Hot Buttered Corn Rice is a simple yet delicious upgrade from plain steamed rice. Serve with any cuisine, any dish – it goes with everything. Make lots – everyone will go in for seconds!

I have no idea what you’re planning to make for dinner tonight. But whatever it is, a big steamy mound of garlicky, buttery rice with sweet pops of corn is going to work with it, and it will make your meal even better than you already envisage it to be!!
And such is the beauty of today’s recipe. It is one of those unicorns that just works with any cuisine and any food that can do with a starchy side. A stir fry? Definitely! Lemony Chicken Francese? Oh yes. Firecracker Beef? Oh course! Coq au vin? Try to stop me!
It’s tasty enough to eat by the spoonful, straight out of the pot but neutral enough to work with full flavoured, saucy mains, like the Mexican Chipotle Pork & Beans pictured below. I also see myself topping it with canned tuna, a squiggle of kewpie mayo and dollop of chilli. Hot Buttered Corn Tuna Rice Bowl! Sounds so much more interesting than tuna and rice. 😂

Ingredients for Hot Buttered Corn Rice
Here’s what you need to make this buttery, garlicky rice! Green onion is not critical.

Corn – I use frozen corn for convenience so imagine how great it is with fresh corn! Canned corn will work too but it’s not my first pick as it’s a little softer so once cooked, it is a little too soft for my taste.
White rice – I like to use long grain white rice for this dish as the rice stays fluffier because the rice itself is less sticky than short grain rice (like sushi rice).
Substitutes: Basmati rice (works just as well, with a little extra perfume of flavour), medium grain rice (next best), sushi rice (works but the rice is a little stickier).
Do not use: Jasmine rice (too soft, requires different cooking treatment), brown rice, risotto rice, paella rice, wild rice, quinoa, or any faux rice (eg cauliflower rice), any par-cooked rice (those microwave packets). The recipe is not designed for this, it would require tweaking.
Butter – For buttery goodness! Some is used to cook the corn and rice, then we stir some through at the end for a good hit of buttery flavour.
Garlic – 3 whole cloves! Garlic + butter + corn = home run.
Green onion – For a little hit of fresh and lovely green colour. Not the end of the world if you don’t have it. You could also just sauté a little onion or eschalots (US: shallots) with the corn.
Chicken or vegetable stock/broth – The cooking liquid. Because it’s tastier than water and we’re making a quick recipe here, so we need the extra helping hand. If we were going to the effort of making a homemade corn stock, we could get away with using water. But we’re not! Not today. 🙂 (But if you want to make something using a homemade corn stock, make this Cold Corn Soup! It’s amazing – but it does require more effort than this recipe.)
Salt – Just a little bit (1/4 teaspoon), so the rice has enough flavour to eat it by the spoonful straight out of the pot. Just lightly salted is best else your overall meal will be too salty when you add a properly seasoned main onto the plate, like the pictured Shredded Chipotle Mexican Pork and Beans.


How to make Hot Buttered Corn Rice
Use a small pot or large saucepan (20 – 22 cm/8 – 9″+). If your saucepan is too small, the depth of the rice will be too deep so the rice will cook unevenly, with mushy rice on the base and raw rice on the surface. If you use a pot that’s too large, then the depth of the rice will be too shallow so the liquid will evaporate too fast, leaving your rice undercooked, and likely with some burnt patches.
The pictured pot is 24cm / 9.4″ and it is a wee bit on the large side, but OK for experienced rice makers!

Sauté – Melt the butter over high heat. Add the garlic and stir for 15 seconds until it smells amazing, but don’t let it go golden. Add the corn (still frozen is fine) and stir for 2 minutes. It will thaw and coat the surface in the tasty garlic butter.
If using fresh corn, it won’t cook through in this time which is fine because it will steam cook with the rice.
Coat rice – Add the rice and stir to coat it in the tasty garlic butter flavour.

Bring to simmer properly – Add the stock and salt. Stir then let the stock come to a simmer.
⚠️ Make sure the whole surface is bubbling or rippling, not just around the edges, before you lower the heat and put the lid on. We want to make sure the stock gets enough heat in it to make sure the rice actually cooks, rather than sitting in hot water just bloating.
Cook the rice for 12 minutes with the lid on. No peeking (this lets steam escape) and no stirring (express path to mushy rice!). At the end of this time, the water should be absorbed by the rice. Tilt the pot and peek quickly to check.

