Category: Japanese Street Food

  • Yakitori: Skewered, Grilled, and Garnished (Part 2)

    Yakitori: Skewered, Grilled, and Garnished (Part 2)

    YakitoriWalk out of almost any train station in Japan in the evening, look for a restaurant with an akachochin (red lantern) outside, and inside you’ll find groups of salaried workers talking, drinking, and consuming countless skewers of yakitori, this country’s version of shish kebab. There is something very seductive about the smell of meat grilling over charcoal, which may help to explain the nation’s enduring love of yakitori.

    The forerunner of yakitori was a variety of small birds, such as quail or sparrow, split open, flattened and grilled. True yakitori, spitted on skewers, appears to have originated in yatai – food stalls – in Tokyo during the Meiji period (1868-1912). At that time chicken was prohibitively expensive, so beef and pork intestines were primarily used. The notion of grilling food caught on during this period, as Japan opened up to Western influences, including cuisine.

    As the price of chicken decreased in Japan, particularly in the Sixties when “broiler” chickens were introduced, it became the most common yakitori ingredient. These days, yakitori usually consists of chicken parts and vegetables skewered on sticks, grilled, and either sprinkled with salt or brushed with a sweetened soy-based sauce.

    Yakitori

    Yakitori

    Lucy Seligman
    No ratings yet
    Servings 4

    Ingredients
      

    • 1-1/2 lbs boned chicken leg or thigh meat, cut into 1-inch pieces
    • 8 washed & halved chicken livers (or chicken gizzards or rolled pieces of skin)
    • 8 small chicken wings (salt grill only)
    • 1 green bell pepper, seeded and cut into 1-inch pieces
    • 1 or 2 large Japanese leeks (naganegi), white part only (or white onions), cut into 1-inch pieces

    Yakitori Sauce:

    • 3/4 cup mirin (sweet rice sake)
    • 2 tbsps rock sugar, or 1 tbsp white sugar
    • 3/4 cup low-sodium soy sauce
    • 1 or 2 roasted or grilled chicken bones, optional

    Garnish:

    • Ground Japanese pepper (sansho)
    • Seven-spice pepper mixture (shichimitogarashi)
    • Lemon wedges for salted skewers

    Instructions
     

    • Put the mirin and sugar in a saucepan and warm, stirring well, over medium heat until the sugar melts. Add the soy sauce and chicken bones (if used), and bring the mixture to a boil. Turn the heat down and simmer, uncovered, for about twenty minutes. The sauce should reduce about 30 percent, and be thick but still pourable. Strain it and cool to room temperature.
      Since the cooking time for each ingredient varies, each should be threaded on separate skewers – 8- or 10-inch bamboo skewers or short steel shish-kebab ones – except for chicken pieces alternated with leeks, a traditional combination. Four pieces per skewer is best.
      Prepare a barbecue, grill, or broiler. For best results, use charcoal. Grill the skewers, unseasoned at first, turning every few minutes until the ingredients start to brown and the juices begin to trickle out. At this point, either salt both sides of each skewer or dip it into the sauce. Grill for a few more minutes, turning occasionally, then remove the salted skewers for immediate consumption; dip the other skewers into the sauce again and grill them twice more, the second time returning them to the fire only briefly. Serve the sauced skewers with garnishes and the salted ones with lemon wedges.
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    Photo attribution: Copyright: npdstock / 123RF Stock Photo

     

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  • Yakisoba: The Noodle That Came In From The Cold

    Yakisoba: The Noodle That Came In From The Cold

    YakisobaLast year, my daughter’s Japanese teacher at the local high school asked me to teach about 40 kids how to make yakisoba. So one early morning, we crammed into the very small ‘parent’s’ kitchen, set up a number of different stations with electric frying pans, and cooked away. There wasn’t a leftover in sight, and it was a lot of fun. Not only is this a deliciously seductive recipe, but it is very easy to make and a great way to get kids to eat a lot of vegetables painlessly!

