Zosui and Ojiya Japanese Rice Porridge Variants
Japan (nationwide; particular association with nabe hot pot closing and sick-day recovery cooking)
Zosui (雑炊) and ojiya (おじや) are Japan's two overlapping styles of rice porridge — both made by simmering cooked rice in broth until softened, but with distinct traditional connotations and methods. Zosui uses already-cooked (sometimes previously flavoured) rice added to a flavoured broth and simmered briefly — the rice retains some individual grain structure. Ojiya traditionally means a wetter, more broken-down version, simmered longer, where the grains begin to release starch into the broth creating a creamier consistency. Both differ fundamentally from kayu (お粥 okayu) which begins with raw rice and a large amount of water simmered from the start — kayu is Japan's canonical sick-day and recovery food. In practice, the distinction between zosui and ojiya is now largely regional linguistic: both refer to the end-of-nabe (hot pot closing) preparation where remaining broth is used to cook leftover rice into a rich porridge that absorbs all the accumulated flavours of the evening's cooking. The flavoured nabe broth enriched by hours of simmering vegetables, proteins, and dashi becomes the vehicle for an extraordinarily flavoured rice porridge finale. A beaten egg stirred in near the end adds richness and body, finished with sliced negi and nori.