Full nutrition details in the recipe card below ↓
Every recipe on FoodNearMe is tested to be anti-inflammatory, satisfying, and actually delicious — real food, real results, no shortcuts.
More about Joe →Bold sesame, tender tuna, and a bowl full of color the Anti Inflammatory Sesame Tuna Rice Bowl is one of those dinners that looks like you tried hard and takes maybe 20 minutes.
Spring always makes me want something that feels fresh but still fills you up. This came together during a stretch of tired Tuesday evenings when I kept defaulting to the same three dinners. I’d been testing tuna bowls for a while tweaking the sesame ratio, swapping refined soy for coconut aminos and this version finally hit that balance of bold flavor and clean ingredients that makes you actually look forward to cooking again.

Anti Inflammatory Sesame Tuna Rice Bowl Vibrant Fresh Way to Make Real Dinner
Ingredients

Why You’ll Love This Sesame Tuna Rice Bowl
Here’s the honest truth this bowl does a lot with very little. Tender sushi-grade tuna, creamy avocado, cool cucumber, and a spicy mayo drizzle all come together in about 15 minutes, and it still feels like a proper dinner.
It’s my go-to on tired evenings when I want something that feels put-together without a lot of effort. Low stress, minimal cleanup, and nothing heavy sitting with you afterward.
- No cooking required beyond the rice
- Naturally balanced with protein, healthy fat, and fiber
- Flavor-forward without relying on a long ingredient list
What Goes Into This Bowl
Every ingredient here is doing something specific, which is what makes a simple bowl taste intentional. The sesame oil is the backbone just one teaspoon carries the whole dish with a deep, nutty warmth that makes this a proper sesame tuna rice bowl and not just tuna on rice.
- Sushi-grade tuna: Cut into half-inch cubes so every bite gets an even coating
- Reduced sodium soy sauce or gluten-free tamari: Brings salt and depth without overpowering
- Sesame oil: Use it as written this is where the flavor lives
- Sriracha: Goes into both the tuna marinade and the spicy mayo
- Light mayonnaise: The base for your drizzle thin it with a little water so it pours clean
- Short grain brown rice or sushi white rice: Either works; brown adds chew, white keeps it classic
- Persian cucumbers and Hass avocado: Fresh contrast to the savory tuna
- Black sesame seeds and scallions: Finishing touches that matter for texture and visual contrast
How to Make It
The method is straightforward marinate, prep, assemble. After testing this more times than I can count, the one thing that makes the biggest difference is letting the tuna sit for a few minutes in the soy sauce, sesame oil, and sriracha before you build the bowls. That short rest changes everything.
- Whisk together light mayonnaise and sriracha in a small bowl. Add a few drops of water to thin it to a drizzle consistency. Set aside.
- In a medium bowl, gently toss the tuna cubes with sliced scallions, soy sauce, sesame oil, and sriracha until evenly coated.
- Divide the cooked rice between two bowls as your base.
- Layer the seasoned tuna, sliced avocado, and diced cucumber over each bowl.
- Drizzle spicy mayo over the top, finish with black sesame seeds and additional scallions, then serve with extra soy sauce or sriracha on the side if desired.
Pro Tip: Don’t skip thinning the mayo a thick dollop sits heavy, but a proper drizzle coats everything evenly and looks far better in the bowl.
Can You Make a Sesame Tuna Rice Bowl Ahead of Time?
You can prep most of this in advance, but a few components are better fresh. Here’s how to think about it:
- Cook the rice ahead and refrigerate it reheats well or works cold
- Mix the spicy mayo up to three days ahead and store covered in the fridge
- Dice the cucumber and slice the avocado just before assembling to avoid browning
- The marinated tuna is best used within an hour of mixing sushi-grade tuna is fresh and doesn’t hold well once seasoned
Note: If you’re packing this for lunch, keep the tuna and toppings in separate containers and assemble right before eating.
Simple Swaps Worth Knowing
The recipe is flexible without needing much adjustment. A few swaps that hold up well:
- Swap soy sauce for gluten-free tamari if you’re avoiding gluten
- Use white sushi rice instead of brown for a softer, stickier base
- Replace light mayonnaise with a dairy-free mayo if needed
- Add extra sriracha to the tuna marinade if you want more heat throughout
FAQs ( Anti Inflammatory Sesame Tuna Rice Bowl )
How do I sear tuna for a sesame rice bowl?
This recipe does not sear the tuna – it uses sushi-grade tuna tossed raw with soy sauce, sesame oil, sriracha, and scallions. No cooking is needed beyond preparing the rice.
Can I use canned tuna instead of fresh for sesame rice bowl?
This dish calls for sushi-grade fresh tuna cut into 1/2-inch cubes. Canned tuna is not listed in the recipe, so substituting it may affect texture and flavor.
What sauce goes on a sesame tuna rice bowl?
This recipe uses a spicy mayo made from light mayonnaise and sriracha, thinned with a little water to drizzle. Optional extra soy sauce or tamari is served on the side.
Is sesame seared tuna anti-inflammatory?
This meal features tuna, avocado, and sesame oil – ingredients widely recognized for their anti-inflammatory properties. It also uses reduced-sodium soy sauce to keep it balanced.
What rice is best for sesame tuna bowl?
This recipe works with either short grain brown rice or sushi white rice – both are listed as options. Brown rice adds extra fiber while white rice gives a more traditional poke bowl feel.

This Sesame Tuna Rice Bowl comes together in about 20 minutes and lands with real flavor nutty sesame, fresh cucumber, creamy avocado, and that spicy mayo drizzle tying everything together beautifully.
One thing worth repeating: thin that mayo before you drizzle. A proper pour coats every bite evenly and makes the whole bowl look intentional. If you want more heat, add a second hit of sriracha directly into the tuna marinade that short marinating rest is where the boldness builds. Brown rice gives you more chew, white rice keeps it classic; both work, and neither choice is wrong.
If you try this one, I’d genuinely love to know how it went did you swap anything, add a little extra heat, make it your own? Drop a note below or tag me if you share it. Save this one for someone who needs a real dinner on a tired evening. Here’s to the meals that bring you back to yourself.