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Home ❯ Recipes ❯ Quick & Easy ❯ Chinese Sausage Rice Cooker Rice (Lap Cheong Fan)

Chinese Sausage Rice Cooker Rice (Lap Cheong Fan)

Sarah

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Sarah

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Posted: 9/28/2021
Rice Cooker Lap Cheong Rice

This Chinese Sausage Rice Cooker Rice is an emergency recipe for busy weeknights when you don’t have much in the fridge besides a few links of lap cheong. It’s so easy we feel a little silly even calling it a “recipe.” 

Just think of it as a dinner hack you have in your back pocket for when you need something fast and simple…with maybe just a vegetable on the side! 

Can You Even Call It A Recipe?

This is one of those recipes you don’t really think to write down, because it’s so simple. Can one even call it a recipe? So many Chinese kids grew up making it without any written instructions, this Chinese kid included. 

First, you prepare to make rice the way your mom, dad, older sibling, or grandma/grandpa taught you, with the “finger trick” in your rice cooker pot. 

You measure the height of the rice by first evening it out and then sticking your finger into the rice. After taking note of where the rice level is on your finger, you add the same level of water. 

Then, you throw a few links of lap cheong (Chinese sausage) in with the rice, drop the pot into the rice cooker, and press the button. 20 minutes later, dinner is ready. 

Package of Lap Cheong Chinese sausage

We’ve been quietly doing this all our lives, but it always seemed crazy to include this as a recipe here on The Woks of Life.

Upon further reflection though, it seems crazy not to include it. 

Cooking Chinese sausage with rice in a rice cooker is such a go-to, nostalgic home cooking hack that we had to post it as a reminder to all the Chinese kids who grew up with it, and as an introduction to our readers who didn’t grow up with it.

If you have some lap cheong in your fridge, this is a quick and easy way to enjoy it! 

Using Other Cured Meats

This method will also work with gon cheong (Chinese duck liver sausage) and lap yuk (Chinese cured pork belly). 

We have a lap yuk recipe!

If you haven’t yet tried lap yuk, my mom has a recipe showing you how to make it! As the weather gets cooler, we know we’ll be curing batches of pork belly in our basement (yes you read that right). Click the link below to learn more:

Our Lap Yuk Recipe

You can also use a mix of different meats to make something akin to a Hong Kong Clay Pot Rice in your rice cooker! (Just make the sauce in that recipe to drizzle over the top.) 

What If I Don’t Have a Rice Cooker?

While the rice cooker is probably the most important and ubiquitous electronic countertop appliance in any Chinese household, we understand that you may not have one (yet!). 

Don’t worry! We’ve included stovetop instructions for this recipe, so you can make it without a rice cooker. It won’t be quite as no-brainer/foolproof/simple as the rice cooker version, but we promise it’s still very easy. 

Ok, on to today’s “recipe.” 

HOW TO MAKE STEAMED CHINESE SAUSAGE RICE

Rice Cooker Instructions: 

Use your rice cooker cup to measure the amount of rice you’d like (2 cups is good for 3 people). 

A NOTE ON RICE COOKER CUPS

Note that the cup that your rice cooker came with is smaller than a standard US cup measure. 1 rice cooker cup is usually around U.S. ¾ cup. 

Then fill the rice cooker with water up to the line that corresponds with the number of cups you added. Alternatively, you can use the “finger trick” to simply measure the height of the rice (even it out first) along your finger, and then add enough water to match that height on your finger if you rest it on top of the rice. 

Add the Chinese Sausage (1 link per person is a decent bet) on top. (I cut mine in half. This step is optional.)

Lap Cheong on top of rice and water in rice cooker pot.

Turn on the rice cooker. The cooker will steam both the rice and the sausage at the same time! 

Steamed rice and Chinese sausage in rice cooker pot

Then you can slice the sausages and serve with the rice!

Slicing Chinese Sausages
Lap Cheong Rice

Stovetop Instructions:

Measure your desired amount of rice and pour into a medium pot, taking note of the measurement. (You don’t need any special measuring tools for this step. You could just use any cup or mug you have.)

Cover the rice with 2 inches of water, and soak for 20 minutes. Once the rice has soaked, drain off the water it was soaking in. You should now just have a pot of soaked rice. 

