Homemade Sushi is so much cheaper than at the restaurant. Sushi is easy and fun to make at home, and you can put all your favorite ingredients into your perfect custom roll — here’s how!
Make your own sushi! Making sushi at home is surprisingly simple. We’ll start with how to make sushi for beginners, which means sushi rolls. With just a little practice, you can make sushi rolls at home that are as dazzling to look at as they are delicious to eat.
How to Make Sushi Rolls
Today, we’re making a variation on the California roll. Along with sushi rice and sheets of seaweed (nori), California rolls require only a few ingredients: crab meat (or imitation), avocado, and cucumber. If you like, mix the crab meat with a little mayo to create a creamy consistency.
To this basic list of ingredients, we’ve added sliced carrots and cooked shrimp…because that’s how we (sushi) roll. Before we got further, a quick note on sushi rice. You can’t use just any rice for sushi. Sushi rice is a special preparation of rice flavored with rice vinegar, sugar, and salt. It’s made from short-grain rice (Japonica), typically made in Japan and parts of California and Italy. With homemade sushi rice, you’re aiming for rice that’s fluffy and a little sticky but not too sticky. Give it a try — you’ll get the hang of it. See how to make sushi rice.
Ingredients
- 6 sheets sushi seaweed aka nori
- 1 batch prepared sushi rice
- 1/2 lb sushi-grade raw salmon or desired raw fish of choice
- 4 oz cream cheese sliced into strips
- 1 avocado sliced
- soy sauce for serving
Also Read: Beet and Burrata Salad with Fried Bread
How to Make California Roll Sushi
This is the traditional way to roll any type of rolled sushi, which is called maki sushi. There are actually two options for this method: rolling with the sushi rice on top of the sheet of nori, as we do here; or with the nori flipped over so the rice ends up on the outside of the finished roll (uramaki sushi).
1. Place the bamboo rolling mat (you can get one for as little as $7 on Amazon) on a cutting board so the bamboo strips are running horizontally to you. Spread a strip of plastic wrap over the bamboo mat. Then place a sheet (or a half sheet) of nori on the plastic wrap.
2. Spread a thin layer of sushi rice over the nori. (See below for more about making perfect sushi rice.)
Don’t use too much rice. With a little practice, you’ll get a feel for how much rice to use. We’re spreading about 1 cup of rice per whole sheet of nori, leaving a small space at the top edge of the nori so you can seal up the roll.
PRO TIP: Wet your fingers as you spread the sticky sushi rice over the nori.
3. Add your ingredients toward the center of the rice-covered nori. Don’t overpack it. If you’re making a roll with the rice on the outside, simply turn the nori over, placing it rice-side down on the rolling mat. Then add your ingredients to the top of the nori.
4. Gently lift the bottom of the mat up and over the sushi. Press and shape the ingredients into a tube. Roll with pressure so you get a firm roll.
5. Roll until just an inch of nori shows at the top. Seal the edge of the nori with a little cold water. Firm it up by squeezing the mat around the roll until it feels uniformly snug. Be careful not to squeeze so hard that the ingredients are smashed or come oozing out the sides. It’s a fine line; with practice you’ll get the feel of it.
6. Slice the sushi roll in half with a sharp knife on a cutting board. Then cut each half into thirds — so you have 6 pieces of sushi. To get a nice clean cut, wet the knife with water each time you make a slice.
7. Line the slices of sushi up on platters or sushi plates. Enjoy with soy sauce, wasabi paste, and pickled ginger, and a little chopped daikon if you like.