Mochi Brownies: The Ultimate Guide to Chewy, Fudgy Perfection

Mochi Brownies

Introduction: Why Mochi Brownies Are the Dessert You Never Knew You Needed

Mochi Brownies are the kind of recipe that ruins all other brownies for you — in the very best way possible. The first time you bite into one, the experience is genuinely surprising: a crinkly, paper-thin top crust gives way to a dense, intensely chocolatey interior with a chew that is unlike anything a standard brownie can offer. That distinctive pull, that elastic bounce between your teeth, comes from one ingredient that changes everything — glutinous rice flour, the same flour used to make traditional Japanese mochi.

This is not a gimmick recipe. It is not a fusion trend that sounds clever but disappoints on the plate. Mochi Brownies have earned their devoted following because they genuinely deliver a textural experience that feels entirely new while remaining deeply, comfortingly familiar. They are still brownies — rich, chocolatey, and satisfying in that specific way only a great brownie can be. But the mochi element adds a dimension of chewiness that makes every bite more interesting, more complex, and frankly more addictive than any traditional brownie you have ever made.

The origin of this recipe sits at the intersection of two beloved food cultures. Japanese mochi — the soft, stretchy rice cake made from mochigome, or glutinous rice — has been a cornerstone of Japanese confectionery for centuries. The American brownie, invented at the turn of the twentieth century and perfected through decades of bake sales and birthday parties, needs no introduction. When these two traditions meet in a single baking tin, the result is something that feels both deeply nostalgic and completely new.

Whether you are an experienced baker looking for your next obsession or a complete beginner making brownies for the first time, this guide gives you everything you need — the ingredients, the technique, professional tips, common mistakes, storage advice, and answers to every question you might have along the way.

What Makes Mochi Brownies Different from Regular Brownies

Before we get into the recipe, it is worth understanding exactly what sets Mochi Brownies apart at a technical level — because once you understand the science, the baking makes much more intuitive sense.

Traditional brownies are made with all-purpose flour, which contains gluten proteins that create structure but can also lead to a cakier, more crumbly texture if overmixed. The gluten network formed during mixing determines how the brownie sets and how it feels in your mouth.

Mochi Brownies replace all-purpose flour with glutinous rice flour — also called sweet rice flour or mochiko. Despite the name, glutinous rice flour contains no gluten whatsoever. Instead, it is composed almost entirely of amylopectin, a type of starch that behaves very differently from wheat starch when it absorbs liquid and is exposed to heat. Amylopectin creates an extraordinarily cohesive, stretchy, chewy structure — which is exactly what gives mochi its characteristic pull.

When you bake a brownie with glutinous rice flour, the starch gelatinizes during baking and creates a dense, tight crumb with that unmistakable chew. The top still develops the coveted papery crust that brownie lovers prize. The chocolate flavor is just as deep and complex. But the eating experience is transformed into something genuinely special — a brownie that stretches slightly as you pull it apart and rewards every single bite.

Ingredients for Mochi Brownies

Makes approximately 16 squares from a standard 8×8-inch pan.

For the Mochi Brownie Batter

  • 1 cup (160g) glutinous rice flour (mochiko — do not substitute with regular rice flour)
  • ¾ cup (150g) granulated sugar
  • ¼ cup (50g) light brown sugar, packed
  • ½ cup (45g) unsweetened Dutch-process cocoa powder
  • 1 teaspoon baking powder
  • ½ teaspoon fine sea salt
  • ½ cup (115g) unsalted butter, melted and cooled slightly
  • 2 large eggs, at room temperature
  • 1 cup (240ml) whole milk (or full-fat coconut milk for a dairy-free version)
  • 1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
  • ½ cup (90g) semi-sweet or dark chocolate chips or chunks

Optional Add-Ins and Toppings

  • Flaky sea salt for finishing
  • ½ cup crushed Oreos swirled through the batter
  • ¼ cup smooth peanut butter dropped in dollops and swirled
  • White chocolate chips in addition to dark
  • 1 tablespoon espresso powder to intensify the chocolate flavor
  • Matcha powder swirl made with 1 tablespoon matcha mixed with 1 tablespoon melted butter
Mochi Brownies
Mochi Brownies

A Note on Key Ingredients

Glutinous rice flour vs. rice flour: This is the most critical ingredient distinction in the entire recipe. Regular rice flour and glutinous rice flour look identical in their packaging but behave completely differently when baked. Regular rice flour produces a gritty, sandy brownie with none of the characteristic chew. Always check the label — you want glutinous rice flour, sweet rice flour, or mochiko. Bob’s Red Mill and Koda Farms are widely available and reliable.

