This crunchy Homemade Rice Cakes recipe is super easy to make and delicious! Enjoy a healthy snack and choose if you’d like it sweet or savory. Can be Gluten Free!
Homemade Rice Cakes Recipe
Lately, my daughters have been begging me to add some different snacks to their lunch boxes. After wracking my brain and remembering the brown rice cakes I did last year, I decided to recreate them and added a few touches.
I love these Homemade Rice Cakes because they’re low in calories, delicious, crunchy and super easy to make. Why buy them at the store when you can make them yourself? My favorite part is customizing them the way I like them.
As you can see, some are brown and some are more yellowish, that’s because I made a cinnamon sweet and a savory one.
The basic rice cake recipe is mild and kind of flavorless, just like the store bought ones, so I trump up the flavor by adding cheese, spices, or just cinnamon and Truvia (or any other sweetener).
The shape and size can also be customizable. With my brown rice cakes, I made then thinner and in a cute donut shape.
With these ones, I made them in a muffin tin for a more traditional shape. Next time, I’ll make them in a heart shape mold.
Just keep in mind that the size and shape will determine the baking time. Since these Homemade Rice Cakes were made using a muffin tin, it took about 45 minutes until the tops were browned and crispy on all sides.
All you need is a high-speed blender and a muffin tin, that’s it. Doesn’t get any easier than this!
I hope you can try this delicious Homemade Rice Cakes at home. If you do, please upload a pic on Instagram and tag me @Livingsweetmoments or use the hashtag #LivingSweet. I promise to repost it.
Homemade Rice Cakes
Ingredients
- 1 cup rice uncooked
- 1 1/2 cups water
- 2 eggs
- 2 tablespoons all purpose flour you may use Gluten free flour
- flavorings of your choice: for savory use 2 teaspoon parmesan cheese, 1 teaspoon salt and pepper. For sweet use 2-3 envelopes of Truvia and 1 teaspoon of cinnamon
Instructions
- Preheat Oven to 350 Degrees Fahrenheit
- Place the uncooked rice in the food processor or blender and process until ground
- Place the rest of ingredients in a high-speed blender or food processor
- Pour the mixture into a GREASED donut pan, muffin tin or any other shaped pan (if using silicone, there's no need to grease)
- Bake for 40-50 minutes or until they tops are brown and all sides are completely crispy
Notes
Nutrition
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Supriya Kutty says
This looks so yummy!! Definitely printing this out and adding it to my collection
Tiffany says
Thank you Supriya!
Varimna says
Can we use cooked rice for thid
Tiffany says
No, Varinma, it wouldn’t work. Sorry
Hayley says
Hello, I have been searching for recipes to compare due to the comments on this one. I have only found a couple others and they both have similar ingredients to this one but include cooked rice instead of uncooked. I note you say it wouldn’t work on this comment but has it been tried?
Aliece says
Have you done these starting from a dried chickpea? I am moving to less packing and dried chickpeas is cheaper with less packaging. Any suggestions
Tiffany says
I have never tried it but it does sound interesting
Tamra says
These were an utter failure for me!! I followed directions but outsides were crisp centers were way too soft! I’m bummed
Jes says
I’m excited to try these. My son LOVES rice cakes but I’d like to add some nutrition to them like spinach or veggies. Would just a regular blender work? I just have a regular blender, not an infusion blender or food processor.
Tiffany says
Yes! a regular blender will work, just make sure that the rice is really getting grounded. A few big pieces is ok
Kevin says
What kind of attachment for the processor did you use? Mine didn’t seem to be able to blend the rice – but I had no problem with the blender
Tiffany says
Hi Kevin, I used my blentec blender and it did a great job.
Suzanne says
Wondering if these can be made successfully vegan with flax eggs.
Tiffany says
I’ve never tried then vegan Suzanne. But you certainly try! Let me know how they come out.
