Looking for a clean, reliable method that you can replicate any weeknight? Here it is. This guide shows how to make coconut rice with only 3 ingredients—no clutter, no extras—using clear ratios, sensory checkpoints, and two cooking paths (stovetop and rice cooker). Expect fluffy grains, a mellow coconut aroma, and a soft, glossy finish in about 25 minutes.
At a Glance
- Ingredients (3): jasmine rice, light coconut milk, fine sea salt
- Ratio: 1 cup rice : 1¼ cups light coconut milk
- Cook time: 12–15 minutes on low heat (+ 10 minutes resting)
- Texture target: tender, separate-but-cozy grains with tiny steam holes on top
If the flavor tastes shy, add a pinch—trust your palate.
Why This Works (The Short Version)
- Light coconut milk cooks evenly. It’s less likely to scorch than full-fat, so the bottom stays golden-not-brown and the top finishes at the same time.
- Rinsing matters. Removing surface starch prevents gummy clumps and keeps the finish lightly glossy.
- Hands-off steam time finishes the job. The 10-minute rest off heat lets trapped steam settle into the center of each grain.
Ingredients & Tools
Ingredients (exact for one batch)
- 1 cup jasmine rice, rinsed until water runs mostly clear
- 1¼ cups light coconut milk, well shaken
- ½ teaspoon fine sea salt
Tools
- Small saucepan with a tight-fitting lid or a rice cooker
- Fine-mesh strainer
- Liquid measuring cup
- Fork for fluffing
Staying strictly 3 ingredients? Swap jasmine → basmati if you prefer longer, lighter, separate grains (same ratio).
Step-by-Step (Stovetop): How to Make Coconut Rice with Only 3 Ingredients
1) Rinse and drain well.
Place rice in a fine-mesh strainer. Rinse under cold water, gently rubbing the grains, until the water runs mostly clear. Drain thoroughly so you don’t sneak in extra liquid.
2) Combine once, then level.
In a small saucepan, stir together rice, 1¼ cups well-shaken light coconut milk, and ½ tsp fine sea salt. Stir once to distribute and level the grains into an even layer.
3) Gentle simmer, then cover.
Bring to a gentle simmer over medium heat. Watch for small bubbles at the edge—no rolling boil. As soon as it simmers, give one brief stir, reduce heat to low, and cover tightly.
4) Cook 12–15 minutes.
Keep the lid closed. The liquid should absorb and tiny steam holes will dot the surface. The top should look dry—no shiny puddles.
5) Rest 10 minutes, covered.
Remove from heat but don’t lift the lid yet. The quiet steam inside finishes the center of each grain.
6) Fluff & serve.
Lift the lid, inhale the soft coconut note, and fluff with a fork. Grains should be tender and lightly glossy, not mushy.
Sensory checkpoints
- Sound: a low, steady whisper—no hard bubbling.
- Sight: tiny steam holes on top; surface looks set and matte.
- Feel: fork slides through easily; grains separate with a gentle lift.
Rice Cooker Method (Same 3 Ingredients)
- Add rinsed, drained rice, 1¼ cups shaken light coconut milk, and salt to the cooker.
- Stir once to level the grains.
- Select White Rice.
- When it switches to Warm, leave closed 5–10 minutes.
- Fluff with a fork and serve.
Cookers vary. Too wet? Reduce liquid by 1–2 Tbsp next time. Too dry? Add 1–2 Tbsp and try again.
Ratios, Swaps, and Don’t-Do’s
- Base ratio: 1 cup jasmine rice : 1¼ cups light coconut milk.
- Basmati swap (still 3 ingredients): same ratio, begin checking at minute 12—basmati can dry faster.
- Avoid: cream of coconut (it’s sweetened and sticky).
- Full-fat coconut milk? It scorches more easily. If it’s all you have, thin it to the body of “light” and watch the heat—but that adds water, so you’d step outside the strict 3-ingredient lane.
Common Mistakes & Quick Fixes
Bottom scorched, top underdone
- Cause: heat too high or lid lifted mid-cook.
- Fix now: If only lightly caught, move rice to a clean pot, add 1–2 Tbsp warm coconut milk/water, cover, low heat 1–2 minutes, then rest 5–10 minutes.
