Easy, Tasty, Fun, Creative and Kawaii Japanese Food Recipes and Cooking Hacks Blog with How-To YouTube Cooking Show Video Tutorials. Bento, Healthy Sweets and More!!! Make Your Life Easier ;)
Showing posts with label WASHOKU Japanese Food Recipe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label WASHOKU Japanese Food Recipe. Show all posts
This video will show you how to make a Japanese Custard Pudding in a microwave! The recipe is very easy but please read my instructions carefully since the cooking time differs depending on the wattage and the microwave manufacturer.
Difficulty: Very Easy
Time: 15min + cooling time
Number of servings: 2
Ingredients:
((Custard Pudding))
1 egg
1tbsp. sugar
150cc milk
a few drops vanilla extract
((Caramel Sauce))
1tsp. sugar
1tsp. water
1tsp. hot water
Directions:
((Caramel Sauce))
1. Combine sugar and water in a microwavable glass bowl. Heat it (uncovered) at 500w for 2-3 minutes until it melts and gets burnt (in brown). (the cooking time depends on the microwave even the wattage is the same, so mine was about 2.5 minutes. please watch out after 2 minutes!!!)
2. Quickly mix hot water, spoon it into center of each microwavable glass dish, and set aside.
((Custard Pudding))
1. Combine egg and sugar, add milk and vanilla extract, and beat well.
2. Strain and pour on top of the caramel.
3. Put the pudding cups in a microwavable container with water. Make sure water is filled up to the level of the pudding and does not spill over into the pudding. Then cover the whole thing with a plastic wrap.
4. Microwave at 500w for 5-7 minutes, until it begins to bubble. My cooking time was 7 minutes but please watch out after 5 minutes since the cooking time depends of the microwave even the wattage is the same.
5. Leave to stand for about 5 minutes. Then serve warm or put in the fridge to serve cold.
--------------------------------- Ketchup Miso Stir-Fried Pork and Cabbage
Difficulty: Easy
Time: 10min
Number of servings: 2
Ingredients:
150g (5.3oz.) thinly sliced pork
A
* 1 tsp. sake
* 1 tsp. soy sauce
* 0.5 tsp. grated garlic
300g (10.6oz.) cabbage (you can add some other leftover vegetables in the fridge: carrot, green pepper, onion, shimeji mushrooms, shitake mushrooms, etc...)
B
* 2 tbsp. sake *you can add water instead
* 1 tbsp. miso
* 1 tbsp. ketchup
* 1 tsp. toban jan (hot bean sauce / Chinese red chili paste, optional)
1 tbsp. sesame oil
Directions:
1. Cut thinly sliced pork into bite-size and season with A.
2. Cut green cabbage into bite-size as well.
3. In a small bowl, mix B well.
4. Heat sesame oil in a frying pan, and saute seasoned pork.
5. When the pork starts to change color, add cabbage and other leftover vegetables and stir-fry until they began to wilt.
6. Then add 3. and cook thoroughly.
I hope everyone can get sake and mirin (sweet sake) since they are necessary for Japanese cooking and I use them very often! Of course you can skip them but they really make the foods taste better. hehe
Fresh chocolate is made with chocolate and fresh cream. It is so simple that it is the most popular handmade chocolate in Japan. Mostly, it is flavored with rum but in my recipe I used Sake! hehe I hope you like this idea but of course you can skip sake ;P
Directions:
1. Melt the chocolate and heavy cream in a double boiler over hot water (60C/140F).
2. Remove from the hot water, using a whisk or spatula, mix until creamy.
3. If you like, add butter and sake (any liqueur) and mix lightly.
4. Line the truffle box (or origami box) with a plastic wrap and fill the chocolate mixture. Smooth the surface and put in a fridge until firm (about an hour or two).
5. When the chocolate got firm, cut into small square pieces, dust with cocoa powder, and put them back in a box lined with a bento cup (or a muffin cup is okay).
Ginjo Sake means premium sake. Ginjo is the grade. Junmai Ginjo is the highest grade! Don't use sake for cooking. It is non premium sake with some salt added.
Please see the video for the origami box instructions.
I named it "Lucky Eho-Maki" because I used seven lucky ingredients including lucky colors such as red and yellow: smoked salmon, corn, onion, baby leaves, avocado, mustard mayonnaise, and cracked black pepper.
