I got the same problem, and to make it worse, I was rebasing three commits, and after solving conflicts on the second commit, I "committed" instead of "rebase --continue".
As a result I had this git reflog
When I applied kirikaza's solution, I just reverted the third commit, and not the second one, which was problematic..
As you can see, the rebase starts by a checkout from the remotes/origin/master branch and then applies my three commits that appear as the three previous operation (before the checkout) in the reflog.
Then, if you want to restart from a clean base, before the rebase, you can simply reset hard to the hash just before the checkout of the rebase operation. In my case (see the picture):
git reset --hard 859ed3c
Then you can start a new git rebase
.