Okonomiyaki from food52.com

Sauce
1/2 cup mayonnaise
tablespoons soy sauce
teaspoons sriracha, more or less to taste
Pancakes
large eggs
teaspoon soy sauce
teaspoon sesame oil

  • teaspoon sea salt
  • 1/3 cup all-purpose flour
  • cups cabbage, shredded with a mandoline or finely chopped
  • bunch scallions, trimmed and chopped
  • 3/4 cup (roughly) baby or chopped shrimp
  • Canola oil for frying
  • 1-2 tablespoons toasted sesame seeds
  • Bonito flakes (optional)
  1. Whisk the first set of ingredients together and voila, your sauce. Set aside while you make the pancakes.
  2. In a large mixing bowl, whisk eggs with the soy sauce, sesame oil, and salt. Gradually add the flour until incorporated. Fold in cabbage, scallions, and shrimp.
  3. Warm a couple glugs of canola oil in a skillet over medium-high heat until glistening. Ladle the batter into the skillet as you would for regular old pancakes. I usually make them about the size of saucer. Cook on each side for about 3 minutes or until golden brown. Keep pancakes covered in a warm oven as you make the rest. Scatter sesame seeds and/or bonito flakes on top of pancakes and serve with dipping sauce and a cold pilsner.

DASHI (JAPANESE SEA STOCK)

  • download6 cups cold water
  • 1 oz (30 grams) kombu (dried kelp), about 20 square inches
  • 2 (5-gram) packages katsuo bushi (dried bonito flakes), about 1 cup

Bring cold water and kombu just to a boil in a large saucepan over high heat. Remove from heat and remove kombu (saving it for pickled Napa cabbage ). Sprinkle katsuo bushi over liquid; let stand 3 minutes and, if necessary, stir to make katsuo bushi sink. Pour through a cheesecloth-lined sieve or a coffee filter into a bowl. Reserve katsuo bushi for rice with soy-glazed bonito flakes and sesame seeds .

cooks’ notes:• If making stock for miso soup it is not necessary to save the kombu or katsuo bushi. • Stock keeps 4 days. Cool, uncovered, before chilling, covered.

okonomiyaki from food52.com

 

  • Food52
    Sauce
    1/2 cup mayonnaise
    2 tablespoons soy sauce
    2 teaspoons sriracha, more or less to taste
    Pancakes
    5 large eggs
    1 teaspoon soy sauce
    1 teaspoon sesame oil
    1 teaspoon sea salt
    1/3 cup AP flour
    2 cups cabbage, shredded with a mandoline or finely chopped
    1 bunch scallions, trimmed and chopped
    3/4 cups (roughly) baby or chopped shrimp
    canola oil for frying
    1-2 tablespoon toasted sesame seed
    bonito flakes (optional)
  • Whisk the first set of ingredients together and voila, your sauce. Set aside while you make the pancakes.
  • In a large mixing bowl, whisk eggs with the soy sauce, sesame oil, and salt. Gradually add the flour until incorporated. Fold in cabbage, scallions, and shrimp.
  • Warm a couple glugs of canola oil in a skillet over medium-high heat until glistening. Ladle the batter into the skillet as you would for regular old pancakes. I usually make them about the size of saucer. Cook on each side for about 3 minutes or until golden brown. Keep pancakes covered in a warm oven as you make the rest. Scatter sesame seeds and/or bonito flakes on top of pancakes and serve with dipping sauce and a cold pilsner.  Makes roughly a dozen pancakes depending on their size

okonomiyaki — splendid table

okonomiyaki_bdu
The large cabbage pancakes known as okonomiyaki are often referred to as “Japanese pizza.” As the name — literally “as you like it, grilled” — implies, they are versatile. You can embellish the batter with whatever you want, such as seafood, sausage, chicken or other vegetables. Okonomiyaki can be eaten at any time of day; make them with bacon and top them with fried eggs for breakfast.
Usually drizzled on top of okonomiyaki are okonomi sauce or tonkatsu sauce (think Worcestershire sauce, soy sauce and ketchup mixed together) and Kewpie brand mayonnaise, which is slightly sweet because it’s made with seasoned rice vinegar. (Think Miracle Whip.) Feel free to be creative with the sauces. An optional recipe for wasabi mayonnaise, great on seafood dishes, is included; see Notes. Using squeeze bottles will allow you to make cross-hatch patterns with those garnishes.
Other okonomiyaki garnishes include chopped scallions, bonito flakes (for seafood dishes) and aonori (seaweed flakes, used as you would chopped parsley). Nori fumi furikake, a blend of sesame seeds, seaweed, sugar and salt used for flavoring sushi rice, also makes a delicious garnish. See the variations below.
Crunchy bits of tempura batter (tenkasu) are added to the cabbage batter for texture. You can buy them in packets at a Japanese market (they resemble Rice Krispies), but making your own yields a better result, even though it means extra work and mess.
Using white cabbage coleslaw mix, even one mixed with carrots and red cabbage, is a huge time saver.
Instant dashi may be substituted for the dashi broth in this recipe. Follow the directions on the packets if using them, or dissolve instant dashi, such as Hondashi brand, in boiling water at a ratio of 1 teaspoon of granules per cup of water.
All of the aforementioned ingredients, sometimes including okonomiyaki kits, are available at Hana Japanese Market in the District and at Super H Mart and H Mart stores in Virginia and Maryland.
 
