Tuesday 31 March 2009

Yakitori sauce recipe

Yakitori recipe from a forum

Ingredients

1/2 cup soy sauce
1/4 cup sugar
1/2 cup mirin
1/4 cup sake
1 garlic clove, crushed
1 slice fresh ginger, peeled (1/8 inch thick)
1 tablespoon water
1 tablespoon cornstarch
Directions
1 In a small saucepan, combine soy sauce, sugar, mirin, sake, garlic and gingerroot.
2 Cook over medium high heat 3 to 4 minutes.
3 In a small bowl, blend water and cornstarch.
4 Stir constarch mixture into soy sauce mixture.
5 Cook until thickened, stirring constantly.
6 Strain sauce.
7 Keep at room temperature for up to 24 hours.
8 Refrigerate.

Tsukunhicken Balls
Ingredients for four people:
Minced chicken ··· 450g
Salt ··· 5g
Green onions ··· 20g
Egg ··· 1/4 (Break and lightly beat egg; use 1/4 of mixture)
Starch ··· 1.5g
Seasoning A:

Soy sauce ··· 30cc

Sake ··· 10cc

Sugar ··· 20g

Mirin ··· 10cc

Ginger juice ··· 10cc
Shichimi pepper ··· as necessary
Cooking surface: Grill pan
Method:
1) Mix minced chicken and salt until whitish.
2) Add minced green onion, egg, starch, and ginger juice and mix well with meat.
3) Shape the mixture into meat patties around 3-4 cm in diameter and 2 cm in thickness.
4) Heat oil in a grill pan, brown one side of the meat patties, then the other side.
5) Remove excess oil with cooking paper as necessary.
6) Add seasoning A to the pan and cook it on low heat until sauce thickens and becomes lustrous on the surface of meat.

Cousins visit meal planning

4 of my cousins are coming to visit us in Japan with 2 of their children. 2 are from Melbourne, 2 from Toronto and 2 from Kuala Lumpur. With 3 of us in Tokyo already, that makes 9 people to cook for dinner. I have to do lots of planning. Why not plan my meal on my site?

Meal 1 - Yakitori
Yakitori
chicken 2 pcs each x 9 = 18, wagyu beef = 9, meat balls = 9, tsukune = 9
Goya champur
Grilled broad beans
Cabbage and tofu
Pickled vegetable
Rice

Meal 2 - Pasta
Spaghetti Meatballs
Another pasta
Salad?

Meal 3 - Curry
Thai chicken stir-fry
A vegetable
A Salad
leftover yakitori?

Meal 4 - Sushi
Order in Sushi platter
Tofu salad with sesame dressing
Simmered pumkin
Miso soup

Meal 5 - Roast chicken
Roast chicken
potatoes
pumpkin
cherry tomatoes
aubergine
Salad

Meal 6 - Soba
Soba
dipping sauce
onions, wasabi, nori,
enoki mushrooms
rice
fish
spinach

Nathan's meals


On a good day, this is what Nathan gets to eat.

Wednesday 25 March 2009

Recipe: Gyoza I


I don't know how bloggers take all those photos of the food while the cook. Aren't their hands full of flour, the kitchen table too messy, their mind on what to do next, if the water with flour ready for the pour? In addition to all that Nathan needed help doing his lego (he just needs attention ALL the time!!!) - Mama I want you to help me....

A friend Kei showed me how to make some guotie with bought skins and filling she made. I was really eager to try it but had to find my ingredients first (the right gyoza skin)

Just for info:

Gyoza is a staple Beijing dish that my father in law introduced to me. It was the first meal we had together and I think I didn't make a great impression eating 15 of them in one meal. I loved it. Unlike dumplings one sees in dim sum meals, Beijing gyoza is boiled, not steamed and filled with lots of vegetables and less meat. The skin is handmade and rolled fresh ready to be filled.

In Taiwan, guotie is more popular. They are 'fried' gyozas. Gyoza's (in the mainland) are boiled and the left overs are fried the next day and called guotie. In Taiwan, guotie is the norm; they use more meat fillings and mass produced skins. which withstand the frying. The end result has a crispy bottom where the dumpling sits on the pan which contrasts to the top which is steamed.

In Japan, their dumplings are fried like the Taiwanese guotie but their fillings are completely different. Their skins are different too. I don't know how to make Japanese dumplings, which the Americans pronounce differently than the Beijing gyoza although spelt the same. Their fillings are quiet complex and not as fresh tasting as the original.

So, how did I make mine? I am writing this out to for my reference and future trials.

Guotie

Minced pork
Ginger juice
Cabbage, finely sliced, salted overnight and squeezed
Garlic chives, finely sliced
Spring onions
Rocket, finely sliced (just because it needed using)
Salt
Pepper
Oyster sauce
Soy sauce
Sake (substitute for chinese wine)
Sesame Oil
Chicken Oil
Sugar

Mix all the ingredients
Prepare a plate for the wrapped guotie
Sprinkle flour on the plate
Have a small bowl of water handy
Prepare the water and flour mixture (1 cup)
Make the guotie
Hold the wrapped in one hand,
Fill with a teaspoon of filling
Wet one half edge with water
Join the two halves together making a frill pattern, try to ensure there is no air in the guotie (takes skill)
Arrange the guotie on the plate
Heat pan till very hot
Pour enough oil to cover the pan and a bit more
When the oil is hot, arrange the guotie on the pan
Pour the flour and water mixture and immediately close the pan
Leave for 15 minutes and make sure the filling is cooked
Prise carefully around the pan
Place a plate over the pan and turn it over so the guotie looks like a fried pancake

Eat

It came out tasting a bit bitter, because of the rocket, I think. But it had a lovely cabbage taste. Nathan might have been really hungry because he ate most of it. I think I had only 3? So my comments arent properly validated. Stephen thought they were nice, and ate the rest of it with noodles. I think I should have let the filling marinate for a while.

Saturday 14 March 2009

Kappabashi


The kappa, himself

The cake shop - all things to make cakes

Plastic food for restaurants

I would love to get an heirloom set for Nathan. Not a Peter Rabbit china set (already have those) but this cute japanese artwork on crockery for children. A salad bowl, a plate, tea cup and rice bowl.

We went to kappabashi to buy some japanese crockery for home use. I went with 3 bags and they were full. Here is a website of one of the shops we went to. www.maru-katsu.co.jp

Friday 6 March 2009

Ho ho ho, Shirokanedai

No, I am not laughing at Shirokanedai. Its a very civilised place. There is a new Vietnamese restaurant next to the Barkery. The Barkery is a shop for dogs, and they bake and sell their own dog biscuits. A bakery for dogs. But I am sure they make more money from the other stuff the sell - dog bags, royal canin, cushions, you get the drift?

This vietnamese restaurant serves pho, (YEAH!!!), spring rolls and a Vietnamese roll (for 1050Yen I bet, it sells for $2.50 in Melbourne). I LOVE the Vietnamese roll, even though people have had salmonella poisoning from it. It is THE most delicious sandwich - liver pate, grilled chicken, coriander leaves, fresh red chilli, avocado perhaps, grated cucumber and carrot salad. As an Asian salad should taste.

Stephen and I went there for lunch and it was too cold and rainy outside to have anything but pho. It was delicious! A simple broth with rice noodles and lots of herbs. It just clears the world away and renews you. Will be our new haunt, I bet.

Sunday 1 March 2009

Negiya Heikichi


The JLIP class mums went out to Negiya Heikichi in Shibuya.

A lovely negi (onion) restaurant down an alley but in most beautiful setting.