Love Japan Recipes from our Japanese American kitchen

Sawako Okochi, 1976-

Book - 2023

"Discover comforting homestyle Japanese American cuisine with 100 unique, simple, and tasty recipes from the owners of the innovative Brooklyn restaurant Shalom Japan"--

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Subjects
Genres
Cookbooks
Published
California : Ten Speed Press [2023]
Language
English
Main Author
Sawako Okochi, 1976- (author)
Other Authors
Aaron Israel, 1982- (author), Yuki Sugiura (photographer)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
261 pages : color illustrations ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes index.
ISBN
9781984860521
  • Gohan Desuyo! (Time to Eat!)
  • From Hiroshima to Texas to New York
  • Homemade Sushi on Long Island
  • Contributor's Note
  • Pantry and Kitchen Staples
  • Japanese Produce
  • Equipment
  • Basics
  • Dashi
  • Okonomi Sauce
  • Japanese Barbecue Sauce
  • Chile Mayo
  • Sweet Kombu and Kombu
  • "Awesome Sauce"
  • Ponzu
  • Shiso Pesto
  • Furikake
  • Umami Rice Seasoning
  • Breakfast
  • Miso Soup
  • Tamagoyaki
  • Dashi Rolled Omelet
  • Smashed Cucumber and Wakame Salad
  • Kinpira
  • Braised Burdock Root and Carrots
  • Hijiki-Ni
  • Braised Hijiki Seaweed
  • Spinach Ohitashi
  • Spinach with Soy Sauce and Bonivo Flakes
  • Gomaae Broccoli
  • Broccoli with Sesame Sauce
  • Shiozake
  • Broiled Salted Salmon
  • Natto with Avocado
  • Vegetables
  • Tofu Caesar Dip
  • Kale Salad with Carrot-Ginger Dressing
  • Tomato and Tofu Salad with Umeboshi
  • Blistered Shishiro Peppers with Shiso-Lime Salt
  • Japanese Street Corn
  • Smashed Satoimo
  • Simmered Japanese Eggplant with Atsuage Tofu
  • Roasted Cauliflower with Miso and Panko Butter
  • Roasted Satsumairno with Shio Koji Buctei
  • Kabocha Squash with Meat Sauce
  • Pancakes and Friends
  • Hiroshima-Style Okonomiyaki with Ram en Noodles
  • Nagaimo-Ika Yaki
  • Japanese Mountain Yam and Squid Pancake
  • Ham and Cheese-Stuffed
  • Aburaage
  • Harumaki
  • Sawa's Mama's Spring Rolls
  • Japanese Garden Pizza
  • Sandos
  • Shokupan
  • Japanese Milk Bread
  • Rakkenji Starter
  • Rakkenji Shokupan
  • Rakkenji-Starter Milk Bread
  • Veggie Deluxe Sando with Shiso Pesto
  • Tamago Sando
  • Egg Salad Sandwich
  • BTS
  • Bacon, Tomato, and Shiso
  • Chicken Katsu Sando
  • Fried Chicken Cutlet Sandwich
  • Hambagu Melt
  • Noodles
  • Sutamina Udon
  • Udon in Hot Broth with Beef, Egg, and Vegetables
  • Chilled Udon with Tsuyu
  • Faux Pho
  • Spaghetti Napolitan
  • Ketchup Pasta with Bacon and Onions
  • Mentaiko Seafood Spaghetti
  • Cold Sesame Mazemen
  • Home-Style Matzoh Ball Ramen
  • Yakisoba
  • Stir-Fried Ramen Noodles
  • New Year's Eve Soba with Kakiage Tempura
  • Hotpot and Tabletop Cooking
  • How to Hotpot
  • Sample Hotpots
  • Rib Eye Sukiyaki
  • Oden
  • Yakiniku
  • Japanese Barbecue
  • Fish
  • Bonito-Cured Lox
  • Lox Bowl
  • Temaki Zushi
  • Hand Roll Sushi
  • Broiled Mackerel with Grated
  • Daikon and Ponzu
  • Braised Black Sea Bass with Ginger and Scallions
  • Flounder in a Pouch with Mushrooms and Koji Butter Sauce
  • Nanban-zuke
  • Japanese Escabeche
  • Tuna Tataki with Sesame Sauce
  • Poultry and Meat
  • Tsukune
  • Chicken Meatballs
  • Karaage
  • Japanese Fried Chicken
  • Miso-Honey Broiled Chicken
  • Oyakodon
  • Chicken and Egg over Rice
  • Tonkatsu
  • Fried Pork Cutlet
  • Tonjiru
  • Hearty Pork and Miso Soup
  • Pork Chops with Teriyaki-Bacon Jam
  • Hambagu
  • Rolled Cabbage in Dashi
  • Nikujaga
  • Beef and Potato Stew
  • Japanese Curry
  • Rakkyo Pickles
  • Rice
  • Japanese White Rice
  • Gohan
  • Sumeshi
  • Sushi Rice
  • Onigiri
  • Omurice
  • Omelet Rice
  • Mame Gohan
  • Green Pea Rice
  • Mushroom Rice
  • Hijiki and Carrot Rice
  • Salmon and Ikura Rice
  • Tori Gobo Gohan
  • Chicken and Burdock Rice
  • Dessert
  • Slice-and-Bake Matcha Cookies
  • Chocolate-Banana
  • Milk Bread Pudding Strawberry Shortcake
  • Fuji Apple Upside-Down Cake
  • Matcha Parfait
  • Satsumaimo Cheesecake
  • Sources
  • Acknowledgments
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