Dutch-process cocoa: The deep, dark, almost smoky flavor of Dutch-process cocoa pairs exceptionally well with the neutral, slightly sweet character of the glutinous rice flour. Natural cocoa will work but produces a slightly sharper, less rounded flavor.

Room temperature eggs: Cold eggs can cause the melted butter to seize and create a lumpy batter. Set your eggs out at least 30 minutes before you begin.

Step-by-Step Instructions for Mochi Brownies

Step 1 — Prepare Your Pan and Preheat the Oven

Preheat your oven to 350°F (175°C). Line an 8×8-inch baking pan with parchment paper, leaving an overhang on two sides to create a sling — this makes lifting the finished brownies out of the pan significantly easier. Lightly grease the parchment with butter or non-stick spray.

Step 2 — Whisk the Dry Ingredients

In a large mixing bowl, whisk together the glutinous rice flour, both sugars, Dutch-process cocoa powder, baking powder, and fine sea salt. Whisk thoroughly and take your time — lumps in the cocoa powder create uneven spots in the finished brownie. Everything should be evenly combined before you add any wet ingredients.

Step 3 — Combine the Wet Ingredients

In a separate bowl or large measuring jug, whisk together the melted and slightly cooled butter, both eggs, whole milk, and vanilla extract until fully combined and smooth. The mixture should look glossy and uniform with no visible streaks of egg.

Mochi Brownies
Mochi Brownies

Step 4 — Bring the Batter Together

Pour the wet ingredients into the dry ingredients and stir with a spatula or wooden spoon until just combined. Unlike traditional brownies where overmixing is the enemy, mochi brownie batter is forgiving in this regard because there is no gluten to overdevelop. Stir until you have a smooth, relatively thin batter with no dry pockets remaining.

Step 5 — Fold in the Chocolate Chips

Add your chocolate chips or chunks and fold them through the batter gently. Reserve a small handful to scatter over the top of the batter once it is in the pan — this creates beautiful chocolate pools on the surface and signals to everyone exactly what they are in for.

Step 6 — Pour and Bake

Pour the batter into your prepared pan and spread it into an even layer with your spatula. Scatter the reserved chocolate chips over the top and add a generous pinch of flaky sea salt if using. Bake at 350°F (175°C) for 40 to 45 minutes. The top should look set and matte with the characteristic papery, slightly crinkled surface. A toothpick inserted into the center should come out with a few moist crumbs but no wet batter.

Step 7 — Cool Completely Before Cutting

This step requires genuine willpower but is absolutely critical. Mochi Brownies need to cool completely — and ideally rest for at least 1 to 2 hours after coming out of the oven — before they are cut. The glutinous rice flour continues to set as the brownie cools, and cutting into warm mochi brownies produces a gummy, sticky mess that clings to your knife and compresses the texture. Room temperature is the minimum. Refrigerator-cold is actually ideal for the cleanest cuts and the fullest expression of the chewy texture.

Step 8 — Cut and Serve

Use the parchment sling to lift the entire brownie slab out of the pan onto a cutting board. Use a sharp knife wiped clean with a damp cloth between each cut to slice into 16 squares. Clean, confident cuts produce neat squares — hesitant, dragging cuts compress the brownie and tear the top crust.

Mochi Brownies
Mochi Brownies

Pro Tips for Making the Best Mochi Brownies

Use a Kitchen Scale

Glutinous rice flour can pack into a measuring cup very differently depending on how it was stored and scooped, creating significant variation in the amount you are actually using. A kitchen scale eliminates all of that uncertainty. 160 grams is 160 grams every single time. If you bake Mochi Brownies regularly — and you will — a scale is the single best investment you can make.

Brown the Butter for Extra Depth

Instead of simply melting the butter, try browning it. Cook the butter in a light-colored saucepan over medium heat, swirling frequently, until the milk solids turn golden-brown and the butter smells intensely nutty and caramel-like. Remove immediately from heat and let it cool before using. Brown butter adds a layer of toffee-like complexity to the chocolate flavor that makes an already excellent brownie taste extraordinary.

