This easy and fun Cucumber-Wrapped Sushi makes a great appetizer for your holiday party or any get-together. Top it with ikura (salmon roe), hamachi (yellowtail), tuna, and amaebi (sweet shrimp). You can also customize it with your favorite creative toppings!

Cucumber Wrapped Sushi on a plate.

While everyone is busy planning and making holiday meals and baked goods, I decided to get a head start on Japanese New Year special meals.

I know it sounds crazy since it’s not even Christmas yet! But in Japan we don’t generally get together with family and relatives for Christmas, but instead we get together on New Year’s Day or the first few days of New Years.

Cucumber Wrapped Sushi on a white long plate.

I was actually surprised to receive many requests for traditional New Years food recipes from the readers because I was never been a big fan of Osechi Ryori (Traditional Japanese New Years Meal, お節料理) while growing up in Japan. I only have a few favorite dishes like Sweet Rolled Omelet (Datemaki 伊達巻) and Mashed Sweet Potatoes with Candied Chestnuts (Kurikinton 栗きんとん) but I mostly look forward to my mom’s Saikyo Miso O-zoni (Kyoto-style shiro miso soup for New Years 西京味噌のお雑煮).

Cucumber Wrapped Sushi on a plate.

Since Christmas or New Year’s Eve is not here yet, I decided to share these Cucumber Wrapped Sushi that could be served as appetizer for your holiday party or any get together. This type of sushi is called Gunkan or Gunkan Maki in Japanese.

Cucumber Wrapped Sushi on a white plate.

Gunkan (軍艦) meas “battleship” in Japanese, and the name comes from its oval shape. Typically, gunkan sushi are wrapped around with nori seaweed and has toppings like salmon roe (ikura), sea urchin (uni), and broiled eel (unagi) on them. But today I used thinly sliced cucumber to wrap around.

Once rice (or sushi rice) is cooked, you can quickly assemble the sushi right before you serve. If you don’t eat raw fish, you can substitute with smoked salmon or simply create your own!

Cucumber Wrapped Sushi on a white plate.

Wish to learn more about Japanese cooking? Sign up for our free newsletter to receive cooking tips & recipe updates! And stay in touch with me on FacebookPinterestYouTube, and Instagram.

Cucumber Wrapped Sushi | JustOneCookbook.com

Cucumber Wrapped Sushi

4.84 from 6 votes
This easy and fun Cucumber-Wrapped Sushi makes a great appetizer for your holiday party or any get-together. Top it with ikura (salmon roe), hamachi (yellowtail), tuna, and amaebi (sweet shrimp). You can also customize it with your favorite creative toppings!
Prep Time: 45 minutes
Total Time: 45 minutes
Servings: 15 sushi

Ingredients
  

For the Toppings of Your Choice

  • 4 oz sashimi-grade tuna (maguro)
  • 10 sashimi-grade shrimp (amaebi)
  • 4 oz sashimi-grade salmon
  • 4 oz sashimi-grade yellowtail (hamachi)
  • 4 Tbsp ikura (salmon roe)

For the Garnish

Japanese Ingredient Substitution: If you want substitutes for Japanese condiments and ingredients, click here.

Instructions
 

  • Gather all the ingredients. I also use a 1¾-inch (4.5-cm) round cookie cutter.
    Cucumber Wrapped Sushi Ingredients

To Prepare the Fillings

  • Dice 4 oz sashimi-grade tuna (maguro) and lightly marinate the tuna with chopped green onion/scallion, soy sauce, and sesame oil.
    Cucumber Wrapped Sushi 4
  • Slice 2 Japanese or Persian cucumbers with a peeler to make long, thin strips.
    Cucumber Wrapped Sushi 1

To Assemble

  • Place 10 shiso leaves (perilla/ooba) on a serving platter. Dip a cookie cutter in a bowl of water (so the rice doesn‘t stick) and place it on top of a shiso leaf. With 3–4 cups sushi rice (cooked and seasoned), stuff some sushi rice into the cookie cutter halfway up. Remove the cutter gently. Roll the sushi cylinder with one strip of cucumber to measure the circumference of the circle.
    Cucumber Wrapped Sushi 2
  • Make slits at the end of the cucumber strip with a knife as you see below. Now you can interlock the strips around the rice.
    Cucumber Wrapped Sushi 3
  • Fill the cucumber-wrapped sushi cups with your favorite toppings. For the 10 sashimi-grade shrimp (amaebi), I place a couple of pieces from the outer edges to the center of each cucumber cup, so it looks like a flower.
    Cucumber Wrapped Sushi 5
  • Slice 4 oz sashimi-grade salmon and 4 oz sashimi-grade yellowtail (hamachi) perpendicular to the muscle (the white line you see in the fish) and place a few slices in each cucumber cup.
    Cucumber Wrapped Sushi 6
  • Place the tuna mixture in some cucumber cups. Use 4 Tbsp ikura (salmon roe) to fill other cucumber cups. Place on a serving platter. Garnish the Cucumber Sushi as you like with 1 lemon, 1 green onion/scallion (chopped), and a few sprouts from 1 bunch kaiware daikon radish sprouts. Serve immediately.
    Cucumber Wrapped Sushi | JustOneCookbook.com

