Tag: Japanese leeks

  • Tori no Hikizuri: A Chicken-based Precursor of Sukiyaki

    Tori no Hikizuri: A Chicken-based Precursor of Sukiyaki

    Like many cultures, Japan first used chickens as living alarm clocks. The first record of this dates back to the Kojiki, the country’s first official history book, written in 712. The chicken was considered a sacred bird back then because it told people when morning had come, and apparently no one considered consuming the source of their wake-up calls!

    Tori no Hikizuri japanese recipe

    Tori no Hikizuri Recipe – One Pot Chicken Dish

    Where did Japan’s first chicken come from? We know that during the Heian era (794 – 1190) Chinese chickens were used in Japan for fortune telling (reportedly by guessing the cock’s song) in addition to announcing the dawn. From the end of the Muromachi era (1338 – 1573) to the early Edo era (1603 – 1867), trading among other Asian countries involved using chickens as currency; they were also sold as pets and matched in cockfights. But eating them (and such animals as horses, monkeys, cows, and boars) was prohibited by Buddhist strictures.

    The taboo of eating chicken

    This taboo was lifted by the 1600s, due largely to a lack of food and occasional periods of true famine. Chickens were also being raised on a small scale domestically. As to which was consumed first, the chicken or the egg, in Japan’s case it was undeniably the egg.

    Cookbooks from the Edo era show a variety of egg dishes, but no chicken dishes. In 1643, however, the book Ryori monogatari (The Story of Cooking) contained a small section of preparing chicken, but it wasn’t until the end of the Edo era that chicken became a common comestible. In those days, chicken cuisine probably meant Nanban ryori (Western cuisine that originated in Nagasaki) and Shippoku ryori (derived from Chinese cuisine). Both used chicken in their dishes, although it still wasn’t popular among the common people.

    One area renowned for chicken production, breeding, and cuisine is central Japan, specifically Aichi and Gifu prefectures. In Aichi, the Owari samurai of Nagoya castle raised chickens as a side business to selling the eggs, they also sold the chickens as pets.

    One of the clans was the Kaifu family, who eventually produced Toshiki Kaifu, one of Japan’s prime ministers. During the early Meiji era (1868 – 1912), the Kaifus created a new chicken by cross breeding a Chinese chicken and a regional chicken called Nagoya cochin that had better – tasting meat and could produce more eggs.

    Tori no Hikizuri Origin

    The origins of this dish, tori no hikizuri, are a bit mysterious. It was first mentioned in 1806 in a book entitled Ukare suzume yugi jima (which translates as “Merry Sparrows Dancing Island”) by Junrei Gohosha. Hikizuri comes from the word hikizuru, a verb meaning to pull or drag, and was applied because people pulled the ingredients from inside the pot. Although many people think this dish is an imitation of sukiyaki, the latter actually mimicked tori no hikizuri.

    This is total and yummy comfort food cooked at the dining table! I love to serve this to family and friends. Everyone gets a kick out of it being cooked in front of them and serving themselves! It is also easy, something we can all appreciate, especially now.



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    Tori no Hikizuri japanese recipe

    Tori no Hikizuri: A Chicken-based Precursor of Sukiyaki

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

    Ingredients
      

    • 600 grams (21 ozs) free-range boned chicken, (use breast and or thigh), cut into medium-sized chunks or thick slices
    • 200 grams (7 ozs) chicken liver and gizzards, cut into pieces
    • 1-1/2 blocks yakidofu (grilled tofu), drained and cut into 1-inch slices
    • 200 grams (7 ozs) negi, (Japanese leeks), cut diagonally on the bias into thin slices
    • 225 grams (8 ozs) shirataki (devil's tongue noodles), parboiled for 2 to 3 minutes, drained and cut in half

    Broth (Warishita)

    • 2/3 cup 100 % pure mirin (sweet rice wine), or as needed
    • 1/3 cup tamari soy sauce, or as needed
    • 1 cup water, or as needed

    Dipping Sauce

    • 4 fresh eggs, optional

    Instructions
     

    • Pour the mirin into a sukiyaki pan, cast–iron pan, or pot, but do not oil it first as you would for sukiyaki. Bring to a rolling boil for a few minutes to burn off the alcohol. Add the tamari and the chicken, vegetables, and other prepared ingredients a little at a time, and cook until done. Thin out the sauce with water as needed.
    • To serve, use a beaten egg as your dipping sauce if you want.
       

    Notes

    Optional ingredients to add if you want:
    1. Shiitake mushrooms, stemmed and cut in half
    2. One or two bunches of mitsuba (trefoil), cut off ends, and cut into 2-inch pieces
    Keyword chicken
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  • Misonikomi Noodles from Nagoya

    Misonikomi Noodles from Nagoya

    Until I lived in Nagoya, I thought I only preferred less salty, lighter-colored misos, on the sweeter side. But the first time I had Misonikomi, another Nagoyan specialty, and tasted the deeply red and pungent hatcho (red) miso, my miso taste preferences widened and expanded. I loved making my kishimen noodle recipe from earlier this month, but this one might be even better!

    While testing this recipe, I was thrilled to find hatcho miso in the Bay area to use. If you are looking for a deeply satisfying, savory, umami-filled hearty noodle dish, Misonikomi is for you! Make sure you not only have chopsticks, but a soup spoon as you will want to spoon and slurp up every drop of the addictively tantalizing, comforting and delicious soup broth.

    If you like this, check out Kishimen Noodles from Nagoya too.