February 3rd was Setsubun for 124 years but starting from 2021, February 2nd will be Setsubun almost once in 4 years. It is the day before the beginning of Risshun (spring season). You need to check out the calendar. Yikes 😅 On Setsubun, we cleanse away all the evil of the former year and drive away disease-bringing evil spirits for the year to come. This special ritual is called Mamemaki (bean scattering). On this day at night, it is customary now to eat uncut maki-zushi called Eho-Maki ("lucky direction roll") while facing the yearly lucky compass direction, determined by the zodiac symbol of that year.
The lucky direction of the year 2024 is East Northeast slightly East. (2024年 令和6年の恵方は 東北東やや東).
But just remember you have to close your eyes and eat all without speaking! You can speak after you complete it ;)
Ingredients:
300g (10.5oz.) cooked Japanese rice (short-grain rice)
2 tbsp Sushisu (seasoning for sushi rice)
1 nori sheet
A
* cracked black pepper
* smoked salmon
* whole kernel corn
* onion slices
* baby leaves
* avocado slices
* mustard mayonnaise
Directions:
1. Place cooked Japanese rice in a bowl. Add Sushisu while the rice is hot and slice through rice using rice paddle to separate the grains.
2. Cover the bamboo sushi-roll mat with plastic wrap. Place nori sheet on the bamboo sushi-roll mat, shiny side down.
3. Spread sushi rice (1.) on the nori sheet using your finger tips, little bit moistened with water.
4. Place A lengthwise on the nori sheet.
5. Roll the bamboo mat forward, hold the line of ingredients firmly with your fingers, make sure all the ingredients are pressed in, roll it completely, and gently press the mat around the roll to shape it (do not squeeze).
You want to eat uncut sushi roll, so don't cut it. You can of course make it smaller!!!
DECO CHOCO is the chocolate (usually the chocolate bar) decorated with sprinkles and cute sweets. Something like this one.
There was a DECO CHOCO contest (by Meiji: one of Japan's leading confectioneries) few years ago. I came up with an idea making a 3D photo frame and I won a silver prize! At that time, I could only use Meiji's product but this time I used sweets from many other manufacturers.
I will list all the product details below but you can use any kind of chocolate bars and sweets to attach.
You can cover with a plastic wrap and save it. It lasts for more than a year in a cool place BUT it is not safe to eat after 3 days. LoL
It will be a great Valentine's Day gift for your loved one :)
--------------------------------- DECO CHOCO Photo Frame for Valentine's Day
Difficulty: easy
Time: 1 hour
Number of servings: 1 photo frame
Ingredients:
((Photo Frame))
3 Meiji Milk Chocolate Bar (明治 ミルクチョコレート) *of course you can use any other brands!
((Decoration))
any sprinkles of your choice
chocolate pen (明治 チョコペン/スイートペン)
Meiji Apollo Strawberry Chocolate (明治 アポロ)
Meiji Vanilla Cookies (明治 バニラサブレ)
Meiji Marble Chocolate(明治 マーブルチョコレート)
Meiji Fran Meltykiss Green Tea Chocolate Cookie Stick Pocky (明治 フラン メルティーキッス仕立て とろける抹茶)
Meiji Kinoko No Yama Strawberry and Cream (明治 大粒きのこの山 たっぷり苺の練乳仕立て)
Meiji Galbo Mini (明治 ガルボ ミニ)
Fukui Ichigo Chocobo (いちごチョコ棒)
HAITAI PACIFIC Stone Chocolate (ヘテパシフィック ストーンチョコ)
Tirol-Choco Bihada Tirol (チロルチョコ 美肌チロル)
Fujiya Peko Poko Chocolate (不二家 ペコポコチョコレート)
Bourbon EVERY BURGER (ブルボン エブリバーガー)
Lotte CRUNKY Positive Joy Caffe Latte (ロッテ クランキーポップジョイ 香るカフェラテ)
Lotte CRUNKY Ball Nude (ロッテ クランキーボール ヌード)
Takaoka Flat Heart (Takaoka フラットハート)
Glico Collon (グリコ コロン 濃厚ダブルベリー)
Directions:
Build the photo frame with 3 chocolate bars and attach the sweets of your choice.
