There is a very specific kind of dinner that feels like a reward after a long day. Not a complicated three-hour project, not a sad bowl of cereal, but something in between — something that looks impressive, tastes incredible, and did not require you to sacrifice your entire evening to make it.
This garlic shrimp rice bowl is exactly that. Smoky seared shrimp with a golden garlic crust, piled over fluffy white rice, topped with a chunky fresh avocado corn salsa, and finished with a creamy spicy mayo drizzle that you will want to put on everything.
The whole thing comes together in 25 minutes and looks like something you would find at a trendy restaurant for about eighteen dollars. Except you made it at home for a fraction of that. And it tastes better.
I started making this bowl on nights when I wanted something that felt special without the effort. It has since become one of the most cooked recipes in my kitchen and the one my family requests most when they want something that feels like a treat on a regular weeknight. Once you make it you will completely understand why.
Why you’ll love this recipe
- The shrimp cook in under 10 minutes and the smoky charred exterior with juicy tender interior is absolutely worth every second
- The fresh avocado corn salsa adds brightness, creaminess, and a pop of color that makes this bowl genuinely stunning to look at
- The spicy mayo drizzle is the finishing touch that ties every component together and adds a creamy heat that is completely addictive
- It is naturally dairy free, gluten free, and high in protein making it a clean and satisfying meal that fits a wide range of dietary needs
- The whole bowl comes together in 25 minutes making it one of the fastest impressive dinners you can put on the table
- It is flexible enough to work as a weeknight dinner, a meal prep lunch, or an impressive dish for guests
Ingredients with key notes
For the shrimp
- 1.5 lbs large shrimp, peeled and deveined — Go for the largest shrimp you can find — jumbo or extra large. They sear beautifully, stay juicy inside, and look stunning in the bowl. Fresh or thawed frozen both work perfectly. Pat them completely dry before seasoning — this is the step most people skip and it makes a huge difference in the sear you get.
- 4 cloves garlic, minced — This goes into the pan with the shrimp at the end so it does not burn. Fresh garlic only — do not even think about the jarred stuff here.
- 1 tablespoon olive oil or butter — Butter gives you a richer more indulgent result. Olive oil keeps it dairy free. Either works beautifully.
- 1 teaspoon smoked paprika — This is what gives the shrimp that gorgeous deep red color and subtle smoky flavor. Do not substitute regular paprika if you can help it.
- 1 teaspoon garlic powder — In addition to the fresh garlic, this gives a more even seasoning across every shrimp.
- 1/2 teaspoon onion powder
- 1/2 teaspoon cayenne pepper — Adjust this based on your heat tolerance. A full teaspoon gives a serious kick. Half a teaspoon gives a pleasant warmth.
- 1/2 teaspoon cumin — Adds a subtle earthiness that rounds out the spice blend beautifully.
- Salt and black pepper to taste
- Fresh lime juice for finishing — A squeeze of lime right after the shrimp come off the heat brightens everything and cuts through the richness perfectly.
For the avocado corn salsa
- 2 ripe avocados, diced — Use avocados that give slightly when pressed. Too firm and they will be tasteless. Too soft and they will turn to mush in the salsa.
- 1 cup corn kernels — Fresh corn cut straight from the cob is ideal in summer. Canned corn drained and rinsed works perfectly the rest of the year. Frozen corn thawed also works well.
- 1/2 cup cherry tomatoes, halved — Adds a juicy sweetness and a pop of red color that makes the salsa visually stunning.
- 1/4 red onion, finely diced — Adds a sharp bite that balances the creaminess of the avocado. Soak in cold water for 5 minutes first if raw onion feels too strong for you.
- 1/4 cup fresh cilantro, chopped — Adds freshness and that unmistakable brightness. Sub with flat-leaf parsley if cilantro is not your thing.
- 2 tablespoons fresh lime juice — Seasons the salsa and keeps the avocado from browning.
- Salt and pepper to taste
For the spicy mayo drizzle
- 3 tablespoons mayonnaise — Kewpie mayo makes this extra rich and creamy but regular mayo works perfectly fine.
- 1 tablespoon sriracha — Adjust to your heat preference. Start with half a tablespoon if you are sensitive to spice.
- 1 teaspoon lime juice — Thins the drizzle slightly and adds brightness.
- 1 teaspoon soy sauce — Adds a savory umami depth that makes this drizzle genuinely addictive.
For the bowl base
- 2 cups white rice, cooked — Fluffy steamed jasmine rice is the classic choice here and the subtle floral aroma pairs beautifully with the shrimp. Brown rice, cauliflower rice, or quinoa all work as substitutes.
- Fresh lime wedges for serving
- Extra cilantro for garnish
Step-by-step instructions
Step 1: Cook the rice
Start your rice first since it takes the longest. Cook according to package directions. Jasmine rice typically takes about 15 minutes. While the rice cooks you will have plenty of time to prep everything else. Season the finished rice with a pinch of salt and a small squeeze of lime juice for extra flavor.
Step 2: Make the avocado corn salsa
In a medium bowl, combine the diced avocado, corn kernels, halved cherry tomatoes, finely diced red onion, and fresh cilantro. Add the lime juice, salt, and pepper. Toss gently — you want to keep the avocado chunks intact rather than mashing them. Taste and adjust the seasoning. Set aside while you cook the shrimp.
Step 3: Make the spicy mayo drizzle
In a small bowl, whisk together the mayonnaise, sriracha, lime juice, and soy sauce until smooth. If the drizzle feels too thick, add a teaspoon of water at a time until it reaches a drizzle-able consistency. Transfer to a small squeeze bottle or a zip lock bag with the corner snipped for easy drizzling. Set aside.