Add Espresso Powder

A tablespoon of instant espresso powder dissolved into the wet ingredients does something remarkable to the chocolate flavor — it does not make the brownies taste like coffee, it makes them taste more intensely and more profoundly like chocolate. This is a well-established baker’s trick and it works just as beautifully in Mochi Brownies as in any other chocolate recipe.

Chill Before Cutting

Once the brownies have cooled to room temperature, transfer the entire pan to the refrigerator for at least an hour before cutting. Cold Mochi Brownies cut dramatically more cleanly, hold their shape better, and have a more pronounced chew than their warm counterparts. Many bakers find they genuinely prefer eating Mochi Brownies cold straight from the refrigerator.

Do Not Overbake

Mochi Brownies look done before they actually are in the traditional sense — the top sets and becomes matte well before the interior has fully gelatinized. Trust the 40 to 45 minute window and rely on the toothpick test rather than visual cues alone. An overbaked mochi brownie turns dry and loses much of its characteristic chew — the one quality that makes the entire recipe worth making.

Common Mistakes to Avoid When Making Mochi Brownies

Using the Wrong Flour

It cannot be said often enough — regular rice flour will not work. The entire textural premise of this recipe depends on the unique starch composition of glutinous rice flour. Check the label before you start. If it does not say glutinous, sweet rice flour, or mochiko, it is the wrong flour.

Cutting While Still Warm

Cutting warm Mochi Brownies is the most common and most heartbreaking mistake in this recipe. The interior is still actively setting as it cools, and warm mochi is soft, sticky, and impossible to cut cleanly. Wait the full cooling time without exception.

Skipping the Parchment Lining

Attempting to remove Mochi Brownies from an unlined pan — even a well-greased one — almost always results in tearing or sticking. The parchment sling is not optional, it is essential.

Using Low-Fat Milk

The fat content in whole milk contributes meaningfully to the richness and texture of the finished brownie. Low-fat or skim milk produces a slightly thinner batter and a less satisfying result. For a dairy-free version, full-fat coconut milk is an excellent substitute that adds a subtle tropical complexity to the chocolate flavor.

Not Letting the Butter Cool

Adding very hot melted butter directly to the eggs can begin to scramble them, creating small cooked egg curds in your batter. Let the butter cool for at least 5 minutes after melting before combining it with the eggs.

Underdissolving the Cocoa

Cocoa powder does not dissolve easily and will form lumps if not properly whisked into the dry ingredients. Those lumps create bitter, dry spots in the finished brownie. Whisk the dry ingredients more thoroughly than you think necessary before adding any liquid.

Mochi Brownies
Mochi Brownies

Storage and Serving Suggestions

Room Temperature Storage

Mochi Brownies can be stored in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 2 days. Place parchment paper between layers to prevent them from sticking together. At room temperature, the texture is softer and the chew is slightly less pronounced than when chilled.

Refrigerator Storage

This is the preferred storage method. Stored in an airtight container in the refrigerator, Mochi Brownies keep beautifully for up to 5 days and actually improve in texture as they chill. The cold temperature firms the starch structure and produces a more pronounced, satisfying chew. Many people who try them cold refuse to eat them any other way.

Freezer Storage

Mochi Brownies freeze exceptionally well — arguably better than traditional brownies. Wrap individual squares tightly in plastic wrap, then place them in a freezer-safe bag or container for up to 2 months. To serve, thaw in the refrigerator overnight or at room temperature for about an hour. Do not microwave from frozen as this makes the texture rubbery and unpleasant.

Serving Suggestions

Serve them cold from the refrigerator as a standalone treat — simple, clean, and intensely chocolatey. Warm a single square for 10 to 15 seconds in the microwave and serve alongside a scoop of good vanilla ice cream for a dessert that feels genuinely special. Dust lightly with powdered sugar and serve with whipped cream and fresh raspberries for an effortlessly elegant dinner party presentation. Cut them into smaller pieces and arrange on a platter for parties and bake sales — they never last long.

Frequently Asked Questions About Mochi Brownies

Q1: Can I make Mochi Brownies without eggs?

