The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdomlets you make all sorts of treats for Link to scarf down on his journey, but many of them tend toward the sweet side. Even heroes can develop cavities. Here is our guide on how to make Veggie Rice Balls inThe Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom.

Tears of the Kingdom– how to make Veggie Rice Balls

Rice is common in some parts of Hyrule, though you may not find a lot of it unless you know where to look. A number of merchants also carry it, and you can find details in our guide coveringwhere to find Hylian Rice, Fresh Milk, and Wild Greens.

Once you have Hylian Rice, you’re ready to start thinking about rice balls.To make Veggie Rice Balls, combine Hylian Rice with the vegetable ingredient of your choice.Flowers count as vegetables when it comes to recipe creation.

Totk Veggie Rice Balls Recipes

By default, Veggie Rice Balls restore health. That’s rather boring, though. you may produce secondary effects by adding certain ingredients to the mix. For instance,SundelionandHylian Ricecombine to produceSunny Veggie Rice Ballsthat help you out when you need to recover from the effects of gloom.Hylian Riceand aStambulbmakeEnergizing Veggie Rice Balls. There are all sorts of useful variations available, and they’re especially handy because the list of required ingredients is so limited.

If you plan to make a lot of Veggie Rice balls, harvest rice yourself instead of buying it.Hylian Rice grows rather abundantly on the slopes of hills high in theEast Necludaregion, east and southeast ofRabella Wetlands Skyview Tower. You can chop down the grass with a bladed weapon and sometimes produce bundles of rice and crickets. It’s not difficult to run around the area and gather quite a lot of rice to facilitate your future cooking endeavors.

The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdomis available on the Nintendo Switch.

Jason Venter

Jason Venter is a contributing writer for PC Invasion since 2022 who can trace his love for video games back to the Apple IIe port of Mario Bros. in the late 80s. He remains a diehard Nintendo fan to this day and loves JRPGs, adventure games, and platformers in particular, but he still plays games in most genres and on most hardware. After founding indie gaming site HonestGamers in 1998, he served as an editor at Hardcore Gamer Magazine during its entire print run. He has since freelanced for a variety of leading sites including IGN, GameSpot, and Polygon. These days, he spends most of his time writing game guides and entertaining readers with his fantasy novels.