Arancini are crisp on the outside with a creamy, cheesy center. Children and adults love these classic Italian rice balls. They such a treat fresh off the stove, stuffed with glorious gooey cheese.
This arancini recipe is similar in flavor to one of the most popular recipes on my site; Instant Pot Chicken and Rice (a one-pot meal). If you loved that dish, you’ll enjoy these cheesy rice balls!

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Arancini Recipe
Arancini are a satisfying treat filled with risotto-like creamy rice, ham, sweet peas, parmesan, and mozzarella cheese. Serve with warmed marinara sauce, these are wonderful for lunch on their own or paired with a fresh Caesar Salad.
This recipe was adapted from one of my favorite Italian cooks: Lidia Matticchio Bastianich and is based on her “Arancini di Riso” (Rice Balls) from her book, Lidia’s Favorite Recipes. Thank you Lidia for introducing me to this wonderful treat!
Arancini Video Tutorial
Learn all of our best tips and tricks for making the best Arancini! One bite into a cheesy rice ball and you’ll know they are well worth every bit of effort.
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What is Arancini?
Sicilian Arancini are rice balls stuffed with cheese and other fillings such as cheese and meat, the coated with bread crumbs and deep fried. The fillings vary by region but arancini have been popular in Italy for centuries.
Even if you aren’t a fan of “deep fried” foods, give this one a try. Arancini are coated in a light layer of fine Italian bread crumbs and the rice is compacted, so they hardly soak up any oil and do not have the taste or mouth feel of a deep-fried food. It is a cross between Risotto and Cheesesticks. Two of my favorites combined into one irresistible dish.

Pro Tip:
Use Italian-style breadcrumbs to enhance the authentic Italian flavor of Arancini. Italian Style bread crumbs also have a finer crumb which helps bind the outer layer to the rice ball and creates an irresistible crisp texture.

How to Make Rice Balls
Cook the Arancini Rice Mixture: In a heavy pot, sautee onion with olive oil and butter until soft then add ham and cook until golden then stir in the rice. Add white wine and cook until mostly evaporated then add hot chicken broth and 1 tsp salt. Cover and simmer until liquid is mostly absorbed. Stir in the peas, cover and cook another 2 minutes.

Cool the Mixture – Spread rice mixture onto a baking sheet to cool. Once rice is at room temperature, stir in parsley and parmesan. Form rice balls with wet hands, using a heaping ice cream scoop of rice for each. Stuff each rice ball with a cube of mozzarella cheese and form a tight ball to enclose the cheese.
Form the Rice Balls – Set up 3 shallow bowls. Bread the rice balls one by one, dipping first into the flour, then the beaten egg and finally rolling in bread crumbs.

Fry the Rice Balls – Once all of the arancini are formed, heat 1″ of vegetable oil in a pot over medium heat. Once the oil is hot (350˚F), add arancini in batches without crowding and cook for about 3 minutes total per batch, turning to get all sides golden brown.

Drain and Serve – Transfer fried rice balls to a paper towel-lined platter and serve warm with marinara, or with ranch (as my son prefers), or skip the dip and just enjoy them! :).

Can you Eat Rice Balls Cold?
Arancini are best served warm when they are creamy and cheesy in the center. They are just as good freshly cooked as they are reheated, especially when you reheat in the oven to re-crisp the exterior.
How do you Reheat Arancini?
Once arancini are fried and cool to room temperature, you can store them in the refrigerator or freezer (in a freezer-safe container or zip-top bag).
- To reheat frozen arancini – There is no need to thaw. Place on a rimmed baking sheet and bake at 400˚F for 20 minutes.
- To reheat refrigerated arancini – bake on a rimmed baking sheet at 400˚F for 15 minutes.

