This is the viral Korean-Japanese protein bowl that turned simple boiled eggs into the most-requested meal in my house. Soy sauce eggs with rice takes eggs boiled exactly 6 minutes (jammy custard yolks), shocks them in ice, peels them, then marinates them in a glossy soy-mirin-garlic-sesame sauce for at least 2 hours before serving over garlic sesame rice.
Fun fact: soy sauce eggs are called “mayak eggs” in Korean — “mayak” literally translates to “drug eggs” because they’re so addictive. The recipe was popularized by Korean YouTuber Maangchi in the 2010s and exploded on TikTok in 2021. The marinade also makes great tofu and chicken — it’s a universal Korean banchan base.
Why this recipe works
Boil exactly 6 minutes. Custard jammy yolk = magic. 5 min = runny mess, 7 min = chalky. Use a timer.
Ice bath stops cooking. Skip the ice and eggs keep cooking from residual heat — overcooked yolks.
Marinate at LEAST 2 hours — 6 hours or overnight is even better. The longer, the more flavor penetration.
Ingredients
Serves 4 (2 eggs each).
8 large eggs
Soy marinade:
1/2 cup (120 ml) soy sauce
1/2 cup (120 ml) water
1/3 cup (80 ml) mirin
3 tbsp brown sugar
6 cloves garlic, smashed
1 inch fresh ginger, sliced
2 scallions, white parts only
2 tbsp sesame seeds
1 tsp red pepper flakes (optional)
Garlic sesame rice:
2 cups jasmine rice, cooked
1 tbsp sesame oil
1 clove garlic, grated
Garnish: sliced scallions, sesame seeds, chili flakes
Instructions
Step 1: Boil the eggs
Bring a pot of water to a rolling boil. Carefully lower in 8 cold eggs. Set timer for EXACTLY 6 minutes. While boiling, prep an ice bath.
Step 2: Shock in ice bath
After 6 min, immediately transfer eggs to the ice bath with a slotted spoon. Let cool 5 min. The ice stops the cooking and makes peeling easier.
Step 3: Peel the eggs
Gently tap each egg all over to crack the shell. Peel under running cold water — the shells should slip off. Set peeled eggs aside.
Step 4: Make the marinade
In a saucepan, combine soy sauce, water, mirin, and brown sugar. Bring to a simmer, stirring until sugar dissolves. Remove from heat. Add smashed garlic, ginger, scallion whites, sesame seeds, and red pepper flakes. Let cool to room temp.
Step 5: Marinate the eggs
Place peeled eggs in a container or jar. Pour cooled marinade over them. They should be submerged (add more water if needed). Cover and refrigerate at least 2 hours, ideally overnight.
Step 6: Assemble and serve
Cook jasmine rice; toss with sesame oil and grated garlic. Divide rice between bowls. Halve marinated eggs and place over rice, cut-side up. Spoon a tablespoon of marinade over each. Garnish with scallions, sesame seeds, and chili flakes.
Nutrition information
Calories: 380 kcal per serving
Protein: 18 g
Carbohydrates: 50 g
Fat: 12 g
Sodium: 1100 mg
Vitamin D: 30% DV
Pro tips for the best soy sauce eggs with rice
Use room-temp eggs — cold eggs crack when dropped in boiling water.
Test ONE egg first if your stove is unfamiliar — altitude affects boiling.
Save the marinade! After eggs are eaten, reuse for tofu, chicken, or another batch of eggs.
Add a dash of fish sauce (1 tsp) for umami depth — chef secret.
Frequently asked questions
How long do they keep?
5 days in the fridge in the marinade. Past 5 days the eggs get over-salted. Best within 2-3 days.
Can I use the marinade twice?
Yes — strain it after the first batch and reuse for a second round of eggs. Add 2 tbsp fresh soy sauce to refresh.
Can I add other proteins?
Yes — sliced tofu, cooked chicken, or shrimp work great. Use the same marinade and steeping time.
What if I overcook the eggs?
Hard-boiled eggs (7-8 min) still work, just no jammy yolk. Still delicious — just a different texture.
Is this gluten-free?
Sub tamari or coconut aminos for soy sauce. Same flavor, GF.