    Like any country, Japan has its traditional snack foods. Some of the tastiest can be sampled in the mobile food stalls known as yatai, found at public events, traditional theater, festivals, and fairs – especially at evening cherry blossom-viewing parties in April – and on many a street corner at night.

    The origins of yatai with prop-up roofs and plastic sheeting “walls” against the worst of the weather can be traced back to the early 1700s. A more primitive version, called a suburi yatai, which sold not only foodstuffs but also basic goods and fuel, dates from 1613, in the early Edo period (1603-1867). After a major earthquake in Edo (Tokyo) in 1700, these stalls started to sell dengaku (grilled tofu topped with sweetened miso), a cheap dish popular with traveling samurai as well as locals. Particularly in the aftermath of natural disasters and during other times of famine, yatai came into their own; the government regularly attempted to ban them, claiming that they caused too many fires or disturbed the peace, but by the eighteenth century they were all the rage, reaching a heyday in the 1780s. While early yatai had sold only dried, grilled, or boiled fish, vegetables, and a variety of desserts, by the 1780s they were offering everything from candy to tenpura.

    One of the most popular types of yatai food since the 1700s has been late-night soba (buckwheat noodle) snacks, known in those days as yotaka soba. A yotaka is a nighthawk, but it can also refer to a prostitute, and ladies of the night often ate soba at yatai after a hard evening’s work. The food being cheap but delicious, it was not uncommon for yotaka women to meet some of their customers also enjoying a restorative bowl of noodles before strolling home. Even now, office workers and students studying late into the night drop in at a yatai for midnight feasts of ramen (Chinese noodles).

    Yakisoba (Japanese-style chow mein) is another typical yatai recipe. Although Chinese noodles are used, the dish is entirely Japanese in origin, and has been sold at yatai in Tokyo since the late 1930s. It is thought to have developed as a variation on okonomiyaki, a pancake topped with vegetables and meat or fish and slathered with a sweet, thick sauce, which has been served at yatai since the Edo period. (See my Okonomiyaki recipe: www.thanksforthemeal.net/okonomiyaki)

    Addictive and filling, like many other yatai foods, yakisoba is very easy to make at home. For an informal party, use a large electric frying pan and cook at the dining table.

    This post may include affiliate links, so without costing you anything extra, I’ll earn a small percentage of the sales if you purchase these items through these links. Thank you for your support!

    Yakisoba

    JAPANESE-STYLE YAKISOBA

    Lucy Seligman
    No ratings yet
    Course Main Course
    Cuisine Japanese
    Servings 4

    Ingredients
      

    • 1 medium-sized onion, peeled and chopped
    • 4 tablespoons vegetable oil
    • 7 oz ground lean beef (200g)
    • Black pepper to taste
    • 7 oz chopped cabbage (200g)
    • 1 ¼ lb steamed Chinese noodles (550g )
    • 4 tablespoons water
    • 8 fl oz ready-made yakisoba or okonomiyaki sauce (if unavailable, use equal parts of Worcestershire sauce and ketchup) (240 ml)

    Garnish:

    • Aonori: seaweed flakes to taste
    • Beni shoga: red pickled ginger to taste

    Instructions
     

    • In a wok, deep frying pan, or large electric pan, sauté the onion and cabbage in the oil over medium heat until slightly soft. Add the ground beef and black pepper to taste. Cook, stirring constantly, until the beef begins to change color. Then add the noodles, separating the strands a little with your fingers as you put them in the pan. Continue to cook, stirring, for a few moments.
    • Finally pour in the water, then the yakisoba sauce, and mix well.
    • Serve on individual plates, passing the seaweed and pickled ginger separately to sprinkle over the noodles.
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    yakisoba

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  • Okonomiyaki: Japanese Savory Pancakes

    Okonomiyaki: Japanese Savory Pancakes

    OkonomiyakiThe Japanese savory pancakes known as okonomiyaki are fun, inexpensive, and make a filling meal for all  seasons. Okonomi means “as you like it,” and being able to mix just about any meat  or vegetable you want into a batch of  them is a great incentive to clear out your refrigerator. Another of okonomiyaki’s charms is that you can make them right  at the dining room table on an electric  griddle.

