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Which temperature sequence best explains why sushi cooks season rice hot but shape nigiri only after the rice cools?

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Answer: Hot mix, warm shape

Hot mix, warm shapeRight. The rice is seasoned while hot, then fanned and cooled into the 30-40 C shaping range. Mizkan describes both steps: add seasoning over hot rice, then cool before molding; Kikkoman describes adding vinegar to freshly cooked rice and fanning it. The surprise is that sushi rice is not one ideal temperature from pot to plate; it moves through a sequence.

Cold mix, hot shapeNo. Cold mixing is exactly what the rice instructions warn against, because cool rice can clump and lose sheen when seasoning is added. Hot shaping is also wrong because the molding range is much lower than steaming rice. This sequence reverses both useful parts of the workflow.

Hot mix, cold shapeNo. Hot mixing is right, but cold shaping overshoots the target. Mizkan's shaping range is about 30-40 C, and The Sushi Geek describes body-temperature shari as ideal. Fridge-cold rice would bring back the hard, dull bite that the temperature control is trying to avoid.

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