Rest 10 minutes – Remove the pot from the the stove and leave it to rest for 10 minutes with the lid still on. This step is so important anytime you cook rice, whether plain or fully-loaded! The rice will finish cooking and the residual water on the surface of the grains gets absorbed, leaving the rice beautifully fluffy. See FAQ for more information about this and for more rice-making rantings, see my How to cook White Rice post. Writing that was so therapeutic!😂
Butter & fluff – Remove the lid and add the butter. Gently fluff the rice. Once the butter is mostly melted, toss the green onion through. By the time you’ve finished, the butter should be fully melted. Time to serve, while it’s hot and fresh! After all, it’s called HOT Buttered Corn Rice, not Lukewarm Corn Rice (well there’s an average recipe name for you!).

Hot Buttered Corn Rice will last for 3 days in the fridge or 3 months in the freezer. And it will reheat really well, so this is a good one to add to your menu planning for a big gathering because you can make it well in advance then just reheat until steamy!
I’m also thinking this might be a good one to add to the RecipeTin Meals rotation! (This is my food bank where we make and donate meals to the vulnerable). Though possibly my team will make a version with more vegetables in it so it will be a complete two-in-one side dish (ie starch plus vegetables). Then we can just add a piece of protein and we’ll have a complete, nutritious meal that’s efficient to make on a large scale! Must run this past them. 🙂 – Nagi x

Hot Buttered Corn Rice FAQ
No, you do not. You just need the right water to rice ratio which is 1.5 : 1 for most types of white rice cooked on the stove.
If you see a recipe that uses more than this, the rice will be mushy.
If you see a recipe that uses more than this and rinses the rice, the rice will be VERY mushy (because there’s also water in the waterlogged rice).
If you see a recipe that uses more than this and rinses the rice and soaks the rice -> 🤯
The only reason to rinse rice is if you are concerned about cleanliness (if you buy rice in packets from grocery stores like I do, you do not need to worry about this) or if you are making a speciality rice recipe like Biryani.
For lots more rice making rantings, see my How to cook White Rice post. Writing that was so therapeutic!😂
If you insist on rinsing the rice (I get it, some habits are impossible to break) then you will need to reduce the stock in the recipe by 2 tablespoons, to account for the water logged in the rice.
Because during this step, the rice will finish cooking and the water on the surface of each grain gets absorbed, leaving the rice fluffy. If you skip this step, the rice will be wet and slippery with a hard centre.
If you’re thinking can’t I just add more water and cook for longer to I can skip this step so I can get the rice on the table faster? The answer is no! The rice will end up mushy because the outside of each rice grain will absorb too much water and overcook by the time the centre of the rice cooks.
The only way to cook rice through properly is to take it off the stove when the outside of each grain is perfectly cooked but the inside is still a bit hard. At this stage, there is also a slick of water on the surface of each rice grain. Then during the resting stage, this layer of water gets absorbed by each rice grain and the residual heat spreads it through to the centre of the grain so it softens and finishes cooking through.
By the way, if you rinse rice or soak rice, you still have to rest the cooked rice. There is no getting around this step, if you want properly cooked rice!!
You can make up to triple the recipe using a large stock pot. If you try to scale up any more, the depth of the rice will be too great so the rice will cook unevenly (mushy).
If tripling or doubling the recipe, be sure to bring the liquid up to a full boil before putting the lid on, and lower the heat to medium low rather than low, and cook for 18 to 20 minutes (tilt pot to check to ensure all the stock is absorbed). Expect a bit of golden crunchy rice on the base (actually, it’s my favourite part – chef’s treat!)
It will serve 4 to 5 as a side dish for a regular meal. If making it as part of a larger banquet where there are other starches (like bread rolls, potato salad, macaroni salad), it will easily serve 6 to 8 (a large, heaped serving spoon scoop per person).
Make per the recipe, including fluffing and stirring through butter while hot. Then let it fully cool, uncovered, before storing in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 3 days, or freezer for 3 months.
Watch how to make it
Hungry for more? Subscribe to my newsletter and follow along on Facebook, Pinterest and Instagram for all of the latest updates.