Yes, with some adjustments. The most reliable egg substitute is a flax egg — 1 tablespoon of ground flaxseed mixed with 3 tablespoons of water, rested for 5 minutes until gelatinous — used in a 1:1 replacement ratio. The texture will be very slightly different and the top crust may not develop as dramatically, but the chew and chocolate flavor remain excellent. Aquafaba at 3 tablespoons per egg also works well and produces a slightly lighter result.

Q2: Why are my Mochi Brownies gummy in the center?

Two likely causes: underbaking or cutting while still warm. If the center is genuinely gummy after cooling completely, the brownies needed more oven time. Return them to a 325°F oven for an additional 8 to 10 minutes. If they were gummy immediately after cutting but firm after further cooling, this is entirely normal mochi behavior — the starch continues setting as it cools.

Q3: Can I double the recipe for a 9×13-inch pan?

Yes. Doubling the recipe and baking in a 9×13-inch pan works well. Increase the baking time by approximately 8 to 12 minutes and begin checking for doneness at the 48-minute mark. The center of a larger pan will always take longer to set than the edges, so use your toothpick test rather than relying on time alone.

Q4: What is the difference between mochiko and regular rice flour?

Mochiko is made from glutinous rice, which has a starch composition that is almost entirely amylopectin — the stretchy, cohesive starch that creates mochi’s characteristic chew. Regular rice flour is made from non-glutinous long-grain rice and contains a significant proportion of amylose, a different starch that does not create the same chewy structure. The two flours look nearly identical but perform completely differently in baking.

Q5: Can I add mix-ins other than chocolate chips?

Absolutely. Mochi Brownies work beautifully with swirls of peanut butter, Nutella, or tahini pressed into the top of the batter before baking. Crushed Oreos, toasted walnuts, or macadamia nuts add wonderful textural contrast. A matcha swirl — 1 tablespoon of high-quality matcha stirred into a tablespoon of melted butter and drizzled over the batter before swirling with a toothpick — is particularly striking in both flavor and appearance. Dried cherries or a thin layer of raspberry jam spread over the batter before baking also pairs wonderfully with the dark chocolate base.

Q6: Are Mochi Brownies gluten-free?

Yes — when made with certified gluten-free glutinous rice flour and certified gluten-free cocoa powder, Mochi Brownies are completely gluten-free. This makes them a wonderful option for guests with gluten sensitivities or celiac disease. Check every label carefully as cross-contamination can occur with some brands. Koda Farms Mochiko is a widely trusted certified gluten-free option.

Q7: My batter seems much thinner than regular brownie batter. Is that normal?

Yes, completely normal. Mochi brownie batter is notably thinner and more liquid than traditional brownie batter — closer to a thick pancake batter than the dense, fudgy consistency of a conventional brownie. This is entirely expected. The batter thickens dramatically during baking as the glutinous rice starch gelatinizes in the heat. Do not add more flour to compensate.

Conclusion: Why Mochi Brownies Belong in Your Permanent Baking Rotation

There are recipes you make once because they are interesting, and there are recipes that become part of your identity as a baker — the thing your friends request by name, the dish you find yourself thinking about on a Wednesday afternoon, the one you always make in a double batch because a single batch never lasts long enough. Mochi Brownies, without question, belong in the second category.

What makes them so enduringly appealing is the way they deliver everything we want from a great dessert simultaneously. They are deeply, unapologetically chocolatey in a way that satisfies completely. They have texture — real, interesting, exciting texture — that keeps you reaching for another square long after you thought you were finished. They are simple enough for a weeknight bake but impressive enough to serve at a dinner party. They are naturally gluten-free without any of the compromises that gluten-free baking so often involves. And they are genuinely unlike anything most people have tasted before, which means they always generate a reaction worth seeing.

The technique is accessible to any level of baker. The ingredient list is short and focused. The margin for error is forgiving in all the ways that matter. The payoff is enormous and consistent.

Once you make Mochi Brownies and experience that first bite — the crinkly crust, the dense chocolate interior, the extraordinary chew that keeps going — you will understand immediately why this recipe has spread so enthusiastically through baking communities around the world. And you will understand why, for many bakers who discover them, no other brownie ever quite measures up again.

Make them this weekend. Serve them cold. Finish them with flaky sea salt. Share them with someone you love and watch their face on the first bite. That reaction is exactly why this recipe exists.