Please see the video. It is much easier to follow :) hehe
Note:
Meiji's Yam Yam, Choco Baby, Poifull, Petitie 5-1 Choco, Takenoko No Sato… etc., colorful candies, gummy candies, are also cute. BUT don't use cotton candy. I tried and it looked pretty bad like mxxx…
I bought them all in packages but it is wise to go to Sweet Factory or any other sweets shops where they sell by measurement and get just one or two each. More colors and shapes you use, cuter it become!
I bought some of them at DAISO (dollar shop). They have weird imported sweets like stone chocolate and flat heart. Oh, btw, I was looking for Meiji Twinkle Chocolate (明治 ツインクル) but I couldn't find it. It should be cute to add on your photo frame, if you know ;) hehe
Mozuku (Cladosiphon okamuranus) is noodle-like seaweed which is mainly produced in Okinawa. It is rich in fiber and minerals! Mozuku is usually sold frozen, so please check the freezer at Asian grocery stores. I hope it is available!!! For this recipe you need plain (non-flavored) Mozuku, so don't get the one soaked in vinegar!
Difficulty: Easy
Time: 5-10min
Number of servings: 2
Ingredients:
100g (3.5oz.) Mozuku
60g (2.2oz.) carrot
3 Japanese green pepper
3 shiitake mushroom
2 bacon strip
1 tbsp. soy sauce
salt and cracked black pepper
2 tsp. sesame oil
2 tsp. toasted white sesame seeds
Directions:
1. Wash mozuku and drain well (cut into bite sized pieces if too long). Thinly slice the shiitake mushroom. Cut carrot, green pepper, and bacon into thin strips.
2. Heat sesame oil in a frying pan, cook the bacon until crisp. Add and stir-fry carrot and green pepper until slightly softened. Then add and stir-fry shiitake and mozuku.
3. Season with soy sauce, salt and cracked black pepper, sprinkle toasted white sesame seeds (or ground sesame seeds), and serve.
This recipe won a grand prize at the easy recipe contest organized by Ajinomoto. I received the prize from chef Wakiya Yuji (脇屋友詞) who is famous for creative Chinese food in Japan.
For the seasoning, I used chicken stock and white miso. The chicken stock adds a nice and rich flavor and white miso makes the dish slightly sweet and tasty!
It can be very colorful and festive recipe for Chinese New Year's day. Also, it is perfect for every-day bento box :)
BTW, at our wedding, we could luckily cater chef Wakiya's fancy and healthy Chinese cuisine from "トゥーランドット遊仙境 - Turandot Yusenkyo" restaurant in Akasaka.
--------------------------------- Chinese Style White Miso Stir Fried Seven Vegetables
Difficulty: Easy
Time: 20min
Number of servings: 2
Ingredients:
75g (2.6oz.) ham
100g (3.5oz.) onion
50g (1.8oz.) carrot
100g (3.5oz.) zucchini
100g (3.5oz.) bean sprouts
50g (1.8oz.) red bell pepper
6 dried cloud ear mushrooms (you can use 3 shitake mushrooms)
A
* 2 tbsp. white miso (it tastes different but you can use 1 tbsp. regular miso)
* 1 tbsp. sake
* 1 tbsp. mirin (sweet sake)
* 1/2 tbsp. chicken stock powder
* 1 tsp. sugar
1/2 tbsp. cooking oil
cracked black pepper
Directions:
1. Soak the dried cloud ear mushrooms in hot water for at least fifteen minutes. Then drain and cut into strips. Trim the bean sprouts at both ends if you prefer. Cut ham, carrot, zucchini and red bell pepper into strips. Thinly slice onion.
2. Mix A.
3. Heat cooking oil in a frying pan, stir-fry onion, carrot, zucchini, bean sprouts, red bell pepper, cloud ear mushrooms, and ham in order. Add A and stir-fry until the seasonings blend. Serve on the dish and sprinkle cracked black pepper.
Nanakusagayu is the seven herbs rice porridge that we eat in the morning of January 7th to bring longevity and health. Perfect for your stomach after a big meal ;)
Difficulty: Very Easy
Time: 10min
Number of servings: 2
Ingredients:
70g Nanakusa (seven herbs)
250g (8.8oz.) cooked white rice (Japanese short-grain rice)
500ml water
a pinch of salt
Directions:
1. Wash Nanakusa. Lightly boil, then drain.
2. Cut off the roots of Nanakusa, and chop the rest into small pieces.
3. Lightly wash the cooked Japanese rice if you do not want a gooey texture. Don't wash if you like a thick porridge.
4. Bring the water to a boil, then add the rice. Add the Nanakusa, and lightly season with salt to finish.
Add toasted Mochi (rice cake) if you like! Mochi goes great with the porridge and fills your stomach ;)
Datemaki is one of the dishes I cook for our Osechi-Ryori (traditional Japanese New Year's food eaten during the first three days of the New Year). But it is also great for bento :) It looks like Tamagoyaki (rolled omelet) but the texture is fluffier and tastes bit sweeter. Ready-made ones are very sweet but if you make it at home, you can control the sweetness, which is good for your health!
