Sunday 6 February 2011

Day 30 - Japanese Kitchen

Today I made my first recipe from my new cook book acquisition. It is called Everyday Harumi by Harumi Karihara and features simple Japanese recipes. I'd heard great things about the author and seen her in action on 'Your Japanese Kitchen' shown on the NHK World TV channel. Harumi has often been called the Delia Smith or Martha Stewart of Japan and is well known for her satisfying home cooking. I couldn't wait to get started.

I had almost all the ingredients I needed and I just had get the raw chicken and prawns and then visit the Japan Centre to pick up the potato starch, mushrooms and all important dashi stock. I decided to go easy on myself first time out and made a pretty simple sauce which is suitable to serve as a donburi. The recipe was a Prawn and Chicken Ankake Donburi. Ankake is a typical Japanese sauce and can be served with a variety of different ingredients.  It forms the backbone of many Japanese housewives' recipes.

Just to make clear, this is not my recipe but is taken from Everyday Harumi by Harumi Karihara and is partly paraphrased for speed. It made enough for 2 servings:

  • 125g boneless chicken thighs, cut into 2cm pieces
  • 50g raw prawns, deveined
  • sake - to marinade
  • salt and pepper
  • 50g shiitake mushrooms, cleaned and thinly sliced on the diagonal
  • 60g onion, cut into wedges and then halved again
  • 100g pak choi, leaves and stem separated and both cut into 5cm-long pieces
  • 25ml soy sauce
  • 1/2 tbsp sake
  • 1/2 tbsp mirin
  • 1/2 tbsp caster sugar
  • 1/4 tsp salt
  • 200ml dashi stock (I used instant powder as I wasn't able to buy bonito flakes to make my own)
  • 1/2 tbsp oil for frying
  • the stem of a green leek (I sliced up the leek into long thick strips)
  • 20g fresh ginger, peeled and halved
  • 2 garlic cloves, slightly crushed
  • 1 tbsp potato starch mixed with 1tbsp cold water
  • rice to serve
  1. In separate bowls, season the chicken and prawns with a little sake, salt and pepper.
  2. Prepare all the vegetables as above and set aside.
  3. Add the soy sauce, sake, mirin, sugar and salt to the dashi stock, mix thoroughly and set aside.
  4. Heat the oil in a frying pan. When hot add the leek, ginger, and garlic, in that order, and cook until you can smell their aroma. Then add the chicken and prawns, followed by the mushroom, onion and pak choi.
  5. Add the dashi mixture. When it comes to the boil, stir in the potato starch mix to thicken the sauce.
  6. Discard the ginger, leek and garlic before serving (actually I left the leek in because I like it!)
  7. Serve the anakake on hot steamed rice.
The meal tasted as I expected because it was very warm and comforting.  It was the first time I cooked with potato starch and I find it a good alternative to cornflour as it is a much stronger thickening agent. I think that in future I might cook off the chicken a little more before adding in the stock and then add the prawns because it took a little longer to cook through then I think the recipe considers above. Although, perhaps I cut the chicken a little too big, who knows. One final thing to note is about the dashi stock. I chose instant stock as I couldn't find the raw ingredients to make my own. Obviously it is a fish stock and tasted as such.  Its always hard to make instant stock quite right when all the ingredients are in Japanese but I worked it out using the ever helpful Internet. 

Anyway, Gerry loved it and said it reminded her of her's mum's cooking, who is Filipino and makes delicious concoctions of this ilk. High praise indeed. Anyway, it's a good one to have in my cooking repertoire as it didn't take long to make and I can imagine would cheer up a particularly grey day!

Chicken and Prawn Ankake Donburi


1 comment:

  1. I just bought this cookook and tried my first recipe too! I went for udon noodles with minced meat miso sauce (p.112). I could only get instant dashi too, I shopped at Arigato on Brewer St rather than The Japan Centre. Your version of Harumi's donburi looks delicious, I think I might give that a try next. Her recipes are really simple and easy to follow.

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