To Store

  • I don‘t recommend keeping sashimi-grade fish and shrimp longer than 24 hours. Keep them refrigerated until serving.

Nutrition

Calories: 75 kcal · Carbohydrates: 8 g · Protein: 7 g · Fat: 1 g · Saturated Fat: 1 g · Polyunsaturated Fat: 1 g · Monounsaturated Fat: 1 g · Cholesterol: 28 mg · Sodium: 36 mg · Potassium: 127 mg · Fiber: 1 g · Sugar: 1 g · Vitamin A: 216 IU · Vitamin C: 5 mg · Calcium: 12 mg · Iron: 1 mg
Author: Namiko Hirasawa Chen
Course: Appetizer, Main Course
Cuisine: Japanese
Keyword: sushi, sushi roll
©JustOneCookbook.com Content and photographs are copyright protected. Sharing of this recipe is both encouraged and appreciated. Copying and/or pasting full recipes to any website or social media is strictly prohibited. Please view my photo use policy here.
Did you make this recipe?If you made this recipe, snap a pic and hashtag it #justonecookbook! We love to see your creations on Instagram @justonecookbook!

 

Introducing JOC Goods

JOC Goods, our new online shop, offering Japanese tableware and kitchenware, is now open. It is a natural extension of Just One Cookbook’s mission to teach home cooks how to prepare and enjoy delicious Japanese meals. We believe that beautifully plated food can bring joy and happiness to people’s lives.

Browse All Products

4.84 from 6 votes (3 ratings without comment)
Subscribe
Notify of
22 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

Hello Namiko,
Thank you for these recipes! For salmon roe ftom freshly purchased fish, how can we store it after washing the roe? Do we make a brine with salt and water in a glass jar? Thank you!5 stars

Hi Miya! Thank you very much for reading Nami’s post!
Fresh salmon roe! It must be delicious! Yes, you can brine with salt water until it turned red, then marinade with simmered sauce (Sake, Mirin, and Soy sauce = 1:1:1). Please place it in the jar or container and store it in the refrigerator.
We hope this helps!

I love this site , I love the recipes …I am totally in love with Japanese food and presentations …your site makes cooking Japanese food so accessible to me . I cannot thank you enough 🤣🤣🤣5 stars

Hi INDRANIE DSAGUOTA,
Thank you for your kind feedback!

Where do you buy your sushi grade fish? I will be ordering your cookbook, LOVE the recipes!

The dishes look beautiful and I really want to try it!!

Hi Nami
Thank you for sharing these recipes. I always interested with Japanese cuisine.
I tried some sushi recipes and they worked very well. Now I want to add Gunkan sushi, but I fail with the wrapping technic.
Could you add some guidelines?
Thank you

Hi Nami
Thank you for your reply.
I have the following problems:
– What is the proper size of seaweed? I cut it to 3 equal pieces, but I think it’s too much.
– Yes, I squeeze tightly 🙁
– How to glue the seaweed strip? I use the rice, but sometimes I manage to brake the strip.
– What are the possible fillings? I use caviar (ikura) – love it, tried some salads, but not all works well (for instance too wet)

Thank you

I have a problem consuming sugar and carbohydrates (Rice).
Do you have more Sushi recipes with wraps like Cucumber, Rice Paper, or Seaweed etc.

Those look amazing! After reading your post, I was so thrilled to find one cucumber left in the fridge and ran off to start making them! Surprisingly, they were really easy to make! I didn’t have any fish or meat for toppings, but I used diced mangos topped with caviar! It was delicious! I remember eating something similar at a Japanese restaurant once (mango + salmon) and felt so happy to be able to actually make these! 😀

Beautiful pics! I always wondered how to slice the cucumber so thinly! Thanks for the recipe!

Nami, the sushi looks so yummy and pretty. It’s like food art. =)

Hey Nami. That looks wonderful. I had some sushi similar to your this summer. It was delightful. You also make it look so easy. I hope it is!