Step 4: Season the shrimp
Pat the shrimp completely dry with paper towels. This step is non-negotiable — wet shrimp steam instead of sear and you will miss out on that beautiful charred exterior. In a large bowl, toss the dried shrimp with smoked paprika, garlic powder, onion powder, cayenne, cumin, salt, and pepper until every shrimp is evenly coated.
Step 5: Sear the shrimp
Heat olive oil or butter in a large skillet over medium-high heat until shimmering and hot. Add the shrimp in a single layer — do not crowd the pan or they will steam. Cook for 2 minutes without touching them until a golden char forms on the bottom. Flip each shrimp and add the minced garlic to the pan. Cook for another 1 to 2 minutes until the shrimp are cooked through, the garlic is golden and fragrant, and the edges have that gorgeous dark char. Squeeze fresh lime juice over the shrimp and remove from heat immediately. Shrimp cook fast — the second they curl into a C shape and turn opaque they are done.
Step 6: Assemble the bowls
Add a generous scoop of fluffy white rice to each bowl. Arrange the seared garlic shrimp on top of the rice. Spoon the avocado corn salsa generously over and around the shrimp. Drizzle the spicy mayo over everything in a back and forth motion. Garnish with fresh cilantro and a lime wedge on the side. Serve immediately.
Serving suggestions
This garlic shrimp rice bowl is a complete meal on its own but here are a few ways to build around it:
- As a full dinner spread — Serve alongside a simple green salad with a citrus vinaigrette to balance the richness of the bowl.
- With warm tortillas on the side — The shrimp and avocado corn salsa work beautifully as a taco filling too. Set out warm tortillas and let everyone build their own.
- Over cauliflower rice — Swap the white rice for cauliflower rice to keep things low carb without losing any of the flavor impact.
- With a side of black beans — Adds extra protein and fiber and leans into the slightly Mexican-inspired flavor profile of the bowl.
- As a meal prep lunch — Portion the rice and shrimp into containers and keep the salsa and drizzle separate until you are ready to eat. This keeps everything fresh and prevents the rice from getting soggy.
Storage tips
This bowl is best eaten fresh but here is how to handle leftovers properly:
Shrimp: Cooked shrimp keeps in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 3 days. Reheat gently in a skillet over medium heat with a small splash of water or olive oil for about 2 minutes. Avoid the microwave — it makes shrimp rubbery and sad.
Rice: Store leftover rice in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 4 days. Add a splash of water before reheating to prevent it from drying out.
Avocado corn salsa: This is best made fresh. If you have leftovers, press plastic wrap directly onto the surface of the salsa to minimize air exposure and store in the fridge for up to one day. The lime juice helps slow the browning but it will still discolor slightly overnight.
Spicy mayo drizzle: This keeps in a sealed jar or squeeze bottle in the fridge for up to 5 days. It also makes an excellent dipping sauce, sandwich spread, or taco topping throughout the week.
Freezer: The cooked shrimp freeze reasonably well for up to 2 months. The rice freezes well too. Do not freeze the avocado corn salsa — it will turn watery and brown after thawing.
Closing
Some recipes earn their place in your regular rotation immediately. This garlic shrimp rice bowl is one of those recipes.
It is fast enough for a Tuesday night, impressive enough for a dinner party, healthy enough to feel good about eating regularly, and delicious enough that you will find yourself thinking about it days after you first make it. That combination is genuinely rare and when you find it you hold onto it.
Make this one this week. Take your time with the sear on those shrimp, be generous with the avocado corn salsa, and do not skip the spicy mayo drizzle. Then come back and tell me how it went in the comments. I genuinely want to hear about it.
With gratitude, Kip
Garlic shrimp rice bowl (the weeknight dinner that looks fancy but takes 25 minutes)
Description
This garlic shrimp rice bowl is the kind of dinner that makes people think you spent way more time in the kitchen than you actually did. Jumbo shrimp seasoned with smoky spices and seared in a hot pan with garlic until perfectly charred and juicy, served over fluffy white rice and topped with a fresh avocado corn salsa and a creamy spicy mayo drizzle that pulls the whole bowl together. It is bold, satisfying, and genuinely beautiful on the table. And it takes 25 minutes from start to finish. That combination should not be possible but here we are.
Ingredients
For the shrimp:
For the avocado corn salsa:
For the spicy mayo drizzle:
For the bowl base:
Instructions
-
Cook the rice according to package directions. Season with salt and a squeeze of lime juice when done.
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Make the avocado corn salsa by gently tossing all salsa ingredients together in a bowl. Set aside.
-
Whisk together spicy mayo drizzle ingredients until smooth. Transfer to a squeeze bottle or zip lock bag. Set aside.
-
Pat shrimp completely dry and toss with all the spices until evenly coated.
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Sear shrimp in a hot oiled skillet over medium-high heat for 2 minutes per side. Add garlic in the last minute. Squeeze lime juice over finished shrimp and remove from heat.
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Assemble bowls with rice, shrimp, avocado corn salsa, spicy mayo drizzle, fresh cilantro, and a lime wedge.
Note
- Pat shrimp completely dry before seasoning for the best sear and char
- Cook shrimp in a single layer and do not move them for the first 2 minutes
- Make the salsa fresh for the best flavor and color
- The spicy mayo keeps in the fridge for up to 5 days and works on everything