Each dishes that make up Osechi-Ryori has a special meaning celebrating the New Year (such as good health, fertility, good harvest, happiness, long life, etc...) and those dishes can last for a couple of days in the refrigerator or at cool room temperature in winter. Usually, they are served in jyubako (重箱: three-tiered bento boxes). In the first tier, we serve colorful festive dishes such as shrimp, black beans, sweet chestnuts, etc... In the second tier we serve sunomono (pickled dishes) and yakimono (grilled dishes). And in the third tier, we serve nimono (simmered dish) called Nishime (simmered Japanese vegetables).
Datemaki is for the first tier. I mixed some leftover minced vegetables from decoratively cut vegetables of Nishime to make them colorful and pretty!
Practice makes perfect, so I hope you learn how to make Datemaki by the end of the year ;)
Difficulty: Easy
Time: 30min
Number of servings: 4
Necessary Equipment:
blender / mixer
tamagoyaki nabe (rectangular omelet pan) regular frying pan is okay if not available
makisu (bamboo sushi-roll mat)
Ingredients:
A
* 4 eggs
* 50g (1.8oz.) hanpen (fluffy white fish cake)
* 2 tbsp. sugar
* 1 tbsp. sake
* 1 tbsp. mirin (sweet sake)
* a pinch of salt
* a bit of soy sauce
B
* 1 tbsp. minced carrot
* 1 tbsp. minced shitake mushroom
* 1 tbsp. minced mitsuba (Japanese wild parsley)
cooking oil
Directions:
1. Place A in a blender / mixer and process until smooth.
2. Add B and gently mix them with a spoon.
3. Heat cooking oil in a tamagoyaki nabe (rectangular omelet pan), pour the mixture in the pan, cover, and cook over low heat for 10 minutes. Check if the bottom is brown or not. If the pan is too hot, cool the pan on a wet towel to prevent burning. After the bottom sets, flip over and cook the other side.
4. Cover the bamboo sushi-roll mat with plastic wrap. While it is hot, score with a sharp knife to prevent breaking, roll the omelet, fasten with rubber bands and allow it to cool until it sets.
5. Cut it into thick slices and serve.
Osechi-Ryori is traditional Japanese New Year's food eaten during the first three days of the New Year. Each dishes that make up Osechi-Ryori has a special meaning celebrating the New Year (such as good health, fertility, good harvest, happiness, long life, etc...) and those dishes can last for a couple of days in the refrigerator or at cool room temperature in winter. Usually, they are served in Jyubako (重箱: three-tiered bento boxes). In the first tier, we serve colorful festive dishes such as shrimp, black beans, sweet chestnuts, etc... In the second tier we serve Sunomono (pickled dishes) and Yakimono (grilled dishes). And in the third tier, we serve Nimono (simmered dish) called Nishime (simmered Japanese vegetables).
Traditionally, we spend few days to prepare Osechi-Ryori but I always spend few hours to complete mine. I use ready-made dishes for sweet dishes since my darling doesn't eat a lot. I put more effort into cooking the savory dishes.
So, this is my darling's favorite Nishime recipe for the third tier :) I use frozen Japanese vegetables to save time and money. I came up with this idea when I lived in New York, where you can not find ingredients easily. I hope you can make it in your country in this way.
For the seasoning, I used Yamasa's Konbu Tsuyu (3 times concentrated Konbu kelp seaweed soup stock) which is tasty and convenient. I'm sure it is available overseas at Asian grocery stores or online.
With just a little extra effort decoratively cutting vegetables, it becomes gorgeous, so try to make it fancy ;)
In the end of the video, I will show you my Osechi-Ryori from past years! Don't miss them!
