An Osaka-native's Sauce Yakisoba (or Stir-fried Udon Noodles)
- 1 bag Chinese-style noodles or udon noodles (as thick and chewy as possible)
- 3 leaves Cabbage
- 1 to 2 handfuls Bean sprouts
- 1 Thinly sliced pork or beef
- 50 ml Dashi stock (about the concentration for miso soup)
- 40 to 60 ml Otafuku Okonomiyaki sauce orsauce
- 30 ml for udon noodles 20 ml for yakisoba ... this is enough for up to two portions of noodles Sake (always use real sake, not cooking sake)
- 1 Vegetable oil
- 1 Salt and pepper ... A
- 1 Tempura crumbs ... B
- 1 Bonito flakes ... B
- 1 Aonori ... B
- Cut the vegetables and meat into bite-sized pieces.
- *In this case, it's better to tear the cabbage by hand instead of cutting it into neat pieces.
- Prepare the dashi stock, it can be dash stock powder dissolved in hot water.
- *Speed is essential, so prepare the sauces now too.
- Take the noodles out of the refrigerator and place on a plate.
- Sprinkle sake over it and lightly cover with plastic wrap.
- *Microwave until the noodles are warm (it takes me about 1.5 minutes at 600 W).
- Many people warm the noodles in the bag, but a popular store told me it's better to prepare the noodles with the method in Step 3.
- This is essential!
- !
- Put vegetable oil in a frying pan, and heat over high.
- Put the meat in first and season with the A ingredients.
- When the meat is almost cooked through, add the vegetables.
- Season again with the A ingredients and stir-fry.
- Once the Step 5 vegetables have softened up, add the Step 3 noodles (do not add sake on the plate).
- Add the Step 2 dashi stock, and untangle the noodles while cooking over high heat.
- When the Step 6 noodles have untangled and about 90% of the dashi stock has evaporated, add the Step 2 sauce.
- Mix quickly and put on a serving plate.
- In Step 7, make sure you mix the sauce with the remaining dashi stock that hasn't been fully evaporated.
- This is important!
- !
- From Step 6 onwards, the process up until plating should take about 20 to 30 seconds.
- If you take your time here, the noodles will not only dry out, but start tasting like the instant kind.
- After serving onto a plate, top with the B ingredients and it's ready.
- Adding mayonnaise or chili pepper powder to taste is also yummy.
- Noodles that have dried out are never good.
- The sauce sticks well onto chewy noodles that have a slippery surface.
- This way, the noodles will taste exactly like what you'd get at a restaurant.
- I always use this type of sauce which is on the sweeter side.
- This company also makes "Yakisoba Sauce" but I like to use the "Okonomi" type.
- But, if you can't find it, try using the"Fake Otafuku type Okonomi Sauce".
- I tried various types of sauce for this recipe before posting it.
- The amount needed is the same at 40 to 60 ml.
- Always use thick noodles...
- Thin noodles will become soggy and mushy.
- To make the noodles as yummy as those cooked at restaurant griddles, make sure to keep the frying pan or electric griddle on high heat.
- The dashi stock added in Step 6 should evaporate if the heat is kept on high.
- This is an important point for keeping the noodles chewy.
noodles, cabbage, sprouts, pork, stock, otafuku, udon noodles, vegetable oil, salt
Taken from cookpad.com/us/recipes/170250-an-osaka-natives-sauce-yakisoba-or-stir-fried-udon-noodles (may not work)