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Bowl of Asian style fried rice with scrambled eggs, diced chicken, carrots, and green onions, served with chopsticks on a wooden table

Recipe

Fried Rice

20 min 4 servings

Nutrition (est.)

Per serving: 1 serving

Calories
320
Protein
10g
Carbs
48g
Fat
10g

Day-old rice stir-fried with eggs, vegetables, and soy sauce. Use leftover rice.

More

Before you cook

Background Recipe story & origin

leftover transformer, where yesterday's rice becomes tonight's dinner.

Fried rice originated in China during the Sui Dynasty (589-618 CE) as a way to use leftover rice. The technique spread throughout Asia and eventually worldwide, with each region developing distinctive versions. American-Chinese fried rice emerged in the 19th century as Chinese immigrants adapted the dish to American tastes and available ingredients. The classic American-Chinese version typically includes eggs, peas, carrots, and soy sauce, served as a side dish or base for other proteins. A technique remains unchanged from ancient times: day-old rice (dried out from refrigeration) is stir-fried at high heat to achieve separated, slightly crispy grains. Fresh rice contains too much moisture and steams rather than fries, resulting in the mushy texture that distinguishes bad fried rice from good.

Before you start Equipment you'll need
  • wok or large skillet — large surface area for proper rice frying
  • spatula — scrapes and tosses rice efficiently
Safety Safety & allergen notes
  • Cold rice must be refrigerated properly to avoid bacterial growth.
  • High heat causes splattering; stand back when adding rice.
Non-negotiables Rules for success
  • Use day-old refrigerated rice.

    Cold rice has dried out and the grains separate when fried; fresh rice turns mushy

  • Break up rice clumps before cooking.

    Clumped rice steams instead of fries; separated grains get proper wok contact

  • Cook eggs first, remove, then add back.

    Eggs overcooked in the wok turn rubbery; removing keeps them soft

  • High heat throughout.

    Low heat steams rice; high heat creates the slightly crispy texture of good fried rice

Prep Get set first

About 8 min of prep

  • Break up cold rice with hands or fork into individual grains
  • Beat 3 eggs in a bowl
  • Dice carrots into small pieces
  • Mince 2 garlic cloves
  • Slice 4 scallions (separate whites from greens)
  • Measure out frozen peas
  • Have soy sauce, salt, white pepper, and sesame oil within reach
  • Set wok or large skillet and spatula nearby

Total cooking time is about 15 minutes. Have everything prepped before you start cooking—fried rice comes together quickly once the heat is on.

Ingredients

Scale
Imperial Metric

Instructions

  1. Prep the rice

    Break up cold rice with your hands or a fork, separating any clumps into individual grains.

  2. Scramble the eggs

    Heat 1 tablespoon oil in wok over high heat (400–450°F surface). Add beaten eggs and scramble until just set but still soft, about 1 minute. Break into pieces and transfer to a plate.

  3. Fry the aromatics and carrots

    Add remaining 2 tablespoons oil to wok. Add garlic and carrots, stir-fry 2 minutes until carrots soften slightly.

  4. Fry the rice

    Add rice to wok, spreading into an even layer. Let sit 30 seconds to crisp bottom, then toss. Repeat for 3 to 4 minutes until rice is hot and some grains are slightly crispy.

  5. Season and finish

    Drizzle soy sauce over rice and toss to distribute. Add peas, scallion whites, salt, and white pepper. Toss 1 minute. Return eggs to wok, add scallion greens and sesame oil. Toss to combine and serve immediately.

Chef's notes

Jasmine or long-grain rice works best; short-grain is too sticky.

Add any protein: diced ham, chicken, shrimp, or char siu.

Frozen peas go in at the end; they cook quickly from residual heat.

Leftover takeout rice is perfect for this.

noadscooking.com — Fried Rice

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