Hot buttered corn rice
Ingredients
- 50g/ 4 tbsp unsalted butter , divided
- 3 big garlic cloves , finely minced (can use garlic press)
- 2 cups frozen corn (no need to thaw), or fresh corn kernels (Note 1)
- 1/4 tsp cooking salt / kosher salt
- Pinch of pepper
- 1 cup long grain rice , uncooked, not rinsed (Note 2)
- 1 1/2 cups low-sodium chicken stock/broth (+ 2 tbsp extra if using fresh corn)
- 2 green onion stems , finely sliced
Instructions
- Pot size – Use a small pot or large saucepan about 20-22 cm/8-9". (Note 3)
- Sauté – Melt half the butter in a pot over high heat. Add the garlic and stir for 15 seconds. Add the corn and half the salt. Stir for 2 minutes.
- Bring to simmer – Add the rice and stir for 30 seconds. Add the stock and remaining salt, and pepper. Stir, bring to a simmer (make sure the whole surface is bubbling/ripplling), then put the lid on and turn the heat down to medium low (or low, if your stove is strong). (Note 4)
- Cook for 12 minutes (no peeking, no stirring!). The liquid should be absorbed by now – tilt the pot and take a quick peek to check.
- Rest 10 minutes – Remove the pot from the stove and let it rest for 10 minutes with the lid on. This step is key, do not skip it! (Note 5)
- Toss – Lift the lid, add the remaining butter, fluff the rice to melt the butter through. Add green onion and toss through.
- Tumble into serving bowl. Serve hot!
Recipe Notes:
Life of Dozer
Me: He failed.
Dozer: Winning!
We make Butter Curry Rice with Peas and corn.
Sometimes with a good packet mixed vegetables.
I hope so. I recently got a rice cooker and this is a great recipe. I am going to try it.
Yes you can, I did it. Did the first garlic butter corn frying in the empty turn on rice cooker. I then added rice with rice measure (supplied with rice cooker) added stock as per levels on side of cooker. Turned on and left it for 10mins and back to Nagi instruction, turned out great.
Nagi, no he didn’t. You were offering the cheese stick to him. Well, at least that’s how it looked.
*dies laughing* A total win for Dozer, he got his cheese 🤣
And what a delicious way to cook rice! Added to my rotation.
Hi Nagi, thanks for another great recipe 🙂
I was at work thinking about what to have with some leftover jerk chicken, something a bit more substantial than a salad, but quick to prep.
Checked my emails. Saw the recipe. Problem solved.
Rice was fluffy and came out perfectly (I used some decent long-grain basmati). Was a delicious accompaniment to the spicy jerk chicken, another hit! 🙂
When it is in season, I roast corn on the cob on the grill and then add it to the rice after the rice is cooked. So using Jasmine rice worked fine. I also like to add roasted red and green bell peppers, sauteed or roasted onion and minced garlic,
Perfect timing for this recipe, Nagi, which looks yummy. We’ve got fresh summer corn at the moment. Love you and the darling Dozer ❤️
Hi Nagi, do you have a rice cooker version of This recipe.
Who is playing the music in this video? Your food always look so good and the music is so relaxing that. I keep playing it over.
My husband loves sweet corn so during the small window when we can get it fresh here in northern Illinois (USA), I make it for him every week while I make myself a huge salad. A couple of weeks ago, we bought an entire dozen extra to remove from the ears and freeze so I have plenty of the good stuff to use throughout the rest of the year in recipes…like this one! Is already on my next week’s menu.
HI looks great and can’t wait to try it. Could I use tinned corn or only fresh/frozen?
I made it last night with one tin of corn and halved the other ingredients.
I used the sweet corn water as part of the liquid.
Turned out great. Enough for 2 when served will some Caribbean chicken thighs and a few green beans.
What a clever idea to use the corn water!! I’m going to try that!! N x
Thanks Nagi!
I try not to waste anything if I think it can be incorporated into the meal.
If it can’t, I will check to see if it can be used in my dogs dinner!
Labradoodle, just turned 12 🙂
His name is Oreo.
xxx
I love corn and I love rice and the thought of a pobblano pepper in this mixture tickles me to no end. Thanks for the recipe Nagi. I wouldn’t have thought to mix the two.
Oh and boy Dozer didn’t waste any time in grabbing that cheese stick. LOL. You both look so cute on video. 🙂
You’re a culinary genius. I appreciate the huge workload you undertake with this blog, also.
This is a common dish in Mexico that’s also served with roasted strips of poblano peppers. Did you come up with this yourself?
Well yes! It’s just rice with corn cooked in garlic butter, fundamentally. Slightly elevated version of a Japanese corn rice dish, actually! N x
Love, love, LOVE your new FAQs! 😊
I’m into corn at the moment so love this! I’ve been looking at American websites and they LOVE their corn. Made a lovely fresh corn polenta recently and it was yummy! Going to make this tomorrow. Tonight my Asian fix Duck Stir Fry with noodles.
This sounds yummy and easy! Frozen corn on shopping list.
Hi Nagi! Cant wait to try this.
Do you have any suggestions on what this would pair with?
So after freezing and thawing, what would the best way to re-heat be please? Microwave?
Why not to use Jasmine rice?
Love this idea. Like the idea of adding more veg for your Meals. I would add red cappo for colour. Yum, frozen corn on the shopping list for tomorrow, can wait to try this.
That was a typo. I CAN’T wait to try this.
😂 I clocked it Kerry!