I hope you all enjoy my video :D
---------------------------------
Easy Nishime (Simmered Japanese Vegetables)
Difficulty: Easy
Time: 1hour
Number of servings: 5
Necessary Equipment:
1 large deep pot
1 medium pot
1 small pot
1 Otoshi But a (drop-lid - you can also use aluminum foil)
Ingredients:
1 large chicken thigh
250g (8.8oz.) Konnyaku
400g (0.9lb.) 1 bag of frozen Japanese vegetables (includes: taro potatoes, lotus roots, carrots, Shiitake mushrooms, green beans, bamboo shoots, burdock roots)
5 decoratively cut Shiitake mushrooms
1 Yurine (lily bulb)
5 decoratively cut carrots
A
* 3 tbsp. soy sauce
* 1 tbsp. Mirin (sweet Sake)
* 1 tbsp. Sake
* 1 tbsp. sugar
B
* 20ml 3 times concentrated Yamasa's Konbu Tsuyu
* 80ml water
C
* 30ml 3 times concentrated Yamasa's Konbu Tsuyu
* 120ml water
Directions:
1. Thinly slice or decoratively cut Konnyaku, and boil 2-3 minutes to remove bad smell.
2. Cut the chicken into bite-sized pieces, parboil to remove the fat, drain, and set aside.
3. Separate the frozen vegetables and keep frozen until just before you use them. NOTE: you don't need to use carrot and Shiitake mushrooms if you prepare decoratively cut ones.
4. In a large deep pot, put Konnyaku, chicken and Shiitake mushrooms. Add enough water to cover the ingredients, bring to a boil, then add A.
5. Cover with Otoshi-Buta (drop-lid - you can also use aluminum foil) and cook on low for 20 minutes.
6. Add lotus roots, bamboo shoots, burdock roots, and simmer uncovered for 15 minutes.
7. Wash Yurine and separate into pieces. In a small pot, bring water to a boil, cook the Yurine pieces for a minute, quickly rinse with cold water, then drain. Bring B to a boil, add the Yurine pieces, and cook for 3 minutes.
8. In a medium pot, bring C to a boil, add taro potatoes and cook for 5 minutes. Add decoratively cut carrots and cook for another 5 minutes. Add green beans and cook for 2 more minutes.
9. In the third tier of Jyubako (three-tiered bento boxes), nicely arrange 6, 7, and 8 (drain excess liquid).
Difficulty: medium
Time: 2 hours
Number of servings: 1 cake
Necessary Equipment:
13cm (5.1-inch) heart shaped cake pan
cookie cutters of your choice
Ingredients:
((Cookies))
50g (1.8oz.) butter (softened)
50g (1.8oz.) cake flour
50g (1.8oz.) bread flour
30g (1.0oz.) powder sugar
1 tbsp. milk
white chocolate pen
sprinkles of your choice (I used silver and pink silver)
((Cake))
1 egg
75g (2.6oz.) cake flour
50g (1.8oz.) butter (softened)
40g (1.4oz.) soft brown sugar
1/2 tsp. baking powder
1 banana
40g (1.4oz.) rum-soaked raisins
((Decoration))
120g (4.2oz.) white chocolate
meringue Santa Claus
Directions:
((Cookies))
1. Mix butter, milk, and powder sugar (powder sugar makes the cookie crisp) with spatula until creamy.
2. Sift in the cake flour and bread flour mixture (you can use all-purpose flour) little by little and mix well.
3. Roll out dough between two pieces of plastic wrap to 0.3 cm (0.1 inch) thick. Refrigerate the dough for at least 1 hour to chill.
4. Preheat the oven to 170C (338F). Remove the plastic wrap. Cut out cookies with cookie cutters of your choice. Place on a cookie sheet lined with parchment paper. Roll out scraps, and repeat.
5. Bake at 170C (338F) for 10-12 minutes. Cool the cookies (on the sheet or wire rack) and attach sprinkles (use tweezers to attach) with chocolate pen (Set the chocolate pen in a cup of hot water for a few minutes. Cut the tip of the chocolate pen and use).
((Cake))
1. Preheat the oven to 180C (350F). Mash the banana with fork.
2. Cream the butter in a large bowl with a wire whisk. Add sugar, beaten egg (little by little), and mix well.
3. With a spatula, mix banana. Sift in flour and baking powder a small amount at a time, and mix well. Then add rum-soaked raisins and mix well.
