I love sushi, but making actual rolls at home always felt intimidating. The bamboo mat, the rice sticking everywhere, getting the roll tight enough—it seemed like too much work for a weeknight dinner. Then I discovered sushi bowls and my life changed.
Sushi bowls give you all the flavors and textures you crave from sushi without any of the rolling struggle. Same ingredients, same delicious taste, zero technique required. Just layer everything in a bowl, drizzle with sauce, and you're eating restaurant-quality sushi at home.
I've been making these California roll bowls at least once a week for the past six months. They're my go-to for when I want something fresh and healthy that doesn't require actual cooking. Plus, they're way cheaper than ordering sushi and you can pile on as much avocado as you want.
All the flavor of sushi without the rolling hassle – You get that same combination of creamy avocado, crisp cucumber, sweet crab, and seasoned rice that makes California rolls so addictive. But instead of spending 30 minutes trying to roll them perfectly, you just throw everything in a bowl. Same deliciousness, fraction of the effort.
Ready in just 20 minutes – If you have pre-cooked rice (or a rice cooker going), these bowls come together in literally 10 minutes. Even making rice from scratch, you're looking at 20-25 minutes tops. That's faster than driving to pick up sushi.
Customizable with your favorite toppings – Don't like crab? Use shrimp or salmon. Want extra crunch? Add more cucumber or some radish. Love spice? Double the spicy mayo. These bowls are a template—make them exactly how you like them.
Perfect for meal prep all week – Prep all your components on Sunday and assemble fresh bowls all week. The rice, veggies, and sauce all keep well separately. Just combine when you're ready to eat and you've got an instant healthy lunch.
Way cheaper than ordering sushi – A California roll at a restaurant costs $6-8. Making these bowls at home? Maybe $3-4 per serving. You're saving money and getting more food. Plus, you can use real crab if you want to splurge.
Fresh, healthy, and incredibly satisfying – Light but filling, these bowls are packed with protein, healthy fats from avocado, and fresh vegetables. You get that satisfied feeling without being weighed down. Perfect for lunch or a light dinner.
Key Notes:
Rinse 2 cups of sushi rice under cold water until the water runs clear. This removes excess starch and prevents mushy rice.
Combine the rinsed rice with 2.5 cups water in a rice cooker or pot. If using a rice cooker, just hit start. If using a pot, bring to a boil, then reduce to low, cover, and simmer for 15 minutes. Remove from heat and let sit covered for 10 minutes.
While the rice cooks, mix together rice vinegar, sugar, and salt in a small bowl. Microwave for 20 seconds to help the sugar dissolve, then stir.
Transfer the hot cooked rice to a large bowl. Pour the vinegar mixture over the rice and gently fold it in using a rice paddle or wooden spoon. Use a cutting motion rather than stirring—you want to coat the grains without making them mushy.
Fan the rice while you fold (or just let it cool naturally) until it reaches room temperature. The rice should be slightly sticky, glossy, and smell faintly sweet and tangy.
In a small bowl, whisk together mayonnaise, sriracha, sesame oil, and rice vinegar until smooth. Taste and adjust the spice level—add more sriracha if you want it hotter, more mayo if it's too spicy.
Transfer to a squeeze bottle or just leave in the bowl for drizzling later.
Chop your imitation crab into bite-sized pieces. Slice or cube your avocado. Dice or julienne your cucumber. Cut your nori sheets into thin strips with scissors or crumble them.
Having everything prepped and ready makes assembly quick and easy.
Start with a base of seasoned sushi rice in each bowl—about 1 to 1.5 cups per bowl depending on how hungry you are.
Arrange your toppings in sections on top of the rice: crab, avocado, cucumber, pickled ginger. You can do it artfully in separate sections or just pile it all on—both work.
Sprinkle with sesame seeds, green onions, and nori strips.
Drizzle the spicy mayo generously over everything. Don't be shy—the sauce is what brings it all together.
Serve immediately with soy sauce on the side if desired. Mix everything together before eating, or keep the sections separate and eat a bit of each—totally up to you.
These bowls are pretty complete on their own, but here are ways to customize:
Add protein variations – Swap the crab for cooked shrimp, smoked salmon, seared tuna, or even crispy tofu for a vegetarian version. The base components work with any protein.
Extra vegetables – Add shredded carrots, edamame, radish slices, or even some wakame (seaweed salad). More vegetables mean more crunch and nutrition.
Different sauces – Try eel sauce instead of spicy mayo, or do both. Ponzu sauce is great if you want something lighter. Sesame ginger dressing works too.
Make it a poke bowl – Use diced raw sushi-grade salmon or tuna marinated in soy sauce and sesame oil instead of the crab. Basically the same concept with a Hawaiian twist.
Deconstructed spicy tuna roll – Mix canned or fresh tuna with spicy mayo and use that instead of crab. Add some masago (fish roe) if you can find it.
Add crunch – Top with crispy fried onions, tempura flakes (tenkasu), or crushed up rice crackers for extra texture.
The key to meal prep with these bowls is storing everything separately:
Sushi rice: Store in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 4 days. Sprinkle with a bit of water before reheating to restore moisture.
Toppings: Keep crab, cucumber, and other vegetables in separate containers for up to 3 days. Don't slice avocado until you're ready to eat—it browns quickly.
Spicy mayo: Keeps in the fridge for up to a week in a sealed container.
When you're ready to eat, warm the rice slightly (or eat it cold—both work), then assemble your bowl with fresh toppings. This keeps everything at peak freshness and texture.
Cold sushi rice straight from the fridge is actually pretty good if you're in a hurry. Just fluff it with a fork first.
Don't freeze these bowls or the components. The rice texture gets weird, avocado turns brown and mushy, and cucumber gets watery. These are best enjoyed fresh or within a few days of prep.
If you need to prep avocado ahead, toss the slices in a bit of lime or lemon juice to prevent browning. Store in an airtight container with a piece of plastic wrap pressed directly against the surface.
These California Roll Sushi Bowls have completely eliminated my sushi takeout habit. Why spend $15 on a roll when I can make a giant bowl at home for a fraction of the cost and get way more avocado?
Make these once and you'll see why sushi bowls are so popular. All the satisfaction of sushi with none of the intimidation factor. Just delicious, fresh ingredients in a bowl.
– Kip
These California Roll Sushi Bowls feature seasoned sushi rice topped with imitation crab, creamy avocado, crisp cucumber, and that signature spicy mayo drizzle. It's everything you love about California rolls deconstructed into an easy bowl that takes 20 minutes to make!