Rebecca rick says
Thanks for asking the vegab question qith flax egg i was windering the same thing with chia seeds
Tiffany says
I have yet to try it with chia Rebecca, if you do, please let me know how it comes out
James Siden says
Have tried this recipe 3 times now. Followed to the letter once and then making adjustments to fix the issue that arise. The simple fact is that this recipe is crap. It doesn’t work, there is no way it could ever work. Sorry, but that’s just the truth
Tiffany says
Hi James, I am so sorry it didn’t work out for you. What seems to be the problem when you bake then? Lack of crunchiness?
sasdf sdafdsa says
Horrific, to put it mildly. After grinding the rice to a POWDER and mixing the other ingredients I got a WATERY slop that would not mix properly or consistently, everything sank to the bottom. After baking, some of the cakes were obviously ninety per cent EGG and ninety percent UNcooked. The rest were like biting into a cake made of SAWDUST, with the flavor of WET CARDBOARD. This recipe is GARBAGE Rice cakes you buy in the store are flavorless but at least they have SOME texture to them, rigid and cruncy, not MEALY like a mouthful of SAWDUST. I hope Tiffany burns in hell for eternity.
Wyatt says
Okay, you can keep your opinions to yourself if you’re going to spew nonsense and be so disrespectful and cruel. Sure, you didn’t like the recipe, but don’t get personal. Inflict your bad attitude on yourself and the people unfortunate enough to be around you.
Comet on the way says
Get a life karen sasdf. There is no need to so be childish and rude. Theyre rice cakes. Move on for fucks sake.
Paula Noble says
Sasdf Do you hear yourself? It’s a recipe. Telling someone to burn in hell for eternity over a recipe is over the top.
Cws says
After reading the recipe I decided not to make it because Rice cake is our culture food and I’ve been making them forever. one problem immediately surfaced after I read the recipe was the rice mixture will sink to the bottom while baking and makes the bottom of the cake denser than the top after baked . Or maybe I’m processing the recipe wrong but either way thank you for sharing .
Tiffany says
You’re welcome CWS, thank you for your feedback. Have a great day.
Curt says
It’s garbage, is this woman trying to sell blend tech blenders? It’s effing garbage.
Tiffany says
Sorry, the recipe did not work out for you Curt. I will try to make a video this weekend to show the process
Ramez says
Can I grind the rice into flour first before blending? .. My blender is too weak to handle full rice grains
Tiffany says
of course Ramez. As long as the rice is ground.
Kasey says
Can I use rice flour instead?
Tiffany says
yes!!
Isabelle says
I tried to recipe and to my disappointment it really didn’t come out well.The cakes were hard, didn’t have a nice texture and didn’t taste all that good either (even when covering them in my favourite nut butters. I’ll have to keep looking for a recipe or give up homemade rice cakes entirely.
Tiffany says
Hi Isabelle, I’m sorry you were disappointed with the recipe and thank you for your feedback.
Leslie says
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now – back to your recipes!
Tiffany says
Oh my goodness! Thanks for telling me that Leslie. I will contact my ad company right away. That is unacceptable.
Joe Harris says
Just to end an argument between friends is it 1 & a half cups of water or just half a cup of water,thanks.
Tiffany says
One and a half cups of water Joe
Mihail Makariev says
Hello Tiffany! Very attractive recipe! But it’s difficult for me to blend the rice with the blender. Can I soak it in water to soften before the blending of the rice?
I think my blender is a good 600W. Three knives. But when blending the rice is broken but not milled…
Tiffany says
Hi Mihail, I’m afraid that soaking will prevent the rice cakes from becoming crispy. Maybe try blending them in the blender without the water. At the end not all pieces will be pulverized and that’s ok
Ashley says
How do you store these after baking.?
Tiffany says
Room temperature in a zip top bag or tupperware
Mary Ellen Gaucin says
I made these. Pretty good. Used a ninja blender first to grind rice like flour or maybe like cornmeal. Then i added other ingredients. I slightly sprayed muffin pan. And only put about a tablespoon in bottom of pan. Cooked maybe 35 minutes until brown. Cooled. Mine were more cracker or chips like. But really good
Tiffany says
Hi Mary Ellen! Good idea on grinding the rice first. Thanks for your feedback!
