Cilantro lime brown rice is brown rice simmered until tender, then folded with fresh lime juice, chopped cilantro, and a touch of oil or butter, a fast swap for the white-rice version popularized by fast-casual chains like Chipotle, made healthier and easy enough for a weeknight side. It works with any cooking method you have on hand: stovetop, Instant Pot, or rice cooker, all covered below.
The upgrade to brown rice isn’t just about texture. A cup of cooked long-grain brown rice provides roughly 3.2 grams of fiber, about four times as much as the same serving of white rice. Hence, the cilantro and lime aren’t just flavoring a blank starch; they’re brightening a grain that’s already doing more nutritional work. That’s part of why so many home cooks reach for brown rice here, even though the original inspiration uses white.
What Is Cilantro Lime Brown Rice?
Cilantro lime brown rice is whole-grain brown rice tossed with fresh lime juice, lime zest, and chopped cilantro right after cooking, while the grains are still warm enough to soak up the flavor. It’s essentially brown rice with cilantro and lime replacing the plain, unseasoned side dish most people default to; the lime’s acidity wakes up the nutty flavor of the brown rice, and the cilantro adds a fresh, herbal note that plain rice doesn’t have on its own.
The combination isn’t new; it’s the same flavor pairing behind the cilantro-lime rice served at fast-casual chains like Chipotle, but made with brown rice instead of white. That one swap adds roughly four times as much fiber as the white-rice version, so you get the same bright, herby flavor with more staying power per serving.
Because the seasoning is added after cooking rather than during, this isn’t a special rice variety or a boxed mix; it’s a finishing technique. Any brown rice you already have in the pantry works, which is part of why it’s become a go-to side for taco nights, grain bowls, and burrito-style dinners.
How to Make Cilantro Lime Brown Rice (Stovetop)
The stovetop method is the most reliable way to make cilantro lime brown rice, using nothing more than a saucepan and about 45 minutes of mostly unattended simmering.
Equipment Needed
- Saucepan
- Spatula
Ingredients
This cilantro lime brown rice recipe uses nine simple ingredients, most of which are already in a typical pantry, plus fresh lime and cilantro for the finishing seasoning.
- 1 cup brown rice, soaked in cold water for 30 minutes
- 2 cups water or vegetable broth
- 1 tablespoon olive oil
- 1 teaspoon garlic, minced
- 1 tablespoon butter
- ½ teaspoon salt, or to taste
- Zest of 1 lime
- Juice of ½ medium lime
- ¼ cup fresh cilantro, finely chopped
Soaking the rice for 30 minutes isn’t optional filler; it shortens brown rice’s typically long cooking time and helps the grains cook more evenly, since its intact bran layer otherwise slows water absorption compared to white rice. The broth is what separates a good side from a plain one: swapping water for vegetable broth adds savory depth to the rice before the lime and cilantro ever go in, so the seasoning builds flavor rather than covering up a bland base.
Fresh lime and fresh cilantro matter more here than in most recipes. Bottled lime juice and dried cilantro will technically work. Still, both lose the bright, volatile oils that make this dish taste like the fast-casual version it’s modeled after, with fresh ingredients, and that flavor holds for about 3 to 4 days in the refrigerator before it starts to fade.
Step-by-Step Instructions
- Rinse the soaked brown rice under cold water to remove excess surface starch; this keeps the finished rice separate and fluffy instead of gummy.
- Heat the olive oil in a medium saucepan over medium heat. Add the minced garlic and sauté for about 30 seconds, just until fragrant.
- Add the rice and toast it for 2 to 3 minutes, stirring occasionally, so each grain picks up a light coating of oil before any liquid goes in.
- Season with salt and lime zest, pour in the water or broth, add the butter, and bring everything to a boil.
- Once boiling, reduce the heat to low, cover the pan, and simmer for 40 to 45 minutes, or until the rice is tender and the liquid is fully absorbed.
- Off the heat, fluff the rice with a fork, then stir in the lime juice and chopped cilantro.