Mochi Brownies
MaraLila

Mochi Brownies

Mochi Brownies are the ultimate fusion dessert — combining the rich, fudgy depth of a classic chocolate brownie with the irresistible chewy pull of Japanese mochi. Made with glutinous rice flour instead of all-purpose flour, these brownies develop a dense, stretchy, extraordinarily satisfying texture with a beautiful crinkly top crust. They are naturally gluten-free, incredibly easy to make, and genuinely unlike any brownie you have tasted before. For another Japanese-inspired chocolate treat, try our Matcha Brownies.
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 45 minutes
Total Time 2 hours
Servings: 16 squares
Course: Dessert, Snack
Cuisine: American, Fusion, Japanese
Calories: 195

Ingredients
  

  • 1 cup glutinous rice flour / mochiko (160g) — do not substitute with regular rice flour
  • 0.75 cup granulated sugar (150g)
  • 0.25 cup light brown sugar, packed (50g)
  • 0.5 cup unsweetened Dutch-process cocoa powder (45g)
  • 1 tsp baking powder
  • 0.5 tsp fine sea salt
  • 0.5 cup unsalted butter, melted and cooled slightly (115g)
  • 2 large eggs, at room temperature
  • 1 cup whole milk or full-fat coconut milk for dairy-free (240ml)
  • 1 tsp pure vanilla extract
  • 0.5 cup semi-sweet or dark chocolate chips or chunks (90g)
  • flaky sea salt for finishing (optional)

Equipment

  • 8×8-inch Baking Pan The standard pan size for this recipe. Line with parchment paper — do not skip this step.
  • Kitchen Scale Highly recommended for measuring glutinous rice flour accurately. Cup measurements can vary significantly.
  • Two Mixing Bowls One for dry ingredients, one for wet ingredients.
  • Whisk and Rubber Spatula For combining ingredients and folding in chocolate chips.
  • Sharp Chef’s Knife For cutting clean squares. Wipe the blade with a damp cloth between each cut.

Method
 

  1. Preheat your oven to 350°F (175°C). Line an 8×8-inch baking pan with parchment paper, leaving an overhang on two sides to create a sling for easy removal. Lightly grease the parchment with butter or non-stick spray.
  2. In a large mixing bowl, whisk together the glutinous rice flour, granulated sugar, brown sugar, Dutch-process cocoa powder, baking powder, and fine sea salt. Whisk thoroughly until evenly combined with no cocoa lumps remaining.
  3. In a separate bowl or large measuring jug, whisk together the melted and slightly cooled butter, both room-temperature eggs, whole milk, and vanilla extract until fully combined, smooth, and glossy with no visible streaks of egg.
  4. Pour the wet ingredients into the dry ingredients and stir with a spatula or wooden spoon until smooth with no dry pockets remaining. The batter will be notably thinner than traditional brownie batter — this is completely normal. Unlike wheat-based brownies, this batter is forgiving and does not suffer from overmixing.
  5. Fold most of the chocolate chips through the batter, reserving a small handful. Pour the batter into the prepared pan and spread into an even layer. Scatter the reserved chocolate chips over the top and add a generous pinch of flaky sea salt if using.
  6. Bake at 350°F (175°C) for 40 to 45 minutes, until the top looks set, matte, and slightly crinkled. A toothpick inserted into the center should come out with a few moist crumbs but no wet batter. Do not overbake — an overbaked mochi brownie loses its signature chew.
  7. Allow the brownies to cool completely in the pan at room temperature — at least 1 to 2 hours. For best results, transfer to the refrigerator for an additional hour before cutting. Use the parchment sling to lift the slab onto a cutting board. Slice into 16 squares using a sharp knife wiped clean between each cut. Serve cold or at room temperature.

Notes

Pro Tips: Always use glutinous rice flour (mochiko) — regular rice flour will not create the signature chew and will produce a gritty, sandy texture instead. Use a kitchen scale for accuracy, especially for the glutinous rice flour, as cup measurements can vary significantly. Brown the butter for an extra layer of toffee-like depth in the chocolate flavor. Never cut warm mochi brownies — the interior continues setting as it cools, and cutting too early produces a sticky, gummy mess. Cool completely at room temperature, then chill in the refrigerator for at least 1 hour before slicing for the cleanest cuts and most pronounced chew. Add 1 tablespoon of espresso powder to intensify the chocolate flavor without making the brownies taste like coffee. Store in the refrigerator for up to 5 days — the texture actually improves as it chills.

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