like

  34. Dani Avatar

    AH I’m, not Damo….

    Like

  35. Marta Avatar

    hahaha, now I just need to get a rice cooker!

    Like

  36. Susan Avatar
    Susan

    I first came to ‘know’ you when you were pregnant with Hugo and my d-i-l was pregnant with my first grandchild. I raised my kids in Brookline MA in the 90’s while working at MFA, so have always embraced you in spirit. How lovely it is to have heard that they are now pregnant with the longed for second child, due in March (I can’t share my URL here, as I am the only one to know for a couple of months, even tho’ I share it here for the world to see…). We walk some of the same paths, in spirit, maybe. Bravo.

    Like

  37. Luisa Avatar

    Oh, how lovely! That makes me very happy indeed. 🙂

    Like

  38. Tony Avatar
    Tony

    Have you tried Salgam? (pronounced Schalgam) It is a Turkish drink made from fermented turnips and purple carrots. It is kind of sour, a bit salty, and you can get it hot (Acili).
    It’s good for what ails you!

    Like

  39. Ellen Avatar
    Ellen

    For readers thinking of buying rice cookers…I totally recommend getting one with a timer. You can set it when you leave in the morning to be ready at dinnertime, or the night before to be ready at breakfast…

    Like

  40. orcagna Avatar
    orcagna

    Yes, getting a rice cooker changes your life… I am still deeply in love with my Persian Khazar rice cooker – one that produces perfect tahdig (for those not in the know, tahdig is the delightfully crunchy crust in some Persian rice recipes which is hell to produce unless you don’t have a non-stick rice cooker). So you put rice, water and salt into the trusted Khazar, turn on a low heat, put a tea towel between the cooker and its lid and wait 15 minutes. Put the rice into a bowl, melt some butter in the rice cooker and then throw in some saffron-infused water (just a thimbleful). Put the rice back in, pat it down into a compact disk, back on with tea towel and lid, and have a go for another 15 minutes. Then put a big clean plate on top of the rice pan, turn, lift of the pan, and – tahdahhh – there is your lovely rice with a stunning golden tahdig on top. Variations: Add some almond slivers and barberries. Does that count as a recipe for cooking in your rice cooker? (Maybe I should add that I always use a serving plate from Deruta…)

    Like

  41. Annette Avatar
    Annette

    I made this in my stove-top pressure cooker last night – worked out very nicely! I used the “1” (= low) setting and cooked it for 6 minutes after reaching pressure, then took the cooker off the burner and let it do a natural release.
    Some changes: I used chicken breasts (haven’t found boneless thighs around here – Berlin, du hast es besser!) and, instead of mushrooms, thickly-sliced carrots which added some color. Important: I increased the amount of liquid to 1 1/2 cups – slightly less than what it normally takes to do rice in the PC because I figured there was some extra moisture coming from the chicken.
    Word of warning: this is rather salty. Next time, I wouldn’t add any extra salt, and I might cut down on the miso, too. And add some garlic to the marinade.

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  42. Luisa Avatar

    Thanks for trying that out! (And I can’t find boneless thighs here either – I deboned them myself…)

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  43. Luisa Avatar

    That sounds so delicious. Need to figure out how to hack my Korean cooker to make Persian rice!

    Like

  44. Annette Avatar
    Annette

    I’m impressed!

    Like

  45. Susan Avatar
    Susan

    So… follow the proportions on the grain’s package, but just cook it in the rice cooker?

    Like

  46. Luisa Avatar

    Actually, I usually end up googling “quinoa in a rice cooker” just to make sure I get the proportions right and because I’m too lazy to write it down. Quinoa should be 1:2 with water.

    Like

  47. Dara Avatar
    Dara

    Please give us the celery recipe too 🙏🏻

    Like

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