Scorched rice| Scorched rice in Iran | 
| Alternative names | 
 pegao - Puerto Rico
 concón - Dominican Republic
 concolón - Peru, Panama
 cocolón - Colombia, Ecuador, Venezuela
 graten - Haitian Creole
 cucayo – Quechua
 htamin gyo (ထမင်းချိုး) - Burmese
 kerak nasi – Malay (including Indonesian and Malaysian Standard Malay)
 kaning tutóng – Filipino
 cơm cháy – Vietnamese
 apango – Malagasy
 guōbā (锅巴(s); 鍋巴(t)) – Mandarin Chinese
 faan6 ziu1 (饭焦(s); 飯焦(t)) – Cantonese Chinese
 nurungji (누룽지) – Korean
 okoge (お焦げ) – Japanese
 qazmagh (qazmağ) or qazandibi (qazandibi)–
Azerbaijani
 tahdig (تهدیگ) –
Persian
 bınkıř  (بنکڕ) – Kurdish
 hakakeh (حكاكه) - Iraqi Arabic
 kodada (كداده) - Hejazi Arabic
 arae el halla (قرع الحلّة) - Egyptian Arabic
 socarrat - Valencian and Catalan
 kanzo or ɛmo ase - Twi
 mawowó - Makhuwa
 kokorota - Cape Verdean Creole
 | 
|---|
| Type | Cooked rice | 
|---|
| Main ingredients | Rice | 
|---|
| Variations | Cucayo, guōbā, nurungji, okoge, tah dig, rengginang | 
|---|
|  | 
Scorched rice, also known as crunchy rice, is a thin crust of slightly browned rice at the bottom of the cooking pot. It is produced during the cooking of rice over direct heat from a flame.