Make Ahead: The batter can be made and refrigerated a day in advance. It’s best to assemble the cabbage mixture and the pancakes just before serving. The optional wasabi mayonnaise needs to be refrigerated for at least 4 hours before serving.
Ingredients
  • 1 cup plus 2 tablepoons flour
  • 1/2 teaspoon kosher salt, plus more as needed
  • 1 cup homemade or store-bought vegetarian dashi
  • 1 large egg, beaten
  • 24 ounces (8 cups) shredded cabbage or coleslaw mix
  • 2 cups tempura bits
  • 2 cups chopped scallions, white and light-green parts, plus more for garnish
  • 4 teaspoons canola oil
  • 8 tablespoons okonomi sauce or tonkatsu sauce, for garnish (see headnote)
  • 8 teaspoons wasabi mayonnaise, Kewpie brand mayonnaise or Kewpie-style mayonnaise, for garnish (see Notes)
  • Aonori (seaweed flakes) or nori fumi furikake (rice seasoning blend), for garnish (see headnote)
Directions
Whisk together the flour and 1/2 teaspoon of salt in a medium bowl. Whisk in the dashi and egg until the batter is combined, but do not overmix. Small lumps should remain. The total yield is about 1 1/2 cups.
For each pancake, mix together 2 cups of cabbage, 1/2 cup tempura bits, 1/2 cup of the scallions and one-fourth of the batter in a separate bowl until well combined.
Heat a teaspoon of the oil in a 12-inch nonstick skillet over medium-high heat until the oil shimmers. Pile in the pancake mixture and use the side of a spatula to tap it into a 10-inch round about 1/2-inch thick. Let the pancake cook for about 3 minutes, or until the batter is set and the bottom is nicely browned.
Use two spatulas to carefully turn over the pancake, keeping it in one piece. Cook for about 3 minutes, until it is cooked through. Transfer to a plate; drizzle with okonomi or tonkatsu sauce; wasabi mayonnaise, Kewpie mayonnaise or Kewpie-style mayonnaise; and aonori or nori fumi furikake.
Repeat the process with the remaining oil and pancake mixture to form and cook 3 other pancakes, garnishing as each one is done.  Serve right away.
Variations
To make one seafood okonomiyaki, add to 1 serving of the pancake-cabbage mixture: 3 ounces of shrimp or sea scallops, cut into 1/2-inch pieces, and 2 teaspoons chopped pickled ginger. Cook as directed above. Serve hot, topped with 2 teaspoons okonomi sauce, 2 teaspoons of Kewpie mayonnaise and bonito flakes (to taste).
To make one smoked salmon okonomiyaki pancake, cook the pancake as directed above, covering the finished pancake with 3 ounces of sliced smoked salmon then topping it with 2 teaspoons of wasabi mayonnaise, 2 tablespoons of slivered red onion, 1 tablespoon of peeled, seeded cucumber cut into 1/4-inch cubes and aonori or nori fumi furikake (to taste).
To make one margherita okonomiyaki pancake, preheat the broiler. Thinly slice 3 basil leaves and add to the pancake-cabbage mixture. Cook as directed above, making sure to use an ovenproof skillet. Top with 3 ounces of sliced fresh mozzarella, then broil for 1 minute to melt the cheese. Transfer the pancake to a plate. Serve hot, garnished with 1 teaspoon’s worth of tomato paste from a tube, squeezed in a few squiggles, and 3 additional basil leaves, thinly sliced.
To make one egg-and-baconomiyaki, fry two eggs (sunny-side up or over-easy or poached) in a small nonstick skillet; keep warm. Pile the pancake-cabbage mixture into a 10-inch round in separate 12-inch skillet as directed above. Lay 2 strips of bacon on top, using them to cover as much of the surface as possible. Once the bottom is nicely browned, flip the pancake over. Cook for 3 to 4 minutes, until the bacon is nicely browned. Serve hot, topped with the fried eggs, nori fumi furikake and chopped scallions.
Notes: To make wasabi mayonnaise, whisk together 1/2 cup mayonnaise and 1 tablespoon of wasabi powder in a medium bowl. Cover and refrigerate for at least 4 hours and up to 3 days.
To make Kewpie-style mayonnaise, whisk together 1/2 cup of mayonnaise and 1 tablespoon of seasoned rice vinegar. Cover and refrigerate for up to 3 days.