Saturday, June 25, 2011

Okonomiyaki: Japanese egg pancake

Many years ago, when alphamatrix returned from a year in Japan (her first visit), I remember her cooking something which she said she really missed, and just had to have.  When she explained what it was, I didn't get it.  Clearly, the Japanese are crazy.  An egg pancake with cabbage in it is just not right. 
When we visited Japan just over a year ago, we stumbled upon a great local spot and tried this okonomiyake we had heard so much about.  And I was so wrong.  Don't knock it til you've tried it.  
This has become one of those foods that I dream about for days if someone mentions it and I can't make it straight away!

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I've heard this described variously as Japanese pancake, Japanese omelet, and Japanese pizza, but none of these does it justice.  This is a thick, eggy pancake, filled with delicious chicken, leek and bacon (you can put all sorts of things in it, but I keep coming back to these as my favourites), and cabbage - there's always cabbage.  Really, though, it's about the sauce, and the crazy bonito flakes - and these two ingredients are well worth tracking down so you can try this.  Trust me.

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Okonomi sauce is something I've tried to substitute for, but it really is unique, and essential.  You can hunt for the word "okonomi" or cheat like I do, and look for a bottle with a picture of okonomiyaki (and the unmistakeable mayonaisse criss-cross)!
I also believe bonito flakes are essential - and I wouldn't have dreamt of outting these near food before I visited Japan.  I've found a brand with individual 3g sachets, which stay fresh and are perfect as I don't make this that often.


Rather than buy okonomiyaki mix, I read the English translation on the back and have come up with an easy batter which tastes the same to me.

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Take two eggs, and mix with about 1/2 cup of plain flour and 1 tsp of white sugar.
Add a couple of tablespoons of cold water until you get a thin consistency, like this:


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Stir-fry your main ingredients: I typically use slices of chicken thigh, leek, and bacon - but also use sliced mushrooms, and onion regularly.


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Add thinly sliced cabbage, and stir until just warmed through (this will cook further when the batter is in)



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Now, pour the batter over, cover, turn the heat to low, and let sit for a couple of minutes.


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Carefully flip when the batter starts to set on top.  You want the batter cooked through, and only lightly browned.



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Transfer to a plate, cover with okonomi sauce, draw pretty pictures with mayonnaise (purists insist on kewpie mayo, but I find standard store-bought is just fine).  Sprinkle generous helpings of bonito flakes, and dig in!


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3 comments:

  1. YUM!!
    I agree about the mayonnaise - any store-bought stuff is fine, so long as its creamy mayonnaise, not tangy sweet stuff (i.e. something like Best Foods, not ETA mayonnaise).

    I"m glad you don't think I'm crazy anymore.

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  2. hee, hee, I love the bonito flakes wave at you when you put them on hot things :-) You'll have to tell me where you found your dealer, this sounds like a fab quick dinner idea :-)

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  3. The bonito flakes are from the Asian grocer on the outside of South Melbourne markets (opposite the nut place at the meat hall entrance on Coventry Street). I always watch to see them wave, though the effect is not as good on these shorter ones as on the really long pieces we saw in Japan!

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