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    Misonikomi noodle recipe

    Misonikomi Noodles from Nagoya

    Lucy Seligman
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    Ingredients
      

    • 14 oz. handmade or dried thick udon noodles
    • 5 oz. chicken breast boned, skinned, and cut into small bite-sized pieces
    • 4 slices kamaboko, steamed fishcake optional
    • 3 ½ oz. Japanese leeks roughly chopped
    • 3 ½ oz. carrots cut into rounds
    • 5 cups strong dashi
    • 2-3 tablespoons hatcho miso soybean paste, or a mixture of 70% red miso and 30% brown miso
    • 4 eggs
    • 3 ½ oz. fresh spinach stemmed, washed, and parboiled, with excess water squeezed out

    To garnish:

    • Shichimitogarashi “seven tastes” pepper

    Instructions
     

    • Boil the chicken, kamaboko, leeks, and carrots in the dashi stock until half-way cooked. Remove.
    • Next, add the udon to the stock and boil until it reaches a chewy consistency. Then add the hatcho miso and continue to cook. As soon as the stock returns to the boil, remove the udon and place in four deep soup bowls.
    • Break the eggs into the stock (perhaps in two batches), and poach until half-way done. While the eggs are cooking, distribute the chicken, kamaboko, spinach, and other vegetables over the udon.
    • Place one egg in the center of each serving, and ladle soup over it – the heat of the soup will finish cooking the chicken, vegetables, and egg. Serve shichimi pepper separately.
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  • Uosuki: Fish Sukiyaki

    Uosuki: Fish Sukiyaki

    uosuki fish sukiyaki

    Ask anyone about sukiyaki, and most will nod knowledgeably and say, “Ah, yes, a famous Japanese dish.” Mention Uosuki, though, and even most Japanese will react with a blank look. Uosuki is a form of fish sukiyaki, a famous regional dish from the Osaka area that originated on fishing boats in the Inland Sea. Fresh catch was quickly cut up and added to a nabe (iron pot) of simmering stock that was sweet and salty (amakara); the stock was said to hide the fishy smell. Vegetables were also thrown in the pot, and a beaten egg was used as a dipping sauce.  At the very end, udon noodles were added instead of rice.

    Maruman Honke, an Osaka restaurant that opened in 1862, claims to be the only establishment to offer authentic uosuki. Located in the theater district until World War II, Maruman Honke became a favorite post-performance hangout for theatergoers. The restaurant’s huge communal room was raucous, convivial place where friends and strangers alike shared the large tables.

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    Today the restaurant is in a different area, and has the standard setup of a counter, tables, and small rooms for private parties. The uosuki hasn’t changed, though.

    Here is my version of uosuki. I use a variety of ultrafresh fish and other seafood – oysters and squid, for example – for a more complex taste. Vary the vegetables as desired: Chinese cabbage, shungiku (chrysanthemum leaves), daikon radish, and various Japanese mushrooms all blend in well. The addition of sansho pepper into the marinade for the fish also adds an elegant and additional subtle layer of flavor to this dish.

    For extra authenticity, try making Uosuki or Beef Sukiyaki (recipe) in a cast-iron sukiyaki pan.



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    uosuki fish sukiyaki

    Uosuki: Fish Sukiyaki

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

    Ingredients
      

    • 2 lb to 2 ¼ lb assorted white-meat fish fillets, such as sea bream, yellowtail, or cod, cut into 1-inch pieces
    • 4 medium or large shrimp, shelled and deveined, with tail left intact
    • 4 hamaguri clams, soaked in cold water for about an hour to cleanse them, then drained and rinsed
    • 3 cups cold dashi fish stock
    • 1/2 teaspoon sansho pepper
    • 1 ½ blocks grilled tofu, cut into 1-inch cubes
    • 4 fresh shiitake mushrooms, stems removed and a crisscross incision made on the caps
    • 7 oz. negi (Japanese leeks), cut diagonally into 1-inch slices* Use white part only
    • 1 large bunch of mitsuba, trefoil, slightly stemmed, washed, and cut into 2-inch pieces
    • ½ lb shirataki (noodles made from devil’s tongue jelly), parboiled for 2 to 3 minutes, then drained and cut into thirds
    • 10 ½ oz dried udon noodles, slightly undercooked, drained and then rinsed in cold water
    • Cold water as needed

    Sauce:

    • ¾ cup low-sodium soy sauce
    • ¼ cup white sugar
    • ½ cup sake
    • ½ cup mirin (sweet sake)
    • ¾ cup cold dashi stock

    Dipping sauce:

    • 4 to 8 eggs

    Instructions
     

    • Marinate the fish and shellfish in the cold dashi-sansho mixture in a shallow container for one hour in the refrigerator before cooking. Drain and place the marinated seafood in a serving bowl.
    • Arrange the rest of the ingredients on a serving platter and place the platter on the dining table. Put all the sauce ingredients in a saucepan and simmer until the sugar dissolves and it’s hot. Adjust the taste as desired, adding more sugar or mirin for a sweeter taste, or more soy sauce for a saltier taste.
    • Pour half the sauce into the sukiyaki pan (or cast-iron pan), and then place the pan over a heating source and bring to a boil. Start adding a little of each ingredient to the pot and let cook over high heat until done. Dip each morsel into beaten egg and eat immediately. Continue adding the ingredients and sauce as needed. Add noodles to the pot toward the end of the meal, cooking only to reheat and eat.
    • If the sauce becomes too thick, add cold water as needed to thin it out.
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