- Serve immediately, or keep covered and warm until ready to serve.
Toasting the rice in step 3 is the detail most versions of this recipe skip. Still, it’s what gives stovetop-cooked brown rice a slightly nutty flavor before the lime and cilantro are even added, a technique borrowed from pilaf-style rice cooking rather than the simple boil-and-simmer method most people default to.
How To Make Easy Cilantro Lime Brown Rice
Ingredients
- 1 cup brown rice soaked in cold water for 30 min
- 2 cups water or vegetable broth
- 1 tbsp olive oil
- 1 tsp garlic minced
- 1 tbsp butter
- 1/2 tsp salt or to taste
- zest of 1 lime
- 1/2 medium lime juice
- 1/4 cup cilantro fresh, chopped
Instructions
- Rinse the soaked brown rice under cold water to remove excess starch.
- In a medium saucepan, heat the olive oil over medium heat. Add the onion and sauté until translucent. Add the minced garlic and sauté until fragrant
- Add the rice and toast for 2-3 minutes, stirring occasionally.
- Season with salt and lime zest, pour in the water or broth, and add butter then bring to a boil.
- Once boiling, reduce the heat to low, cover the pan, and let it simmer for 40-45 minutes or until the rice is tender.
- Once cooked, fluff the rice with a fork, and stir in lime juice, and chopped cilantro.
- Serve immediately or keep warm until ready to enjoy.
Notes
Nutrition
Why You’ll Love This Recipe
This cilantro lime brown rice comes together with five ingredients and about 45 minutes of mostly hands-off cooking time, making it an easy side to build a weeknight dinner around rather than a project in itself. Once the rice is done, the whole seasoning step, lime juice, zest, and cilantro, takes under five minutes, so it’s realistic to make even on a night when you’re short on time.
It’s also more forgiving than most rice sides. Because brown rice holds its texture well, this dish keeps in the fridge for days without turning mushy or gluey, which means it reheats cleanly for lunches or gets folded straight into a bowl the next day. That durability is one of the reasons whole-grain rice, unlike white rice, holds up so well to meal prep.
Beyond convenience, it’s simply a more nutritious base than the plain rice it replaces. Swapping in brown rice adds roughly 3 grams of fiber per cup compared to white rice, so this isn’t just a flavor upgrade; it’s a side dish that does more for the rest of your plate, whether it’s sitting next to grilled chicken, black beans, or a taco bar.
How to Make Cilantro Lime Brown Rice in an Instant Pot
An Instant Pot significantly reduces the hands-on time for cilantro-lime brown rice, cooking the rice under pressure in under half the time a stovetop simmer takes, with almost no risk of scorching or boiling over.
Instant Pot Cook Time & Ratio
For 1 cup of soaked brown rice, use 1¼ cups of water or broth, slightly less liquid than the stovetop method, since pressure cooking loses less moisture to evaporation. Cook on high pressure for 22 to 24 minutes, then let the pressure release naturally for 10 minutes before manually releasing any remaining pressure. That natural-release window matters: releasing pressure immediately tends to leave the rice slightly underdone and can cause the cooking liquid to sputter out through the valve.
To build in the same flavor as the stovetop version, use the sauté function first: heat the olive oil, sauté the garlic until fragrant, then add the rice and toast it for 2 to 3 minutes before adding the liquid, salt, lime zest, and butter. Seal the lid and cook using the ratio and timing above. Once the pot finishes its natural release, fluff the rice with a fork and stir in the lime juice and chopped cilantro, the same as you would on the stovetop.
Because Instant Pot brown rice cooks in a sealed, pressurized environment, it typically comes out slightly more tender and evenly cooked than stovetop rice, with less risk of a dry or crunchy layer at the bottom of the pot.
How to Make Cilantro Lime Brown Rice in a Rice Cooker
A rice cooker makes cilantro-lime brown rice almost hands-off: measure, add liquid, press start, and the machine handles the timing and temperature without needing to watch the pot.
