Gadget works
@oahuwriter (26773)
United States
July 26, 2022 5:08pm CST
Last night watching NCIS Hawaii, there was a scene where Spam Musubi, rice balls in was introduced! Well, I decided to have Spam Musubi, today. I had bought musubi maker, so I thought to use it today too.
Here are my musubi made from the musubi gadget. Looks like they'll hold together. Directions hadn't said to put the seaweed before the cooked rice. I just like it with seaweed, yum.
5 people like this
5 responses

@much2say (57760)
• Los Angeles, California
28 Jul 22
@oahuwriter Are you going to try other fillings? Like ume (salted plum)? I like rice mixed with furikake too.
1 person likes this
@oahuwriter (26773)
• United States
28 Jul 22
@much2say
I like ume & Furikake ones too, buy mostly plain ones to eat.

1 person likes this
@oahuwriter (26773)
• United States
27 Jul 22
Me too. As you spoon rice into the gadget, press it so as to keep rice together, packing rice into gadget will keep rice ball together. I just put my Spam a too rice ball to violla Spam Musubi!
1 person likes this

@LindaOHio (222222)
• United States
27 Jul 22
What is musubi? Rice wrapped in seaweed?
1 person likes this

@LindaOHio (222222)
• United States
28 Jul 22
@oahuwriter Thank you for the explanation.
1 person likes this
@oahuwriter (26773)
• United States
28 Jul 22
Rice ball. Sticky rice makes good rice balls. Usually shaped in a triangle. Cupping your hands with sticky rice yields a triangle shaped little rice cake. By gadget a triangle or rectangle shape is available. I sprinkle light salt to hands before cupping rice, yum!
1 person likes this

@toniganzon (77064)
• Philippines
27 Jul 22
Oh so that’s what it’s called, musubi! I have had those in Korean restaurants but i don’t think they call that musubi. Same rice shape, wrapped in seaweed.
1 person likes this
@oahuwriter (26773)
• United States
27 Jul 22
Probably a Korean word for rice ball.

1 person likes this
@toniganzon (77064)
• Philippines
27 Jul 22
@oahuwriter I think they have a different term for their rice balls. We have lots of Korean restaurants here but I always tend to forget the names of the food except for some few favorites of mine.
1 person likes this
@oahuwriter (26773)
• United States
28 Jul 22
@toniganzon
Ok, no worries. Different languages different names. Taste great foods.
1 person likes this
@Marilynda1225 (91013)
• United States
27 Jul 22
Glad your gadget worked. I'm not familiar with musubi
1 person likes this

@oahuwriter (26773)
• United States
27 Jul 22
Musubi in English is rice ball. It's made with sticky rice.
1 person likes this

@oahuwriter (26773)
• United States
27 Jul 22
Yes, rice balls or musubi is good if you like sticky rice.

1 person likes this





- I'd rather use the gadget
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