- Cut cucumbers in half lengthwise and scoop out any large seeds. Slice crosswise into very thin slices.
- In a small bowl combine vinegar, sugar, salt and ginger. Mix well. Place cucumbers inside of the bowl, stir so that cucumbers are coated with the mixture. Refrigerate the bowl of cucumbers for at least 1 hour before serving.
Oyakodon (Chicken & Egg Bowl)
- 2 boneless skinless chicken thighs
- ½ onion
- 2 large eggs
- 3 cups cooked Japanese short grain rice
- small bunch Mitsuba (Japanese parsley) (or green onion/scallion)
- Shichimi Togarashi (Japanese seven spice)
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Gather all the ingredients.
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Combine dashi, mirin, sake, soy sauce in a bowl or a liquid measuring cup.
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Add sugar and mix all together until sugar is dissolved.
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Thinly slice the onion and chop mitsuba (or green onion). Beat one egg in a small bowl (you will need to beat another egg when you work on the second batch).
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Slice the chicken thigh diagonally and cut into 1.5″ (4 cm) pieces. I recommend using “sogigiri” cutting technique so the chicken will be equal thickness and create more surface area for fast cooking.
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We make one serving at a time using a small frying pan. Divide all the ingredients in half. Add half of the onion in a single layer. Pour roughly 1/3 to ½ of the seasonings mixture (depending on the size of your frying pan, the amount may vary). You will need just enough sauce to cover the onion and chicken.
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Add half of the chicken on top of the onion. Make sure the onion and chicken are evenly distributed. Turn on the heat to medium heat and bring to a boil.
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Once boiling, lower the heat to medium low heat. Skim off any foam or scum if you see any. Cover and cook for about 5 minutes or until chicken is no longer pink.
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Slowly and evenly drizzle the beaten egg over the chicken and onion. Cook covered on medium low heat until the egg is done to your liking. Usually Oyakdon in Japan is served with almost set but runny egg.
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Add the mitsuba (or green onion) right before removing from the heat. Pour the chicken and egg on top of steamed rice and drizzle desired amount of remaining sauce.
Soba-Cha Pudding (Roasted-Buckwheat Custard)
These egg custards are rich and dense, with a silky-smooth texture. The secret ingredient is Japanese roasted-buckwheat tea (called soba-cha). Somewhat similar to chestnuts, the buckwheat adds a deeply nutty, toasted flavor that pairs beautifully with the lightly sweet dairy in the custards.
Recipe courtesy of Serious Eats.
Yield: Serves 4
Active time: 30 minutes
Total time: 5 hours 30 minutes
Ingredients
- 12 ounces heavy cream (1 ½ cups; 355ml), plus more as needed
- 1 ½ ounces soba-cha, or roasted-buckwheat tea (¼cup; 45g), plus more for garnish (see note)
- Pinch kosher salt
- 6 large egg yolks (about 4 ounces; 115g)
- 3 ounces sugar (7 tablespoons; 85g)
- Whipped cream, for garnish
Special Tools
- 4 (4- or 6-ounce) ramekins
- fine-mesh strainer
- flexible rubber or silicone spatula
- instant-read thermometer
Directions
- Preheat oven to 300°F (150°C). Bring a kettle of water to a boil. In a medium saucier or saucepan, combine cream with soba-cha and bring to a bare simmer over medium heat, stirring and scraping the bottom and sides frequently with a rubber or silicone spatula to prevent scorching. Remove from heat and let steep for 5 minutes.
- Fine-strain infused cream into a heatproof measuring cup, pressing down on soba-cha to extract as much liquid as possible. Discard soba-cha. Add enough fresh cream to infused cream to top it up to 1 1/2 cups total. Season with a scant pinch of salt.
- In a clean medium saucier or saucepan (you can also use the same one from step 1, as long as it has cooled sufficiently that it won’t cook the yolks), whisk egg yolks with sugar, then pour hot infused cream into egg yolk mixture while whisking constantly. Set over medium-low heat and cook, stirring and scraping bottom and sides of pot with a rubber or silicone spatula, until custard registers 140°F (60°C) on an instant-read thermometer. Remove from heat.
- Fine-strain custard, then divide into ramekins and set ramekins in a baking dish. Cover baking dish with aluminum foil, leaving a small opening in the foil, and transfer to oven. Pour prepared boiling water into baking dish, being careful not to splash it into ramekins, until water comes about 3/4 of the way up the ramekin sides. Seal foil and bake custards until just set, 30 to 45 minutes.
- Carefully remove baking dish from oven, making sure not to slosh water, and let custards cool in water bath for about 1 hour. Remove ramekins from water bath, cover with plastic, and refrigerate until fully chilled, at least 3 hours.
- Custards can be refrigerated for up to 5 days. To serve, top with whipped cream and garnish with a few stray roasted buckwheat seeds.