Japanese braised Kakuni Aubergine

Japanse braised Kakuni aubergine is soft with a savory and spicy flavour. I had this dish in a Japanese restaurant which I cannot forget, and they call it ‘eggplant nanban’. But after searching online for the recipe I got many different results that didn’t match what I ate at the restaurant.

I got so confused with the Japanese sauce or type of cooking methods like nanban, agebitashi and kakuni. After some research on these different cooking styles, here a brief summary on what each means.

Nanban means deep-fried and common accompanied with tartare sauce. Ingredient is usually deep-fried chicken in batter. Agebitashi means deep-fry and soaked in sauce or broth. Kakuni means stewed cube. Ingredient is usually pork belly cut into large cubes.

After some home cooking attempts and the flavours I remembered (well… I went back to the restaurant a few times), the closest style is Kakuni pork belly but then with aubergine. You can eat it cold or warm as appetiser. If you serve the aubergine cold, the flavours are denser and superlicious. For example, you can eat it with rice or as topping in your soup noodles.

Cooking time: approx. 30-45min and serves 5-6 persons

Ingredients & Tools

  • 6x Chinese aubergine
  • 6x Tbsp cooking sake
  • 6x Tbsp mirin
  • 3x Tbsp grated ginger
  • 4.5 Tbsp soy sauce
  • 150cl water
  • Optional: 2-3x thin sliced medium-hot chili
  • Garnish: sesame seeds and/or thin sliced spring onion
  • Olive oil
  • Grater
  • Frying pan 24-28cm diameter, not too big because you want to braise the aubergine in the sauce
  • Cut baking paper to use it as lid on the pan
  • Small medium bowl
  • Big bowl

What to do?

  1. ————- Aubergine ————-
  2. Peel the skin in ‘zebra stripes’ down the aubergine.
  3. Cut aubergine into 2-3cm cubes
  4. Soak the cubes in big bowl for 5min in cold or hand warm water. This is to decrease the bitterness of the aubergine.
  5. ———– Kakuni Sauce ———–
  6. Mix in bowl: 6x Tbsp sake, 6x Tbsp mirin, 4.5 Tbsp soy sauce, 150cl water, 3x Tbsp grated ginger and optional 3x thin sliced chilli
  7. ——— Cooking Process ———
  8. Cut the baking paper round, 3-4cm bigger than the pan size and cut a small whole in the middle.
  9. Heat the pan with a splash of olive oil.
  10. Put the cubes in the pan on low/medium heat.
  11. Pan fry the cubes, turnaround and sprinkle extra olive oil if needed
  12. Once your aubergine gets a bit soft, pour the sauce in the pan.
  13. Let it braise for 20min on low heat and cover the pan with the baking paper lid
  14. Turnaround the cubes from time to time during the cooking process.
  15. When the cubes are soft, near to mushy, it’s time to serve.
  16. Garnish with some sesame seeds and/or with thin sliced spring onion.

I hope you like this homemade Kakuni style aubergine, itadakimasu 😊

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Japanese restaurant Yakitori la Kushi in Amsterdam

Do you like Japanese grilled skewers but also like to have the option in eating sushi or tempura? A new authentic Japanese restaurant bar is finally open in Amsterdam Rivierenbuurt, Yakitori la Kushi. I was so much looking forward to this new Japanese grill bar. The opening got a bit delayed by covid19 and some construction work but its now open for delightful dinners 😃

You can enjoy traditional Japanese dishes and some are with a modern twist. The menu offers a variety of appetizers, sushi, sashimi, tempura, rice bowls and ofcourse Yakitori. All look superlicious! You can take a seat at the bar counter like how it goes in Japan or dine at a table. 

What is Yakitori? Yakitori means grilled chicken skewer, it can be served with various part of a chicken e.g. wings, stomach, heart or skin and the grilling is finished with a little bit of salt seasoning or yakitori sauce (glazed savory sweet sauce). When there are other grilled ingredients, you can also call it Kushiyaki as this term covers all kind of meat or vegetable skewers and not explicitly chicken. 

Grilled skewers are a classic food served at izakaya in Japan and is a serious business. It’s about having dinner in a Japanese-tapas style pub where beer, sake, tasty bites and jolly chatters take part. The quality, the meat texture and the grilling skills are important factors in bringing the right atmosphere & flavours. Just yummie!

I started my evening with a smooth dry sake drink, a junmai ginjo from Kyoto and I loved it! I didn’t take a starter, I wanted it but I was so much graving for nigiri sushi. My sushi was fresh made with gloves on ☺️, this already gave me a positive hygienic feeling. It tasted very good, especially the unagi was in balance of sweetness and had the right texture. Personally, I’m not a unagi fan and I wanted to eat more.  I continued with a shrimp tempura roll. The tempura shrimp was fresh fried and crunchy, and not greasy at all, so thumbs 👍🏼. Although, it could have a bit more kewpie mayonnaise and extra lettuce for a divine balance between fried food and a fresh taste. After the sushi and roll, I felt quite pleased in my tummy but being in a Yakitory bar I must try the skewers before leaving. So I ordered a tsukune (chicken ball) and hatsu (chicken heart), one of my favourites. The heart tasted fine, I was missing a bit of smoked flavour and the tsukune meat texture was a bit dry and pricy for a small thin ball. To my personal taste in terms of Yakitori, I prefer my regular favourite Yakitori bar but nevertheless, I had a superlicious dinner + good sake = which made my evening superb! Definitely highly recommended. 

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Happy Temari Sushi

My weekly dinner with my partner + friends continues in this covid period. We were doubting between cooking a Serbian dish or having sushi 🍣 and decided for the latter. 

This time, curiosity brought us in trying out a new popular place in Amsterdam where they normally don’t offer take away service because it affects the food quality e.g. temperature and freshness. Taking this opportunity and the limited boxes they sell per day, I ordered the sushi boxes a few days in advance. 

Opening the box, the presentation looks so cute! They made Temari Sushi and each sushi was placed in a wooden paper boat. Temari sushi has a different shape then nigiri sushi. It has a ball shape and normally goes with a variety of colorful toppings, and are often served for happy celebration occasions.

Happy, it definitely is😊. If you like to have a happy dinner feeling as well, you can order this sushi box at Ken Sushi.

Itadakimasu! 

Temari Sushi
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Social Distance Picnic

My weekly virtual dinner with my partner + friends continues in this bizarre pandemic period. We had a social distance picnic on a beautiful sunny Saturday evening along the canals of Amsterdam. It was a fabulous and inspiring dinner!

Finally, having some good Japanese Izakaya food, champagne, wine and ofcourse being with great company 🥂🌻✌🏼

Do you also crave for good BBQ meat in Japanese style?

Take away is now possible from one of my favourite restaurants in Amsterdam at Hakata Senpachi.

Itadakimasu!

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