Measure out fresh water in the same volume as the rice, and pour it into the pot. Add the Chinese sausages on top.

Put the pot over the stove on medium high heat. Once the liquid comes to a boil, turn the heat to low, cover, and cook for about 15 minutes, or until all the liquid has cooked off and the rice is fluffy.

Slice the steamed Chinese sausages and serve with the rice!

Rice Cooker Rice

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Recipe

Rice Cooker Lap Cheong Rice
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4.83 from 17 votes

Rice Cooker Lap Cheong Rice

This Rice Cooker Lap Cheong Rice is an easy recipe & Chinese dinnertime hack for busy weeknights when you don’t have much in the fridge.
by: Sarah
Serves: 3
Prep: 5 minutes mins
Cook: 20 minutes mins
Total: 25 minutes mins

Ingredients

  • jasmine rice
  • water
  • lap cheong (Chinese Sausage)

Instructions

Rice Cooker Instructions:
  • Use your rice cooker cup to measure the amount of rice you’d like (2 cups is good for 3 people).
  • Then fill the rice cooker with water up to the line that corresponds with the number of cups you added. Alternatively, you can use the “finger trick” to simply measure the height of the rice (even it out first) along your finger, and then add enough water to match that height on your finger if you rest it on top of the rice.
  • Add the Chinese Sausage (1 link per person is a decent bet), and turn on the rice cooker. The cooker will steam both the rice and the sausage at the same time! Slice the sausage and serve over the rice.
Stovetop Instructions:
  • Measure your desired amount of rice and pour into a medium pot, taking note of the measurement. (You don't need any special measuring tools for this step. You could just use any cup or mug you have.) Cover the rice with 2 inches of water, and soak for 20 minutes. Once the rice has soaked, drain off the water it was soaking in. You should now just have a pot of soaked rice.
  • Measure out fresh water in the same volume as the rice, and pour it into the pot. Add the Chinese sausages on top. Put the pot over the stove on medium high heat. Once the liquid comes to a boil, turn the heat to low, cover, and cook for about 15 minutes, or until all the liquid has cooked off and the rice is fluffy. Slice the sausage and serve over the rice.

Tips & Notes:

Nutrition information is for 1 cup cooked rice and 1 link Chinese sausage. 

Nutrition Facts

Calories: 395kcal (20%) Carbohydrates: 50g (17%) Protein: 15g (30%) Fat: 14g (22%) Saturated Fat: 3g (15%) Polyunsaturated Fat: 1g Monounsaturated Fat: 1g Cholesterol: 35mg (12%) Sodium: 613mg (26%) Potassium: 55mg (2%) Fiber: 1g (4%) Sugar: 5g (6%) Calcium: 23mg (2%) Iron: 1mg (6%)
Nutritional Info Disclaimer Hide Disclaimer
TheWoksofLife.com is written and produced for informational purposes only. While we do our best to provide nutritional information as a general guideline to our readers, we are not certified nutritionists, and the values provided should be considered estimates. Factors such as brands purchased, natural variations in fresh ingredients, etc. will change the nutritional information in any recipe. Various online calculators also provide different results, depending on their sources. To obtain accurate nutritional information for a recipe, use your preferred nutrition calculator to determine nutritional information with the actual ingredients and quantities used.
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Sarah

About

Sarah
Sarah Leung is the eldest daughter in The Woks of Life family, working alongside younger sister Kaitlin and parents Bill and Judy. You could say this multigenerational recipe blog was born out of two things: 1) her realization in college that she had no idea how to make her mom’s Braised Pork Belly and 2) that she couldn’t find a job after graduation. With the rest of the family on board, she laid the groundwork for the blog in 2013. By 2015, it had become one of the internet’s most trusted resources for Chinese cooking. Creator of quick and easy recipes for harried home cooks and official Woks of Life photographer, Sarah loves creating accessible recipes that chase down familiar nostalgic flavors while adapting to the needs of modern home cooks. Alongside her family, Sarah has become a New York Times Bestselling author with their cookbook, The Woks of Life: Recipes to Know and Love from a Chinese American Family, as well as a James Beard Award nominee and IACP Award finalist.
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