I went through a phase also known as my TWENTIES when I would eat breakfast every single chance I had. Since I just exited my twenties, I’m not 100% that this trend won’t carry over into the next decade because breakfast is just the best.
I’ve been in a bit of a breakfast rut lately though so it was awesome to get my hands on the new book from my friends over at Love and Olive Oil called Breakfast for Dinner!
This Loco Moco recipe (which I adapted slightly) is in the book along with tons of other great breakfast recipes that you can slide onto a dinner table.
Loco Moco
Ingredients
Sticky Rice:
- 1 cup white sticky rice, or sushi rice
- ½ cup coconut milk
- 1 cup water, 1 1/2 cups for sushi rice
Soy reduction:
- ¼ cup low-sodium soy sauce
- 2 tablespoons water
- 2 tablespoons brown sugar
- ½ teaspoon sriracha
Pork topping:
- ½ pound ground pork
- Pinch of fennel seeds, optional
- Pinch of salt and pepper
Toppings:
- 2 eggs
- Olive oil
- Scallions, minced
- Fresh cilantro, minced
Instructions
- The rice will work best if you add the water and rice together, stir them, and let them sit in the fridge for 6-8 hours. Alternatively, bring the water to a simmer,covered, stir in rice, remove from heat and let sit for 15 minutes.
- Stir coconut milk into rice and set over low heat. If the rice is completely dry, add another 1/2 cup of water. Bring back to a simmer over low heat, cover, and let cook for 8-10 minutes. Remove from heat and let steam, covered, for about five minutes. Then fluff with a fork.
- In a small pan, combine soy sauce, brown sugar, and sriracha. Bring to a simmer over medium heat and simmer until thick, about 8-10 minutes. It should have the consistency of a very thin gravy. It’s important to use low-sodium soy sauce or it will be too salty.
- Cook pork in a large skillet over medium high heat. Season with salt, pepper, and fennel seed and cook until browned, breaking up pork as it cooks. This should take 8-10 minutes.
- Remove pork from skillet and wipe the skillet clean. Add a drizzle of oil and crack in two eggs over medium-high heat. Cook for 2-3 minutes, then cover and cook for another 45 seconds for over-easy. Cook longer for firmer yolks.
- Serve the rice in a big bowl topped with pork and an egg. Garnish with scallions and cilantro and drizzle with soy sauce reduction.
Notes
Nutrition
Did you make this recipe?
Loco Moco
Making the rice
The recipe in the book has some very important notes on the rice preparation for this dish which… I promptly ignored almost to my detriment. I didn’t have any of the rice they recommend (sticky white rice) so I used sushi rice which required a bit more water during cooking.
Most importantly though, I got ready to cook the recipe and then noticed the first step: Combine rice and water and let soak for 6-8 hours. DOH!
I did not have that long so I tried a quick-soak method like one might for dried beans. Basically, I brought 1.5 cups of water (for 1 cup rice) to a simmer and then added the rice, stirred it together, and removed it from the heat. I let this soak for about 15 minutes and it seemed to get the job done.
After the quick soak, I stirred in my coconut milk which gives the rice some seriously awesome flavor. Please ignore that my coconut milk is a bit chunky. I just did a bad job of shaking the can before opening it. It all cooked up fine though.
The next step can be a bit finicky and will depend on your rice, but basically you want to cook the rice over low heat for probably 8-10 minutes until the liquid is absorbed and the rice is cooked through and a bit on the sticky side.
I had to add a little more water to mine halfway through because it was looking dry. After it cooks for 8 minutes or so, remove the rice from the heat and let it steam for a few minutes. This was my finished rice which I couldn’t stop eating out of the pot.
The Sauce
This rice bowl is good on its own, but this sauce takes it to the next level. It’s also super-easy to make. Just toss the ingredients together in a small pot and bring it to a simmer for a few minutes over medium heat until it thickens slightly, about 8 minutes.
It should have the consistency of a thin gravy and will thicken a bit more as it cools.
The very important note on the sauce is to use low sodium soy sauce. If you use the full-strength stuff, it will be too salty.
Pork Topping
Pork is always a good breakfast topping and while you could get away with some sort of breakfast sausage in this Loco Moco dish, I like that the recipe just called for normal ground pork. There is already quite a few other flavors going on in the dish.
