Traditional Japanese Treats (that you can make abroad)
- 500 grams Red beans
- 400 grams Sugar
- 1/2 tsp Salt
- 6 pieces Sweet chestnuts in syrup
- 25 grams Mochiko
- 15 grams Sugar
- 50 grams Water
- 15 grams Walnuts
- 150 grams Plain white flour
- 3 Eggs
- 80 grams Sugar
- 2 pinch Salt
- 1 tbsp Honey
- 1 tbsp Mirin
- 80 ml Water
- 1 tsp Baking soda
- Wash the red beans with water and drain once with hot water.
- Boil until soft, then rinse off any scum with water.
- Drain the water, then add the sugar and simmer.
- Chop up the chestnuts and add to a small amount of the mixture from Step 1.
- Heat the walnuts in the microwave at 500 W for about 1:30.
- Chop.
- Mix together the gyuuhi (sweet rice cake) ingredients.
- Cook in the microwave at 1000 W for 1:30, then mix well.
- Add the walnuts and mix.
- Smooth the surface and let cool.
- Mix together the dorayaki batter (eggs, sugar, salt, honey, mirin, baking soda mixed with water, flour), let rest for 30 minutes, then cook.
- On a scale of 3-9, heat the frying pan between 3 and 5.
- Using a non-stick pan (no oil), fry the batter until holes start to break on the surface.
- Do a test run with the first.
- Here's a tip for flipping them over.
- Slip the dorayaki onto the spatula, lightly support it with chopsticks, and flip over.
- Wipe the pan down with a paper towel between each dorayaki.
- Cover the cooked dorayaki with a damp towel.
- Sandwich the anko and gyuhii in the dorayaki.
- .
sugar, salt, sweet chestnuts, sugar, water, walnuts, white flour, eggs, sugar, salt, honey, mirin, water, baking soda
Taken from cookpad.com/us/recipes/158472-traditional-japanese-treats-that-you-can-make-abroad (may not work)