I hope you give these classic Italian Rice Balls a try. Everyone of all ages loves Arancini. Who can resist a crisp fried ball of rice stuffed with cheese?
Love Rice? Try Our Best Rice Recipes:
- Shrimp Fried Rice
- How to Cook Rice on the Stove
- Beef Rice Pilaf (Plov)
- California Rolls
- Stuffed Cabbage Rolls
- Chicken Fried rice
- Chicken and Rice Soup
Arancini Rice Balls

Ingredients
For the Arancini Rice Balls:
- 2 Tbsp olive oil
- 2 Tbsp unsalted butter
- 1 medium onion, finely diced (about 1 cup)
- 1 cup ham, finely diced (about 3 oz)
- 2 cups Jasmine rice, un-rinsed
- 1 cup Chardonnay, (dry white wine)
- 5 cups chicken broth, or stock (hot)
- 1 tsp salt, (plus more to sprinkle fried arancini)
- 1 cup frozen peas, fully thawed
- 1/3 cup parsley, finely chopped
- 1 cup parmesan cheese, shredded
- 4 oz mozzarella cheese, cut into 24 (1/2-inch) cubes
For Breading/ Frying:
- 1 cup all-purpose flour
- 3 large eggs, beaten with a fork
- 1 1/2 cups Italian bread crumbs
- Oil for frying, vegetable, canola, or grapeseed oil
Instructions
- Using a Dutch oven or heavy-bottomed pot with a tight-fitting lid, over medium/high heat, add 2 Tbsp olive oil and 2 Tbsp butter. When hot, stir in diced onion and saute until soft and golden (4-5 min). Add finely diced ham and cook another 2 min or until golden. Add rice and stir to coat with oil.
- Pour in 1 cup white wine and cook until mostly evaporated (2 min). Add 5 cups hot low sodium chicken broth and 1 tsp salt then cover and simmer until liquid has been absorbed by the rice (about 15-17 min). Stir in the peas in, then cover with a tight fitting lid and finish cooking (2 min). Rice should be soft and the liquid mostly absorbed. Spread rice mixture onto a large rimmed baking dish to cool.
- Once rice is at room temperature, stir in 1/3 cup finely chopped parsley and 1 cup parmesan cheese. Form rice balls with wet hands, using a heaping ice cream scoop for each. Stuff each rice ball with a cube of mozzarella cheese and form a tight ball with the rice mixture to enclose the cheese.
- Set up 3 shallow bowls, the first one to have 1 cup flour, the second with 3 beaten eggs, the third with 1 1/2 cups bread crumbs. Dredge each rice ball in flour, shaking off the excess, then dip one-by-one in the beaten egg allowing excess egg to drip back into the bowl. Finally, roll balls in breadcrumbs until evenly coated. It’s best to roll and bread all of the rice balls before beginning frying since the frying is quick.
- Add an inch of vegetable oil into a deep pot over medium heat. Once oil is hot (350˚F), add the breaded rice balls in batches without crowding the pot and cook about 3 min total per batch, turning to get all sides golden brown. Transfer to paper towels, sprinkle right away with salt and serve warm with marinara.
Thank you so so much for this AMAZING recipe!! This recipe is seriously TO DIE FOR!! I always try rice balls if I see them on a menu at a restaurant and I have NEVER had ones HALF AS GOOD AS THIS RECIPE! and I’m originally from New York so I feel like this says a lot !! 😆😆😁 These pair perfectly with my homemade red sauce. I always omit the ham and peas and just stick to the cheese. Thanks again for sharing!!!
That’s amazing! So glad to hear that, Michelle! Thank you for the wonderful feedback.
Wow, what a great recipe!! I just made them and they came out golden brown and perfect!! The chardonnay and ham/onion combination adds so much flavor. I can’t wait to make these again!!
Thank you for sharing that with us, Patty. Great to hear that you loved them!
I’ve always loved these at restaurants. Now I can enjoy them at home. This recipe is fabulous!!!
I’m so glad you love the recipe!
Hi, Natasha! I love your recipes very much! And arancini rice balls is wonderful, of course! Can I ask you something? In this recipe can I omit the ham? For me personally I like it, but I have vegetarian friends… This is for my future birthday party soon. And another thing I want to ask you about is if I can prepare arancini a day before and the next day just coating through flour, eggs and bread crumbs and frying them? I want”em fresh. Thank you for all your recipes and you are so happy and funny! Love your site!
Hi Cornelia, I recommend looking through the comments of this recipe, there were quite a few suggestions in trying things like beef, eggs, etc in place of ham. I hope this helps.
I’ve made your tiramisu which was fabulous. So happy to find arancini recipe here. I had them from a train station in Naples headed to Rome and loved them. I’ve made them but so happy to find your recipe.
Hi Kim! That’s great. I’m glad you loved the tiramisu and I’m so glad you found this recipe. Thank you for sharing.
Can you make them in the oven instead of deep frying them?
Thank you in advance
