Light and Chewy Hanpen Fritters
- 1 Hanpen
- 1 can Canned tuna
- 4 to 5 Green shiso leaves
- 1 small packet Bonito flakes
- 2 tbsp Shiratamako
- 2 tbsp Water
- 1/2 tbsp Mayonnaise
- 1 Sesame oil
- Wash the shiso leaves quickly, pat dry and shred.
- Drain the canned tuna very well Don't throw out the liquid from the can, since it will be used later.
- Julienne the hanpen finely, and grind to a paste in a mortar.
- Gradually addd 1 tablespoon of the tuna oil to form a smooth paste.
- A food processor makes this step much easier.
- Dissolve the shiratama flour in water or use the tuna can liquid if you still have some.
- Add the mixture from step 3 to the ground-up hanpen from step 2, then add mayonnaise.
- When it's smooth, add tuna shiso leaves bonito flakes in that order.
- The fritter mixture is done.
- Make the fritters: Heat a little sesame oil in a pan.
- Form the mixture into small oval shaped patties (like mini-burgers) and pan-fry both sides until golden brown.
- Arrange on a plate and serve.
- Eat with any sauce of your choice, such as soy sauce, ponzu sauce and so on.
- To make deep fried balls: Form bite-sized balls with the mixture, deep fry and then coat with ankake sticky sauce.
- To make the sauce: for every 1 cup (200 ml) of dashi stock, use 1 tablespoon each of sake, soy sauce and mirin + a little grated ginger juice, and thicken with a little katakuriko dissolved in water to taste.
- A small variation: Add corn kernels to the mixture.
- This is sweet and delicious.
- Add corn kernels at step 4.
- You can then pan fry or deep fry the mixture.
- Adding sesame seeds is delicious too.
- Variation 2: Use mayonnaise instead of miso, add 1 tablespoon of sakura shrimp (tiny dried shrimp) and deep fry.
- The mixture is very loose and hard to handle, but that makes them more light and chewy.
- These have a stronger flavor, so you can eat then without any sauce.
- I used rather small and tender sakura shrimp for the variation in step 10.
- Extra: This is the hanpen (left) and canned tuna (right) I used.
- I used a non-oil canned tuna, but you could use another type if you like.
- Added note: I used this reduced calorie mayonnaise.
- If you use tuna canned in oil rather than water, and full fat mayonnaise instead of reduced fat, the mixture may be hard to handle because of the added fat.
- (See Hints)
hanpen, tuna, flakes, shiratamako, water, mayonnaise, sesame oil
Taken from cookpad.com/us/recipes/168000-light-and-chewy-hanpen-fritters (may not work)