- Next time: reduce to low as soon as simmer appears; use a heavier-bottomed pan.
Too mushy
- Cause: excess liquid or poorly drained rice.
- Fix now: Spread rice on a wide plate for 2–3 minutes to vent steam, then gently re-fluff.
- Next time: shake the strainer longer; reduce liquid by 1–2 Tbsp.
Too dry/firm
- Cause: not enough liquid or an underpowered initial simmer.
- Fix now: Sprinkle 1–2 Tbsp warm coconut milk/water over rice, cover, heat low 1–2 minutes, then rest 5 minutes.
- Next time: confirm you reached a true gentle simmer before covering.
Flat flavor
- Cause: under-salted.
- Fix now: add a small pinch while fluffing. If it tastes flat, add a pinch—trust your palate.
Texture Goals (What “Right” Looks and Feels Like)
- Grain shape: intact, soft edges, center tender.
- Surface: matte with steam holes; light gloss returns when fluffed.
- Aroma: mellow coconut warmth, not heavy or oily.
- Mouthfeel: cozy-soft without sludge; grains separate with a fork but cuddle nicely on the spoon.
Scaling Up and Meal Prep
- Double or triple: Keep the ratio identical. Use a wider pot so heat spreads evenly. Cook time can extend by 1–3 minutes; rely on steam holes and absorbed liquid rather than the clock.
- Batch and freeze: Portion flat in zip bags so it reheats quickly and evenly.
- Lunch boxes: Pack while slightly warm so it settles into the container, but vent before sealing to avoid condensation.
Serving Ideas (Stay 3 Ingredients—or Add Later)
Pure & simple (3-ingredient spirit). Serve warm beside roasted chicken, pan-seared fish, or sautéed greens. The mellow coconut note plays friendly with most sauces.
Tropical bowl (add-ons another day). Pair with ripe mango and a crunchy edge for contrast.
Saucy night. Coconut rice loves curries and sambal—its soft richness tames heat without feeling heavy.
Leftover magic. Reheat with a sprinkle of water, cover, and warm gently until steam rises; fluff to wake the grains.
Storage & Reheating
- Fridge: Cool quickly; store airtight 3–4 days.
- Freezer: Up to 1 month; press flat for fast thawing.
- Microwave reheat: Sprinkle a little water, cover, heat 1–2 minutes, fluff halfway.
- Stovetop reheat: Add 1–2 Tbsp water, cover on low 3–5 minutes; listen for a soft sizzle and look for light steam at the edge.
Yield, Time, and Nutrition Notes
- Yield: 2–3 side servings
- Active time: ~5 minutes
- Total time: ~25 minutes (includes resting)
- Nutrition note: Light coconut milk keeps the mouthfeel plush without tipping into oily or overly rich.
Print-Friendly Recipe Card
FAQ: How to Make Coconut Rice with Only 3 Ingredients
You can, but it scorches faster. If you must, thin it to mimic light coconut milk and watch the heat closely. (Thinning means stepping outside the strict 3-ingredient rule if the “water” isn’t counted within your three.)
For fluffier grains, yes. Rinsing removes excess starch so the texture stays soft, not gummy.
Yes. Use a wider pot for even heating. Time may increase by 1–3 minutes; trust the steam holes and absorbed liquid more than the clock.
Use the standard cycle. The ratio remains the same; let it rest on Warm for 5–10 minutes before fluffing.
Yes, but you’ll need more liquid and time (typically 1½–1¾ cups light coconut milk per cup of brown rice). Texture will be chewier and the coconut note subtler.
A little more salt unlocks the coconut’s natural sweetness. Add a pinch while fluffing. If it tastes flat, add a pinch—trust your palate.
Wrap-Up
You now have a clear, repeatable method for how to make coconut rice with only 3 ingredients. Keep the ratio, watch for the first gentle simmer, trust the steam rest, and adjust salt to taste. If you try this, tell me what you swapped—I collect cozy hacks.
Editorial note: This article was fact-checked and technically edited by Chaedar (SEO/Tech Editor). Last updated: .