4. Butter the cake pan and pour the mixture in the pan.
5. Bake at 180C (350F) for 30-40 minutes, or until lightly browned. (Depending on the heat of the oven, cooking time may differ, so please watch out.)
6. Place the cake pan on the wire rack to cool.
((Decoration))
1. Remove the cake from the pan and turn upside-down on the wire rack.
2. Melt white chocolate over hot water. Pour over the cake and spread over the side or let it drizzle down the side.
3. Decorate the cake with cookies and meringue Santa Claus, or any sugar decoration of your choice ;)
I used to hate oyster when I was small but now I can eat it ;)
My darling and I love to eat it with tartar sauce, lemon, or tonkatsu sauce. Or, all together. hehe It is pretty delicious! Yummy :P
How about you?!
--------------------------------- Kaki Furai (Deep Fried Oyster) with Tartar Sauce
Difficulty: Easy
Time: 15min
Number of servings: 12 pieces
Ingredients:
12 oysters
salt and cracked black pepper
A
* flour
* beaten egg
* Panko (bread crumbs)
vegetable oil for frying
B
* 1/2 cup mayonnaise
* 20g (0.7oz.) minced onion
* 2 chopped dill pickles
* 1 chopped hard-boiled egg
* 1 tbsp. lemon juice
* a bit of chopped parsley
* salt and pepper
Bull-Dog Tonkatsu sauce if preferred
lemon wedge
shredded cabbage and tomatoes
Directions:
1. Shake and wash oysters in salted water. Put on a paper towel and remove excess water.
2. Sprinkle salt and papper over oysters. Lightly coat the oysters with flour. When the flour gets moist, coat the oysters again with flour. In this way the oysters won't absorb the frying oil and the batter stays on better, so you can make crispy fried oysters.
3. Dip in beaten egg and coat with Panko. Use one hand to dip in egg and the other hand to coat Panko to keep one of your hands dry.
4. Fry them in oil at 170C (340F) until cooked golden brown. (Turn the oysters over to cook evenly.) Remove the them from the oil and drain.
5. Mix B and make tartar sauce.
5. Serve on plate with shredded cabbage and some grape tomatoes. Dip into the tartar sauce and eat. Or eat with lemon juice or tonkatsu sauce. Or all of them! Anyway you like ;D
In the end of the video, I will show you how save my frying oil. I use an oil pot with a strainer. Usually i use the oil 2 to 3 times within a month. or, I change the oil when I think it smells bad and no longer clear.
The recipe is very easy! You just cut ingredients and cook in a rice cooker. It's my darling's favorite dish!!! You can use a can of tuna & any vegetables to make this dish ;)
Directions:
1. Wash rice and leave for about 30 minutes.
2. Soak dried Shiitake mushrooms in water until they become soft (or microwave at 500w for 2 minutes). Pour hot water over the Aburaage and wrap in paper towel to remove excess water. Cut carrot, Takenoko, and Aburaage into short and thin strips.
3. Place the rice in a pot, add water to the appropriate level indicated in the pot, then add Kombu Tsuyu, Sake, and tuna with oil, and mix well. Put Shiitake mushrooms, carrot strips, Takenoko strips, and Aburaage strips on top of the rice. Place the pot into the rice cooker. Cover and press the button to start.
4. When it's done, don't open and leave it for about 10 minutes to blend the flavor.
5. Toss the rice lightly using a rice paddle, then serve.
Currently 50 people photo reported me and said it was good. Please scroll down the page to view the photos. http://cookpad.com/recipe/302562
--------------------------------- Christmas Broccoli Tree
Difficulty: Very Easy
Time: 5min
Number of servings: 1 Christmas tree
Ingredients:
1 large broccoli crown
salt
Kewpie Mayonnaise
dressing of your choice
star-shaped processed cheese
Directions:
1. Lightly wash the broccoli crown and cut into bite-sized florets. Boil water in a large pot. Add a pinch of salt in the boiling water (salt removes oxalic acid - bitter taste, and makes the broccoli nice and green). Boil broccoli for about 3 minute. Drain and cool down until you can touch.