    Okonomiyaki first became popular in Osaka after the Meiji period (1868-1912) and eventually spread throughout Japan.  Osakans also call them yoshokuyaki  (Western-style pancakes) since they use flour, an import. Whatever they’re called, okonomiyaki are still an enormous favorite in that city: there are close to 50,000  okonomiyaki restaurants in Osaka alone.

    Japanese Savory Pancakes Recipe

    After the Meiji period, small candy shops in downtown Tokyo used to have  a heated iron plate in front of their shops where children could make their own  okonomiyaki (or monjayaki as they’re called in Tokyo).

    Up until the early thirties, soy sauce was used as the primary sauce for okonomiyaki. After that, a thick sauce similar to that used on tonkatsu (pork cutlets) became popular. Depending on the  region, this sauce can be on the sweetish side (Hiroshima) or have a slightly spicy kick (Osaka).  Hiroshima is also a renowned okonomiyaki center. I tasted them for the first time there in a small back-alley restaurant during my college days. The generous volume of the Hiroshima pancake exceeds even that of the Osaka variety.

    Okonomiyaki

    Hiroshima-style Okonomiyaki

    Lucy Seligman
    No ratings yet

    Ingredients
      

    • 2 cups all-purpose flour
    • 2 cups water
    • 4 pinches each of salt and freshly ground black pepper or to taste
    • 1 tablespoon grated yamaimo mountain yam, optional
    • 13 ounces 37Og cored and shredded green cabbage
    • Chopped green onions to taste
    • 4 tablespoons katsuobushi dried bonito flakes
    • 4 very thin slices about 7 oz. or 200g of well-marbled pork
    • Vegetable oil as needed
    • Garnish:
    • Okonomiyaki sauce*
    • 4 fried eggs
    • Beni-shoga pickled red ginger, coarsely chopped and to taste
    • Additional green onions to taste
    • Ao-nori green seaweed flakes, optional

    Instructions
     

    • Prepare the batter first, sifting the flour into a bowl and slowly adding the water, salt, pepper, and yamaimo, whisking well. Cover and refrigerate for 30 minutes. Meanwhile, prepare the cabbage and other ingredients, including the fried eggs, and set them on the table on serving platters. Preheat the electric skillet or griddle at the table until very hot (at least 400 degrees Fahrenheit). Divide the chilled batter into four bowls and place one in front of each guest. Coat the griddle lightly with the oil. Then have each diner pour in half the batter from his or her bowl and shape it into a round pancake. Place a handful of cabbage on it, then sprinkle with green onions, katsuobushi, and top with the sliced pork. Pour the remaining batter on top. Turn the okonomiyaki over when the bottom starts to turn brown. When the pancake is cooked through, spread a thick layer of sauce over it, place a fried egg on top, and sprinkle generously with more chopped green onions and beni-shoga. Eat immediately.
    • Note: Other suggested ingredients include cleaned and halved shrimp, pieces of skinned squid, bean sprouts, tiny dried shrimp, ground beef or pork, tenkasu (fried tempura batter crumbs), sliced boneless chicken, cooked udon noodles, and yakisoba (pan-fried soba noodles).
    • *If okonomiyaki sauce is unavailable, mix equal parts of tonkatsu sauce and ketchup with a splash of Worcestershire sauce, or mix 1/2 cup ketchup, 1/2 cup Worcestershire sauce, 1-1/2 teaspoons sugar (or to taste), 1 tablespoon low- sodium soy sauce, and 3/4 teaspoon Dijon mustard.
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    okonomiyaki Japanese savory pancake

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