I just seasoned the pork with some salt and pepper and a pinch of fennel seeds (my addition). Cook the pork in a large skillet until it’s nicely browned.
The Egg
In my opinion, the egg is the most important part of the dish. A runny yolk mixes with the soy sauce reduction and makes for a great sauce for the rice. Once my pork was done, I just spooned it out of the skillet and cracked in my egg. I let it cook, sunny side up, for about 2 minutes, then covered it with a lid and let it cook for another 30-45 seconds until the top of the egg set, but didn’t cook through.
Then just pile everything in a bowl!
This Loco Moco was an awesome dish and you better believe I would eat Loco Moco for breakfast, lunch, dinner or any other time it’s offered to me.
Check out the Breakfast for dinner book, people. It’s seriously beautiful and if this recipe is any guide, the recipes seriously rock.
Sarah
I would so eat this for breakfast! Looks awesome!!! :-)
Connie
This dish may have been intended for breakfast, but it looks delicious enough for lunch or dinner, as well! The egg is cooked perfectly for some of the yolk to drip off and mixed into the rice.
Lucila
I’m a vegetarian and I would love to do this with tofu instead of the pork, what do you think?
Nick
Sure! I would season or marinate it with something a bit spicy before browning it. Maybe some chile oil of some sort? Should be great though! You could also add other veggies…
Lucila
Sounds great! Thank you!
Dot
We had Loco Moco in Maui more than once. A very popular dish there. They used a hamburger patty for the meat. Thanks for the recipe. We certainly will try it.
Nick
I feel like I’ve seen a very of this dish with SPAM also….
Samantha
Love loco moco! Had it in Hawaii too, even at one of the Denny’s there :) Looks like a nice adaptation to the dish.
Chris
Baader-Meinhof strikes again…..
Pam
Hey Nick!
I’ve been enjoying your blog! Even went back to the beginning and at least skimmed most of the posts! Even tried some of the recipes with success!!
I remembered reading that Betsy was into Doritos and that you couldn’t find any suitable substitute that was healthy. Here is a link that you should really try. It is really good. I have served homemade tortilla chips with this on them to people who didn’t even like tortilla chips and they couldn’t stop eating them. I have not tried this in a side by side comparison with Doritos, but from memory, these are even better! Prove me wrong, ha!
http://veganfeastkitchen.blogspot.ca/2008/02/homemade-veggie-broth-powder-big-batch.html
So that’s the link–scroll down to the recipe for chicken-style broth powder. Just wanted to share the love in thanks for your blog!
Nick
Cool! thanks for the link Pam. :)
Katie
Do you think this would work with regular jasmine rice? Cooked with all coconut milk or 1/2 water, 1/2 coconut? I hate to buy rice for 1 dish.
Nick
I don’t see why not. I would just replace some of the liquid in your normal recipe with coconut milk. You might need to add a bit of extra water, but it should work just fine. It might not be quite like traditional sticky rice, but I didn’t use the rice that the original recipe called for and it worked great. Good luck!
Mikaele
Brah…I don’t know who taught you how to cook this classic Hawaiian breakfast dish, but you just slapped everyone not only from the islands in the face, but anyone who has ever encountered this classic dish knows that this is not how you make it! Dude, you act like you were the one who invented this dish! Out of respect, I to am a Chef, but I don’t go around taking cultural based recipes and twisting them around to make it my own. If you want to add this dish to your book, at least have the respect to do it the way it was made…the original recipe…1 egg any style, 1 large Hamburger patty over a bed of white rice, and covered with brown gravy! THIS IS LOCO MOCO! Not that stuff you claim to be this classic dish! Ono if done correctly!
Nick
Heya, for starters, this isn’t my recipe and I’m not sure how you can say that I “act like I invented this dish”. I got the dish from a cookbook that I didn’t write which I clearly disclose in the post (in the first two sentences no less). I’m simply reviewing the cookbook.
That said, I do respect cultural dishes, but I think most people would agree that even traditional dishes can be improved. I would fly to Hawaii and make this version of the dish for anybody on the island. It’s okay to push the boundaries a bit on recipes…
After all, it’s just food. It should be fun.