7-Eleven Poké Ball Onigiri: The Nintendo Life Evaluate
We, after all, should start with the ball that began all of it…
Poké Ball
This red-and-white unique comes with roasted pork, garlic, and mayonnaise.
Of all three balls, this was the toughest to eat…the sausage slab slid off the rice and we had been pressured to eat them individually
As you possibly can see within the pictures, the Pokéball design consists of the outer plastic wrapping solely. Beneath, the spherical onigiri loosely resembles what we used to catch our first Caterpies and Weedles. Nonetheless, the color of the pork and the darkish band of seaweed invoke the picture of a Poké Ball. As seen within the cross-section, the cooks at 7-Eleven sandwiched a dollop of mayonnaise between the rice and meat.
Earlier than we bit in, we questioned the place this pork got here from. With Scarlet and Violet’s launch, maybe this sausage was constructed from a Lechonk, or perhaps the cooks pulled from Pokémon’s previous to fillet a unique pig-themed Pokémon reminiscent of Tepig. They uncared for to specify which Pokémon we’re feasting on, although we’re positive all of them style considerably the identical anyway.
Of all three balls, this was the toughest to eat. Instantly after taking a chunk, the sausage slab slid off the rice and we had been pressured to eat them individually as if it had been an unfinished Lechonk fried rice dish. That stated, the Lechonk slice was fairly tasty, if a bit salty, regardless of the onigiri costing solely 172 yen from a comfort retailer. The band of seaweed, or nori, and the rice itself we loved as they had been fairly contemporary.
Nevertheless, as we admittedly don’t like Japanese mayonnaise, the little blob within the center turned us off the entire bundle. It overpowered any trace of garlic like a Dragonite utilizing Hyper Beam on a Pidgey, leaving us total upset with the unique Poké Ball.
Common: 5/10
Nice Ball
The blue and purple Nice Ball takes the favored Japanese dish of omelette rice and compresses it down right into a compact rice/Pokéball type.
Whereas the omelette itself lacked any fluffy butteriness, the rice had a spicy little zing to it that made up for the egg
Omelette rice – or omurice – usually sees fried rice wrapped in a skinny omelette earlier than being topped with ketchup. On this type, a considerably thick layer of omelette tops the onigiri, and as an alternative of being drizzled with ketchup, the cooks combined the ketchup into the rice itself. Inside, a mushroom and rooster mix awaits hungry Pokémon followers and Japanese businessmen that needed to boost their comfort retailer lunch a bit.
Very similar to the Poké Ball, we questioned from which Pokémon the eggs got here – was it a Togepi? Or a chicken-like Pokémon reminiscent of Torchic? Who can say? What we will inform you, nonetheless, is that the mushroom inside positively reminded us of Amoonguss. Or perhaps it was Shiinotic.
We digress. We loved this onigiri greater than the primary as a result of the omelette on high stayed put. Consuming it by hand, as Arceus supposed of all onigiri, was a way more nice expertise. Whereas the omelette itself lacked any fluffy butteriness, giving it each bland style and texture, the rice had a spicy little zing to it that made up for the egg – and no, it didn’t style strictly of ketchup.
The Amoonguss and Torchic combination, nonetheless, combines for a wierd, mushy combination that we might’ve completed with out. The truth is, we weren’t sure if any Torchic was current. Admittedly, we’re not huge mushroom followers.
Not Fairly Nice, However Good: 7/10
Extremely Ball
Very similar to within the precise video games, the Extremely Ball captured our style buds the simplest. A mixture of pork (Grumpig?), a medium-boiled egg (Happiny?), and soy sauce doesn’t appear that particular when in comparison with the opposite two, nevertheless it all comes collectively to create a way more savoury onigiri.
Should you squint, the half of a boiled egg within the centre might characterize the Extremely Ball’s launch button, or maybe a Pokémon itself. A band of seaweed envelopes the highest half to symbolise the black design of an Extremely Ball. Aside from this, it thematically has little to do with its packaging, and of the three we’d argue seems to be the least appetising.
Generally, simplicity wins the day. The half of an egg within the centre was cooked nicely, being neither dry nor runny, although we needed a pinch of salt to sprinkle on it. The seaweed offered a barely crunchy texture with an fragrant style. Nevertheless it was the rice itself, combined along with soy sauce and chunks of Grumpig, that resulted in our style buds being critically captured.
It was, in reality, not too far gone from an everyday previous fried rice ball – our private favorite. Of the three, we wouldn’t hesitate to buy the Extremely Ball onigiri as soon as once more.
Extremely Balls, Certainly: 9/10
Hungry for some donuts rice balls? Should you had the possibility to pop right into a Japanese 7-Eleven, which of those onigiri balls would you wish to eat most – if in any respect? Remember to tell us within the feedback!
*Assured 15% minimal real Pokémon. In all probability. Could include traces of Digimon.