Ono Grindz 808
Snacks & Sides

Spam Musubi

The official snack of every beach day, baseball game, and gas station in Hawai'i.

Prep15 min
Cook10 min
Total25 min
Serves8 musubi

The musubi is proof that Hawai'i can take anything and make it local. Teriyaki-glazed Spam pressed onto a block of rice and wrapped in nori — portable, salty-sweet, and somehow perfect at room temperature.

A musubi press (acrylic mold) makes life easy, but the classic hack is the Spam can itself: wash it out, cut off both ends carefully, and use it as your mold.

How fo’ make ’um

  1. Slice the Spam into 8 even slabs. Pan-fry in a dry nonstick skillet over medium heat until the edges crisp, about 2–3 minutes per side.
  2. Stir shoyu, sugar, and mirin together, pour over the Spam in the pan, and let it bubble 1–2 minutes, flipping the slices so they lacquer in the glaze. Remove from heat before it burns — sugar moves fast.
  3. Lay a strip of nori shiny-side down. Place your musubi mold (or clean Spam can) in the middle of the strip.
  4. Pack in about ½ cup of warm rice and press it firm and flat. Sprinkle furikake on the rice if using. Lay a slice of glazed Spam on top and press again.
  5. Lift off the mold, then wrap the nori snugly around the whole block, sealing the seam with a damp finger.
  6. Rest seam-side down a minute so the nori sets. Eat warm or pack for later — wrap each one in plastic wrap for da beach.

Local tips

  • Wet the mold and your hands so rice doesn't stick.
  • Rice should be warm when you wrap — cold rice won't hold together, and the nori won't seal.
  • Variations to try: egg layer, katsu Spam, or ume in the rice.

Keep grinding

More liddis

← All recipes