A few nights ago, I was making 肉じゃが (nikujaga). Somewhere along the way I noticed that the flavor and texture at that very stage was similar to a dish called 牛丼 (gyudon). I've had it several times while traveling with my father in Asia. There is a Japanese fast food chain call Yoshinoya that specializes in it. It has several branches outside of its home country, including Taiwan, Hong Kong, and southern California where I spent some time.
So, tonight, I decided to recreate this dish from memory by altering the 肉じゃが recipe. It may not be authentic, but hey! no complaints from my taste bud.
The main players (minus cooking oil - 'cause I forgot) |
- 2 TBSP Cooking Oil
- 2 Cups Dashi
- 2 TBSP Soy Sauce
- 2 TBSP Mirin
- 1 TBSP Sake
- 1/2 TBSP Sugar
- 1 large White Onion
- 1 LBS Thinly Sliced Beef (marbling = yummy flavor)
Slice them, not dice them |
Step 1.5: Break up the onion layers
"Ogres have layers. Onions have layers. You get it? We both have layers." - Shrek |
Stir it around so the oil coats the onion. |
Quickly... I said "QUICKLY"! |
Reminds me of goldfish food... memo to shelf: don't put instant bottle it next to Fubuki's food and check label before using... |
Is the onion softer and slightly translucent? Yes. Is the beef cooked? Yes. Good, move on. |
Step 5.2: In goes the Sake
Step 5.3: In goes the Mirin
Step 5.5: In goes the Soy Sauce
No better shot, sorry. Camera battery was out of juice when I started, I was happy it made it this far. |
Intermediate Step B: Grate some ginger
I hope that fresh ginger is suppose to have that slight blue tint and that it's not mold 'cause it's going in! |
Step 7: Bust out the rice, weigh it down with the beefy goodness
Step 8: Take a moment... plate up... let the eyes feast... and Enjoy!
Fresh green grapes to cleanse the pallet. |
Okay, some additional comments and notes:
- Really doesn't matter what order you add all the little step 5s in, just get it in.
- This dish is on the "heavier" side, especially if you use a fattier meat. My thought: maybe that's why it's often times served with 紅生姜 (beni shoga), the shockingly pink pickled ginger.
- Since I don't have any 紅生姜 on hand (not that I like them), freshly grated ginger to the rescue! It was a wasabi inspiration moment.
- Don't be shocked if you see someone crack a fresh egg over their bowl of 牛丼, mix it up, then slurp up their meal. My thought: guess it's like a version of 卵かけご飯 (tamago kake gohan), personally that gooey-rawness creeps me out. But hey, 十人十色 (junintoiro).
- I don't like freshly grated ginger either, it was just for the photo. It didn't go to waste though. It's currently in a bag with other ingredients marinating the chicken, waiting to be turn into 鶏の唐揚げ (tori no karaage).
Tappy
P.S. Whops, re-shoot. Forgot the beverage!
Had to re-bowl. Started chowing down before I realized I'd forgotten about the drink. HA! |
Yummy! Looks really good. Sure pays to know your meat deli guy.
ReplyDeleteThe meat department at Albertsons on Apple in Parkcenter (shameless plug) is really the best out there. They're always so knowledgeable and willing to prep the meat in the style I need it.
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