Alison says
Would it work if I just used rice flour instead of grinding the rice?
Tiffany says
I haven’t tried it with flour. If you do, let me know how it come sout
Mimine says
Thank you so much for this recipe. It was a hit with friends and family.
I followed your advice about adding my own touches: 1 teaspoon Trader Joe 21 Seasoning Salute and 1/8 teasooon flaked red pepper. Everything else was the same for the savory ones.
Tiffany says
Thanks for your feedback Mimine! Glad you liked them. The 21 seasoning sounds like an amazing idea! I wonder if the everything bagel seasoning would work as well>?
Brandi Northrup says
Can you make these without any type of flour?
Tiffany says
If you use whole wheat you need to add a bit more liquid
Jacqui says
Since the water and rice mixture does not blend together well (rice sinks) I am not quite sure how much water or how much rice to put in.
Tiffany says
Jacqui, can you try processing the rice first and then adding the water?
Ruth says
Ok so I just made these, and they did not turn out like yours. I used wholr wheat flour and added just a little bit more liquid like you suggested. When i poured the mixture into the muffin pan I noticed a lot of the rice mixture was in the bottom. I baked them for 50 minutes. They were very wet on the inside. The taste was ok, bit definately not like they were supposed to turn out
Tiffany says
Oh no Ruth! So sorry they didn’t work out, my guess is that the rice was not completely ground when you blended the rest of the ingredients
Carson says
The batter separated with the ground rice sinking to the bottom. When baked, this left a gooey top layer that did not cook, despite leaving them in the oven for an additional 20 minutes.
The part underneath was very dense, not inedible, but not the light, crispy, fluffy cracker like cake that I was expecting.
Not sure what the deal was.
Tiffany says
I am so sorry that happened Carson! I am guessing the batter wasn’t properly mixed and/or rice wasn’t fine enough
Curt says
I followed the recipe to the t. and same thing it immediately separates. I think 1.5 cups of water is too much. And did you make this? because there is no way this is how they are made.
Kate says
Hi! Does the rice need to be almost a flour consistency? My cakes came out very heavy and dense at the bottom. Should the mixture be very wet? I’m not sure where I’ve gone wrong. Thanks for the recipe.
Tiffany says
Hi Kate! They should be as ground as possible and yes the batter is liquid
Paul Parker says
Can these be made with puffed rice?
Tiffany says
yes!
Paul Parker says
Do you have a recipe that would use puffed rice (cereal) for the rice cakes?
Thanks
Tiffany says
Hi Paul, I do not.. All the trials I’ve done with puffed rice have been unsuccessful 🙁
Mayde says
Do you think they would come out ok using wild rice & do you think it would still come out ok if you omit the flour? Cheers!
Tiffany says
Hi Mayde, I don’t think it will work. Sorry.
Nenny says
I have made this twice now as a healthy snack for my 16 month old. I blend the rice completely in my nutribullet before I add the eggs, flour and a pinch of cinnamon. I also add in a handful of strawberries and blueberries (while keeping all the liquid to a cup and half as the recipe directed) then a tablespoon of milled organic flaxseed. I add 2 tablespoons to the bottom of a slightly sprayed muffin pan. It’s ready in about 25 minutes and my little one loves it. So do I if I am honest. Thanks for the recipe.
Tiffany says
You’re very welcome Nenmy! The addition of berries and flaxseed sound like a great idea.
Hilary says
These never set up. I even turned my oven up to 400 degrees finally because they were just a watery mess. I’m a very experienced baker and cook and generally can execute a recipe without issues but I’m just going to have to throw these away.
Fr Andrew says
Loved making these and going ,to do them often. Recipe works so well thanks
Tiffany says
Thanks for your feedback Andrew. Glad you liked the recipe
Cindy Hower says
After reading lots of comments about how these cooked. I made sure I ground the rice fine in my high speed ninja, added only 1 cup of water in lieu of 1 1/2cup. Used 2T coconut flour and 2 eggs. Blended in Ninja then cooked in my old fashioned waffle iron. Turned out great. They are probably a little more dense with less water but cooked up nicely.