2. Pile up the broccoli florets on a plate and mold them with your hands to shape like a tree.
3. Decorate the tree with mayonnaise (like a garland) and place the star-shaped cheese (attach it with a toothpick) on top of the tree. Pour some dressing of your choice over the tree and eat ;D
Yukimi Daifuku is Mochi ice cream manufactured by LOTTE. It is a very popular ice cream product sold over 30 years since 1981. I'm sure you can find it at Japanese grocery stores overseas! I remember I saw it at Mitsuwa in NJ! You can make it from scratch at home. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iR0vqOnYoq8
Difficulty: very easy
Time: 3min
Number of servings: 9 pieces
Ingredients:
9 Mini Yukimi Daifuku
cocoa powder
Matcha green tea powder
goji berries (wolf berries)
Directions:
1. Thinly slice goji berries to look like Beni Shoga (red pickled ginger).
2. Using a tea strainer (or any fine mesh strainer), lightly sprinkle cocoa powder to look like Takoyaki sauce, and Matcha green tea powder to look like Aonori (green laver).
3. Top with sliced goji berries and eat with a pick!
「雪印 Cheese-1 GP チーワングランプリ レシピコンテスト」の受賞作品です。最終審査会ではフランス料理の鉄人でも有名な坂井宏行シェフに会いました♪
--------------------------------- Spinach Bacon Crispy Cheeze Gyoza with Balsamic Vinegar
Difficulty: Easy
Time: 20min
Number of servings: 24 dumplings
Ingredients:
200g (7oz.) spinach
100g (3.5oz.) bacon
150g (5.3oz.) onion
salt and cracked black pepper
24 gyoza wrappers
2 sliced cheese or 35g (1.3oz.) pizza cheese or any cheese that melts
180cc water
olive oil
balsamic vinegar
Directions:
1. Boil water in a large pot. Add a pinch of salt in the water (salt removes oxalic acid - bitter taste, and makes the spinach nice and green). Wash spinach and add in the boiling water from the stem side. Boil spinach for about one minute. Drain and soak the spinach in cold water (or use running water) to cool. Drain and squeeze the spinach to remove the excess water (use paper towel if you have).
2. Cut off the root ends of the spinach and cut into small pieces. Cut bacon into small strips. Roughly mince onion.
3. Heat the pan and saute the bacon until oil comes out. Add onion and saute until tender. Then add spinach and season with salt and cracked black pepper. Cool down until you can touch.
4. Place the gyoza wrapper in your palm and place a small spoonful of filling in the center. Put water along the edge of the wrapper by fingers, fold into semi circle, gather the front side of the wrapper and seal.
5. In a microwavable container, put water and cheese (cut into small pieces). Microwave for about 2 minutes until the cheese slightly melts.
6. Heat olive oil in a frying pan, place gyoza, cook on high heat until the bottoms become brown. Turn down the heat to medium, add melted cheese water (5.), cover and steam the gyoza on high heat until the water is gone and cooked.
7. Serve with balsamic vinegar.
It was awarded at Seafood Cooking Contest, and I met Yukio Hattori (who is a president of Hattori Nutrition College and best known as an expert commentator on the Japanese television show Iron Chef) - he was the chairman of the awards committee!!!
服部幸應先生が審査する「シーフード料理コンクール」の入賞作品です!
Sorry for the imperfect avocado…
--------------------------------- Christmas Sushi
Difficulty: Easy
Time: 20min
Number of servings: 4 Christmas trees
Ingredients:
300g (10.5oz.) cooked Japanese rice (short-grain rice)
2 tbsp Sushisu (seasoning for sushi rice)
100g (3.5oz.) chopped toro (tuna belly) *you can chop tuna using a sharp knife until almost paste-like
1 avocado
1 tsp. lemon juice
1/2 nori sheet
4 Shiso (perilla)
chopped green onion (or asatsuki)
ikura (salmon roe)
mayonnaise
4 star-shaped cheese *make with processed cheese
soy sauce
wasabi (Japanese Horseradish Paste) if desired
pickled Ginger if desired
Directions:
1. Place cooked Japanese rice in a bowl. Add Sushisu while the rice is hot and slice through rice using rice paddle to separate the grains.
2. Using a fork, mash the avocado. Add lemon juice (to prevent browning) and mash some more.
3. Make 4 round and flat rice balls with sushi rice.
4. Place chopped toro on top of the rice ball and make circular cone shape.
5. Spread avocado paste and cover the surface.
6. Wrap a strip of nori sheet at the base of the tree and decorate it with green onion, ikura, and mayonnaise. Place the tree on Shiso and place the star on top of the tree.
7. Serve with soy sauce, wasabi, and pickled ginger. Pour some soy sauce over the tree and eat ;D