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World Foodie Guide

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A Home-cooked Japanese Lunch

Oct 8th, 2008 by admin

Carrot tempura

Imagine my reaction when we were recently invited by my in-laws for Sunday lunch. I charged up BOTH my camera batteries and hastily re-read the operating manual, fiddling with the settings to ensure that I was primed and ready to record what was guaranteed to be a superb home-cooked Japanese lunch.

Yes, I am blessed to have an amazing cook in my family – my Japanese stepmother-in-law. Her modern kitchen is a foodie’s dream, and her shelves are stuffed with complicated cookery books. And she’s going to hate reading this post, because she’s extremely modest…

We arrived at 11:30, as I was keen to photograph the action in the kitchen, only to find that much of the work had already been done! Rice was cooking in the rice cooker, soup was simmering away, hijiki salad was ready, as were the potato salad and the inari, while the apple pie was warming in the oven. But luckily for me, there was still quite a bit to do…

Tempura flour Temperature gauge Vegetables in tempura batter Vegetable tempura

The vegetable tempura had to be prepared (click here for Y’s indepth recipe, with these recent tempura- making photos added). The vegetables – okra, carrot wrapped in shiso leaf, shiitake mushroom, pepper, cauliflower and onion – were dipped in the tempura batter, then added to the hot oil in small batches and deep-fried for several minutes, before being drained on paper.

This time, Y used ready-made tempura flour (all you have to do is add the correct amount of water to the flour used), but it’s easy enough to make your own too (see recipe). She also had a nifty gadget attached to the rim of the saucepan, a temperature gauge for deep-frying tempura. It really takes very little time to prepare tempura, but you have to be on your toes all the time to make sure nothing burns (and avoid getting splashed with hot oil). Anyway, Y made it look extremely easy.

Onigiri mould Onigiri Adding miso paste to soup

Next to be finished were the onigiri rice balls. The rice had been cooking in the rice cooker with a splash of sake, while fresh peas had been added about 10 minutes before the rice was ready. My small but vital task was to pack the rice into an onigiri mould (what a brilliant invention!), then press down as hard as I could with the lid part to form the compacted rice balls. It was a little tricky extracting them from the mould, but Y did that part for me. I alway wondered how onigiri were so perfectly shaped, and now I know.

Finally the miso paste had to be added to the okra and seaweed soup that had been simmering away. Y used a white miso from Kyoto, which imparts a much lighter flavour. A generous scoop was added into a sieve and dissolved using a spoon to stir it. There are different methods of adding miso, but as long as the paste dissolves properly in the soup, it doesn’t matter how it’s done.

Vegetable tempura

We started with the tempura and miso soup. The tempura batter was so light and of course there wasn’t even the slightest hint of oil. Why can’t all deep-fried food taste like this? And although I don’t usually like okra, it was delicious both in the soup and as tempura. The onigiri and the inari (rice inside pockets made from bean curd, seasoned with sesame) were lovely, while I could have eaten the entire hijiki salad on my own.

Hijiki salad

As Y knows I love potato, she made a delicious Japanese-style potato salad (I got to take this home with me, along with everything else that we couldn’t finish). Finally, we had low-calorie home-made apple pie with apples from the garden, and a raisin wich, which is a tasty Japanese biscuit with a fresh cream and rum & raisin filling!

Radish, celery & avocado salad

Here’s a quick recipe for salad dressing (mixed with the radish, celery and avocado, the latter which requires a good squeeze of lemon juice to stop it from darkening). Mix the ingredients together and add to the salad. Then sprinkle sesame seeds and bonito flakes on top. It’s delicious!

  • ¼ cup of vinegar (Japanese is best, but you can also use apple cider vinegar)
  • ½ tbsp soy sauce
  • ½ ground sesame seeds
  • 1 tbsp sugar

Okra tempura Potato salad Miso soup with okra Apple pie with joghurt

Click for all the Japanese recipes on World Foodie Guide

Helen Yuet Ling Pang @ World Foodie Guide

Inari

Tags: cookery, cooking, food, Japan, Japanese, recipe, traveleating, vegetarian

Posted in cookery, cooking, food, Japan, Japanese, recipe, traveleating, vegetarian

4 Responses to “A Home-cooked Japanese Lunch”

  1. on 08 Oct 2008 at 8:18 am1American in London

    Everything looks and sounds amazing – esp that tempura. I can’t believe your stepmother-in-law made all of this food at home! I also liked that she served apple pie. :-)

  2. on 08 Oct 2008 at 9:50 am2Chinamatt

    That food looks and sounds amazing. I don’t get enough Japanese food (too expensive here). You’re very lucky to be related to the cook. I too have a mother-in-law who makes some great meals (just not such photogenic ones). I just have to get my wife to learn to cook from her.

  3. on 08 Oct 2008 at 10:35 am3American in London

    Chinamatt, have you considered learning yourself to cook from your mother-in-law, rather than getting your wife to learn?

  4. on 08 Oct 2008 at 11:01 am4admin

    Hi guys – it really was an excellent lunch! Chinamatt, I seem to remember your wife bought YOU a cookery book, haven’t you used it yet?!

    Next post from HK hopefully!

    Helen Yuet Ling

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