Meaty Oden (Fish Cake Hotpot) Packed With Homemade Simmered Beef Tendon!
- 500 to 600 grams Beef tendon
- 1/2 Daikon radish
- 4 Eggs
- 1 Konnyaku
- 1 as much (to taste) Chikuwa and other oden ingredients
- 10 to 12 Bamboo skewers (for the been tendon...don't forget these)
- 1000 ml Water (or bonito dashi stock)
- 1 10cm long piece Kombu
- 80 ml Sake
- 80 ml Soy sauce
- 1 tbsp Sugar
- 1 1/2 tbsp Bonito dashi stock granules (if using water rather than dashi)
- 1/2 to 1 teaspoon Salt
- Slice the daikon into the thickness you like, and parboil it.
- Boil the konnyaku also.
- Hard boil the eggs and peel.
- Cut the beef tendon into bite sized pieces using a knife or kitchen shears.
- Using the shears is easier.
- Bring plenty of water to a boil in a frying pan, and throw in the beef tendon.
- Bring to a boil over high heat.
- A lot of scum will rise to the surface, but just ignore it and simmer over medium heat for 7 to 8 minutes.
- If the scum bothers you, remove it.
- Bring the frying pan over to the sink, throw out the hot liquid, pour some lukewarm water over the meat and drain.
- Don't burn yourself.
- When the water in the frying pan is lukewarm, wash the beef tendon by massaging it.
- Change the water twice, and keep washing the meat until the water runs clear.
- When it's washed, spread the meat out on paper towels and pat dry.
- The beef tendon becomes shiny and clean as shown in the photo.
- Skewer the beef tendon.
- And here you have meaty, hearty beef tendon pieces!
- I was able to make 10 beef tendon skewers.
- You can freeze them like this.
- If you prep a lot of beef tendon in one go it's very convenient.
- You can take the skewers out and use the meat in curry and so on.
- Put the water and seasoning ingredients (bonito dashi stock granules, or storebought oden soup base) in a pan, add the konbu seaweed and simmer to make the dashi or soup base.
- You can use the konbu seaweed in the oden (re-added later and simmered until tender).
- When the soup is boiling, add the beef tendon, and simmer over low heat for 1 hour.
- Don't let it boil too hard, or the dashi will become cloudy and not as tasty.
- Add the parboiled daikon radish, konnyaku, and eggs from step 1, and simmer for another hour or so.
- As you continue simmering, clear fat from the beef tendon will rise to the surface, so skim it off diligently.
- This makes the soup stock really delicious.
- After 2 hours of simmering, the beef tendon will become tender enough that a skewer goes through it easily.
- The soup stock will be deliciously flavored with the beef tendon too.
- I always let it rest overnight so that the daikon radish, eggs and meat become permeated with flavor.
- The next day the fat will have floated to the surface and hardened, so just scoop this out.
- Heat it up the next day, add more dashi stock and fish paste cakes (such as chikuwa and gobo-maki) of your choice, simmer some more and it's done!
- The meaty beef tendon and the daikon radish which have soaked up the beef soup overnight are just sublime!
- Mustard and yuzu pepper go well with this.
- It's still delicious if you don't rest it overnight, but in that case make sure to remove any fat from the surface in step 13.
- The soup will become clean and delicious.
- Gobo-maki (fish paste sticks with burdock root) and chikuwa fish sticks go very well in this oden.
- Mochi-kinchaku (mochi rice cake in a fried tofu bag) is delicious too, as it soaks up the beef soup.
- My favorite is chikuwa.
radish, eggs, much, skewers, water, sake, soy sauce, sugar, granules, salt
Taken from cookpad.com/us/recipes/154749-meaty-oden-fish-cake-hotpot-packed-with-homemade-simmered-beef-tendon (may not work)