Tiffany says
Thanks for your feedback Cindy! glad they worked out for you
Samantha Odle says
Is the batter supposed to be super watery? Mine isn’t like a batter, it’s like a soup.
Tiffany says
Yes!
Chris says
Wish I had read the comments before trying… same results as many. Used my blendtec to make the rice nice and fine, blended rest of ingredients, went to pour in a muffin tin and all that came out was water leaving a fine rice mud in the bottom.
Tiffany says
thanks for the feedback Chris. Sorry it didn’t work for you
Rhonda says
Can you use Minute Rice?
Tiffany says
Yikes! never tried it with minute rice. If you do, let me know how they come out
Chris says
Wow yum I used gluten free flour and egg replacers they came out great I’m very happy with them.. thank you so much for taking the time to share this amazing recipe.. very much appreciated..
Tiffany says
You’re welcome Chris! thanks for your feedback!
Larissa says
Cute pics, but these are so strange. They taste like raw rice and the texture is so bizarre. It’s definitely nothing like a rice cake! It’s like an egg muffin with rice in it.
Curt says
I don’t understand how people say this was good. Mine separates out. I’ve blended. I’ve healed the rice. It’s too liquid. It separates immediately.
Can you send a video?
Kat says
This recipe did not turn out well at all. My food processor wasn’t able to grind down the rice fine enough. If we basically want it as fine as rice flour, would it not make more sense to just call for rice flour in the recipe instead of asking to grind our own?
Tiffany says
Hi Kat! sorry about that. A lot of people don’t have rice flour at home. I left some chunks in my rice cakes as well and they turned out fine.
Ray says
Where is the video? Anxious to try….
Ray
Tiffany says
it’s coming! too many people quarantined in my house right now making noise 🙂
Tara says
Hello. Has a video been made yet?
Michael says
I cooked these on my Traeger pellet smoker at 350 for 45 minutes as directed-delicious! The only tip that I would add is to keep stirring as you fill-I used muffin pan sprayed with Vegetable oil . Tastes so much better than commercial rice cakes-also I’m on sodium restriction so I didn’t add salt and it’s difficult to find salt free rice cakes in stores. Thanks so much-this is a winner and easy too!
Tiffany says
Thanks for your feedback Michael! Love the idea of cooking them using a smoker
Sarah says
Sad and angry. Thanks a lot. Next time I’ll just throw my eggs and rice straight into the trash to save time. I really wanted this to work so I could say hey guys take it easy you’re being awfully harsh, but now I know why! I tried adjusting temp, time, even tried flipping them halfway thru! What a waste! I think you are aware this recipe doesn’t work considering the comments and also the fact that there are no similar recipes to be found. I will be sure to avoid your recipes in the future. Just so you know, you are the first bad review I have ever posted. Ever! So the fact that I’m doing this says a lot.
Tiffany says
Hi Sarah. I am sorry you’re sad and angry. I know how frustrating is when a recipe does not work out.
Yes, these rice cakes have been controversial. I’ve made it plenty of times and while some people have had success with it, a lot of people haven’t. I still haven’t figured out is it because of the equipment or simply the answer is to substitute regular rice for rice flour, which I suspect would yield a different result.
Thanks so much for your comment and feedback.
shahin says
I made this tonight. But I think the amount of water is too much.
Richard says
My Wolfgang Puck food processor also did nothing to the rice so I ground the rice in a coffee grinder. I stirred the mixture constantly while putting it in muffin tins and they did turn out consistent throughout, but the consistency of the finished product was like corn bread. I even had to bake them for 1 hour and 10 minutes and I’ve checked my oven temperature and it is accurate.
I thought that 2 teaspoons of cheese wasn’t quite enough so I put 1 tablespoon of Parmesan and 1 tablespoon of cheddar and they were extremely bland with little cheese flavor.
