Tag Archives: okonomiyaki

Osaka – Dining by Blowtorch

Takoyaki

How often do you cook with a blowtorch? Not canned heat (the fondue pot type), but an industrial grade blowtorch? We have now eaten our way across half of Japan, but tonight we witnessed a new style of Japanese cooking – flame thrower.

We left Nara around 11 AM, and arrived in Osaka in the early afternoon. I am behind in my accounts, but I must again take a side track and tell you about the food. Cassady has a good friend in Osaka, Besu, and we met her for dinner. She wanted us to go to a local takoyaki restaurant, the Pizza Ball House (Takonotetsu). The translation is loose. Trust me, there is no pizza in this cuisine other than melted cheese.

Okonomiyaki by blowtorch

Takoyaki is similar to okonomiyaki in that both consist of mixed vegetables fried in a milk-light batter. Okonomiyaki is a fritter or patty, while the takoyaki is a similar mix molded in a ping pong-sized ball. We cooked these dough balls at our table, carefully turning them in their cast iron mold with a stiletto-like pick. The end result is a crisp doughy outside protecting a moist, vegetable and/or meat laden interior. Scrumptious.

Takoyaki

The restaurant also served okonomiyaki, and I ordered the version with mountain vegetables. I absolutely love mountain vegetables. For those in the U.S. that have not had the pleasure, mountain vegetables consist of the fiddle leaves of ferns, mountain potatoes, wild mushrooms, and a variety of forest stems and leaves that defy description. Cassady and Besu finished off with a pizza okonomiyaki, which is the standard patty drowned in mayonnaise and cheese and then crisped by blowtorch.

Cassady and Besu

Of all of the Japanese cuisine that I have experienced, I like this style the best. Okonomiyaki, like soba and udon, is Japanese soul food. I am not a fan of Japanese curry (another soul food favorite), but otherwise I can’t think of a more satisfying way to spend a relaxing evening than with friends and family, a bottle of cold sake, and okonomiyaki.

Ted
23 Mar 2010

Hiroshima Okonomiyaki – Fried, Your Choice

Hiroshima Okonomiyaki Village

Okonomiyaki is among Japan’s gifts to the world (along with soba, udon, ocha, anime, and Godzilla). Translated the word means “fried, your choice.” In practice Okonomiyaki is a fritter-like concoction of whatever is at hand – seafood, vegetables, pork. Hiroshima is famous for its particular style of Okonomiyaki, and we spent an evening in the Okonomimura (Okonomiyaki village) delving into the intricacies of this local cuisine.

Hiroshima Oysters

First, though, let’s start with Hiroshima oysters. Over 30,000 tons of oysters are cultured each year in Hiroshima Bay. and the Japanese travel great distances to enjoy this particular bivalve. Although I eat no meat, I decided to taste the fried version as an appetizer. I grew up on the Texas Gulf Coast, and I have consumed more of these filter feeders than I, or my gut, cares to mention.
Hiroshima Fried Oysters

I must state unequivocally, though, that Hiroshima fried oysters are the best that I have tasted anywhere in this world. With a delicate, crispy crust, the encapsulated oysters retain both their moisture and their unique saline character. My suggestion (and hope) would be to attend the annual Hiroshima Oyster Festival in early March. The Japanese have been cultivating oysters here for over 450 years, and no one should miss this aspect of a Hiroshima visit.

Hiroshima Okonomiyaki

After the oysters we dove into our Okonomiyaki. Virginia and I ordered vegetarian (remember: fried, your choice). The Hiroshima Okonomiyaki differs in two ways. Noodles are incorporated into the fritter, and the concoction itself is covered with egg (like an omelet). Downstairs people were cooking their own on a griddle at their tables, as we have done before in Tokyo. Upstairs a cook prepared the cakes. I didn’t miss the thrill of cooking my own. Ours were divine.

Macha Latte

Among America’s gifts to the world is Starbucks. We have yet to visit a city in Japan without one. Cassady’s favorite drink is macha (green tea) latte. We capped off our dinner with a stop at Starbucks. Check out Cassady’s fingernail polish. Both Cassady and Virginia now have nails festooned with glitter and rhinestones. I am definitely the odd man (and only man) out among these fashionistas.

Ted

21 Mar 2010