Add 1 cup of soaked brown rice to the rice cooker’s inner pot with 2 cups of water or broth, using the same ratio as on the stovetop, since a rice cooker doesn’t reduce liquid through evaporation the way an open pan does. If your machine has a “brown rice” setting, use it; it runs a longer cycle than the standard white-rice setting to account for brown rice’s tougher bran layer. Add the salt, lime zest, and butter directly to the pot before starting, so the rice absorbs that flavor as it cooks rather than sitting on top. Skip the stovetop sauté-and-toast step here; most rice cookers lack a sauté function, and the sealed cooking environment makes toasting the grains beforehand unnecessary anyway.
Once the cooker switches to “keep warm” or finishes its cycle, let the rice sit covered for 5 minutes before opening the lid. That short rest lets residual steam finish softening any grains near the bottom of the pot, which tend to cook slightly faster than the rest. Fluff with a fork, then stir in the fresh lime juice and chopped cilantro.
Rice cookers are built specifically to manage the water absorption and even heating that whole grains like brown rice need, which is part of why brown rice settings have become a standard feature on most mid-range rice cookers rather than a rare add-on.
Variations and Tips for This Cilantro Lime Brown Rice
This recipe is easy to adjust once you’ve made the base version a few times, since the rice itself is neutral enough to take on different flavor directions without changing the core method. If you want a lighter version, you can skip the butter and use only olive oil. The butter adds richness, but the dish doesn’t have to hold together.
For more heat or smokiness, diced jalapeños stirred in with the cilantro add a spicy kick, while a pinch of cumin and paprika added during the toasting step brings a smoky depth that pairs well with grilled meats. Both are one-ingredient swaps, so you can test either without reworking the rest of the recipe.
This cilantro lime brown rice also works as a base rather than just a side. Adding black beans, corn, and avocado turns it into a full vegetarian meal on its own. The same brown rice base, cooked ahead of time, makes it a natural fit for weekly meal prep. It holds its texture in the fridge better than white rice does, so it’s less likely to turn gummy after a few days of reheating.
Try our other delicious rice recipes
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ’s)
Is Chipotle’s Brown Rice Cilantro Lime?
Yes. Chipotle seasons its brown rice the same way it seasons its white rice, with lime juice, lemon juice, and chopped cilantro added after cooking, plus bay leaves during cooking for aroma. The “brown rice” option on Chipotle’s menu isn’t a plain, unseasoned alternative; it’s the same cilantro-lime flavor profile in a whole-grain form.
How Do You Make Chipotle-Style Cilantro Lime Brown Rice at Home?
Follow the stovetop, Instant Pot, or rice cooker method above, using long-grain brown rice and finishing with fresh lime juice and chopped cilantro once the rice is cooked. The one addition that gets you closer to the restaurant’s exact flavor is a bay leaf added to the cooking liquid and removed before serving; it’s a detail Chipotle uses that this recipe’s base version omits for simplicity.
Is Cilantro Lime Rice Different from Regular Brown Rice?
Cilantro lime rice isn’t a different type of rice; it’s regular brown rice with lime juice, lime zest, and cilantro stirred in after cooking. The grain itself is identical; the only difference is the seasoning added at the end, which means any brown rice you already have on hand can become cilantro lime rice in under five minutes.
Is Cilantro Lime Brown Rice Good for Weight Loss?
It can fit well into a weight-loss-focused diet, mainly because of brown rice’s fiber content rather than anything added by the lime or cilantro, which contribute negligible calories. A cup of cooked brown rice provides roughly 3 grams of fiber, which supports satiety and helps you feel fuller on a comparable portion size than the same amount of white rice. However, portion size still matters more than the rice variety alone.



















1 Comment. Leave new
Turned out perfectly fluffy and so fresh-tasting the lime and cilantro really make this better than plain rice. Will be making this on repeat!