Anton says
It’s a nice recipe but it’s not crunchy mine came out almost like a scone but looks like it does on your photos
laura says
Annoyingly I also had the same issue where both of my blenders could not blend the rice down!
Savannah says
should i fill the muffin tin 3/4 or 1/2 full?
Tiffany says
1/2 is fine
Andrew says
Should have listened to the 1 star reviews. Mine did back but the rice didnt mix and it was grinded to a powdered. I haven’t tried them yet but I bet its going in the trash.
Andrew Young says
I gave this another try but used rice flour instead and used 1 cup of water cause 1 & 1/2 cup seem too much. It only seem to rise around the edges and not much all around itself. Added everything bagel seasoning. Not great but okay.
Tiffany says
thanks for your comment
Izzy Childress says
Wtf is up with this comment section?? I’ve never seen so many toxic people in one place. Tiffany, you’re doing great. Thank you for sharing and please disregard the unwarranted hostility. Clearly they’ve got some seriously unresolved personal issues.
Tiffany says
Thank you for your kindness Izzy. Have a great day!
Natasha says
Can we make with rice flour
Tiffany says
yes!
Tick Taylor says
I think a very big problem with your recipe is peoples expectations. I think those that are unhappy were expecting a recipe for puffed rice cakes like Quaker type. Yours is very good but if they think more – English muffins gone rice they might be less disappointed. It’s a great way to cut down on wheat products.
Aspen says
Hey i made your recipe and i think its going well but what is the consistency supposed to be in the middle after fully cooked? Ive had mine baking for even longer than 50 minutes and the insides are a weird white goopy batter
Tiffany says
leave it longer until crunchy
Hossein says
Hi you said that 1 rice cake have 71 kcal. But what about the gram?
Tiffany says
same, 71 grams
Andrew Young says
I gave this another try but used rice flour instead and used 1 cup of water cause 1 & 1/2 cup seem too much. It only seem to rise around the edges and not much all around itself. Added everything bagel seasoning. Not great but okay.
Jelly says
when baked as is [1/2 full in a muffin cup: we didn’t care for the dense gumminess or thickness]…but we realized when baked in a flat cookie sheet it was thin and cripsy & great for sheet pan toad in a hole…we just poured the batter into a 11 x 17 cookie sheet and sprinkled cooked ground sausage over the top…baked til done and it was great…thought we’d have to give up on a family favourite when trying to avoid gluten but this makes a great substitution…didn’t know what the consistency of the ground rice was supposed to be like ie: granular or flour so we just measured the weight of 1 cup of rice and used an equal amount of rice flour instead…
Francisco says
These are great. I followed everything and they came out just fine. Kids loved them.
Rupa says
Hi
How long would they last after baking in airtight container.
Which size muffin tray did use mini or Normal.
Tiffany says
I used normal size. They would like 4-5 days in a tight container
Tara says
Same issues as the majority of people have commented on. Even with a fine rice flour type of blend I don’t think this recipe would work well.
However, if any of you are reading this comment after the recipe failing miserably wondering what you did wrong, don’t throw away those rock/egg muffins yet! I ripped apart a couple at a time and re-food processed them with about a tbsp of water and 2 tbsp of flour. It will form a dough-like material that can then be baked on a greased cookie sheet for about 20-30 minutes on 375°F to make a mini pizza crust or crackers (depending on the thickness you roll it out to.)
Figured I’d share my solution to the food waste with everyone!
Kate says
These didn’t turn out quite the way I was expecting, but no matter: They’re tasty! My son said they’re “the best thing that’s happened all day.” When the rice sank to the bottom of the food processor bowl, I abandoned plans to use muffin tins and instead poured the batter into a 9 x 13 pan; I baked for about 40 minutes, until the custard was set. I’ll be making these again. Thank you, Tiffany! (And I second the comments about ignoring the haters. I’m so glad you shared this recipe and am happy I found it.)
Tiffany says
You’re welcome Kate! glad you and your son enjoyed them 🙂