Hi Olga! I haven’t tried baking them and I imagine they would taste best fried. Let us know if you experiment.
Hi Natasha!
I made these tonight for my family and served them with a side salad. I followed the recipe and only had to make a few changes. My husband likes onion flavor but not the texture, so I had to puree the cooked onions. I was afraid how it would turn out since it was a mushy consistency, but it was fine when I mixed it back in to saute the ham. I also didn’t have vegetable oil at home, so I fried them in peanut oil and they came out soooo good. Everyone went back for seconds and thirds!
Thanks for sharing another amazing recipe! I’ve tried so many of your recipes and they are always delicious, but this is my first time commenting. If anyone is contemplating making these, I highly recommend you give them a try. They are not heavy or greasy at all and go great with a side salad for a satisfying meal. I will definitely be making these again!
Thank you for sharing! So glad it was a hit!
This is a restaurant quality recipe. To make them you have to be skilled as a cook. I have only seen them as appetizers at high end Italian restaurants.
Hi. can I use a dutch oven pot to fry, or something lighter?
I usually never fry but what type of heavy pot can purchase on amazon? Trish
Love the video
Hi Trish, I use Le Creuset 5 1/2 quarts Dutch Oven. The size is ideal for our family and it distributes the heat very evenly.
Hi, this looks delicious! If using cold, leftover rice, do you still add the wine, 5 cups of chicken stock, and cook following the recipe? TIA
Yes that’s right, please let us know how it goes if you try it.
Hi Natasha,
I love all your recipes!
Can I use day old jasmine rice to make arancini balls?
Hi Robin, this recipe is a perfect way to use up leftover rice. I hope you love it!
Hi
For the Arancini can we use any rice?
Thanks
Lina
Hi Lina, we found Jasmine rice works best for this – a long-grain rice.
I love to do this recipe but I have a question can you tell me what is the size per portion of this appetizer dish? Thank you, I love your video about this btw.
You’re very welcome! The serving size listed is 24 rice balls.
Hi. I’d like to try this recipe but my family doesn’t like peas. Is the another vegetable you’d recommend to add in with the ham?
Hi Rakisha! I haven’t tested an alternative but you may try diced carrots or just leave the peas out.
Natasha, I love arancini balls could you air fry them as well?
Hi Terry, I haven’t tested that myself so I do not know how they would turn out. If you experiment, please share your experience.
I’m making this for a family get together and am currently pregnant, I know you’ve suggested substituting the wine in previous comments with more broth instead but I’m just curious if the wine gets cooked out like alcohol does normally in cooking? thanks in advance!
Hi Ally, if you’re worried about the alcohol, you can use the north in place of it. I’m no scientist, but most of the alcohol should cook out.
Silly question, what type of ham do I use
Any ham should be fine, you can see the ham that I used in the picture in the recipe.
About to make this for the family this weekend. Could the white wine be replaced with chicken stock? Thank you
Hi Mrs, Davidson, you could replace white wine with a little more chicken broth.
I just made and they came out great! I only used ingredients available in the house and made them gluten free. They are unbelievable!
My swap outs were hardboiled eggs for ham (and used rotisserie chicken seasoning on them to replace the saltiness of ham), dried onions since I didn’t have any fresh, dried parsley, arborio rice in the instapot, King Arthur GF flour, and 4C season GF crumbs. I even used 4 kid’s mozzarella sticks and cut them into 24 pieces. Perfecto! Used Rao’s marinara and topped with a truffle parmesan.
That’s just awesome! Thank you for sharing your wonderful review!
Love your recipes, I too am a fan of Lidia. I am trying this with my leftover Jasmine rice from last night.
I hope you love this recipe, Dawn!
I’ve made this recipe it is excellent but now my question is can I make it with gluten-free breadcrumbs
Hi Ron, I haven’t tried any substitute yet to advise. If you do an experiment and find another substitute, please share with us how it goes.
Hi substituted the flour with potato starch and the breadcrumbs with gluten free breadcrumbs … delish!!!
Yum! That sounds delicious! Thank you so much for sharing that with me.
Hey! this looks great, quick question, what can i use instead of the white wine?
thanks
Hello Jada, you could replace white wine with a little more chicken broth.
Can you make this with cauliflower rice?
Hi Lynn, that’s a great question. Unfortunately, I haven’t experimented with cauliflower to advise on an outcome.