Sawako Okochi and Aaron Israel, restaurateurs behind Brooklyn's Shalom Japan, are bound to change perceptions about home-cooked Japanese food as they weave stories around 80-plus recipes, with help from coauthor Gabriella Gershenson. In addition to the introductory blurbs for each dish and the authors' recommended (and extensive) precooking setup--pantry staples, produce, equipment--are many lessons: the three different types of tofu; cherry tree traditions and worship; sushi selection tips; the art of rice. Then, let the good foodstuffs roll: bonito-cured lox, flounder in a pouch, chicken meatballs, Japanese rolled cabbage, tofu Caesar, fuji apple upside-down cake. Riffs on American and Jewish favorites abound, like homestyle matzo ball ramen or the hambagu melt, which substitutes meatloaf for the traditional burger. Israel himself was once "skeptical" about ketchup pasta with bacon and onions, but it's sure to dazzle taste buds. Occasionally lengthy instructions cover critical how-tos, and step-by-step photographs accompany a few of the dishes. It's gohan desuyo (time to eat)!

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Library Journal Review

Okochi and Israel are chefs and the husband-and-wife owners of Brooklyn restaurant Shalom Japan, which emphasizes their Japanese and Jewish cultures. Their first cookbook (with James Beard-nominated food writer Gabriella Gershenson) doesn't concentrate on restaurant fare but rather on the food they enjoy in their home. These are recipes that demonstrate that Japanese cooking need not be intimidating; they are selected for their convenience and simplicity. Categories include sauces, breakfast, vegetables, pancakes and pizzas, sandos (sandwiches), noodles, meats, fish, rice, and desserts. Ingredients are typically staples that could be found in most U.S. grocery stores; some are available mostly from Asian markets such as bonito flakes, kewpie mayonnaise, konnyaku (a distant cousin to taro root), and various types of noodles and rice. A chapter on tabletop cooking illustrates a common Japanese practice where family and friends get together and sit around a grill or an earthenware pot, each person taking turns to grill their own food. VERDICT A beautifully designed book with fantastic photographs and a mouth-watering array of recipes that serve as a great introduction to Japanese cooking.--Phillip Oliver

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Gohan Desuyo! (Time to Eat!) At its core, this cookbook is a love story about how two chefs from different worlds fell for each other, and for each other's cuisines. We met in 2011 in New York City on a setup at a Chinese restaurant, which was soon followed by a procession of late-night dinners out, leisurely home-cooked breakfasts, and rooftop beers during the odd hours that chefs keep. Eventually we fell in love, moved in together, and decided to go all in and open our own restaurant, Shalom Japan, in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. It's a quirky, improbable project, a Japanese-Jewish restaurant that melds the foods of our roots, which for one of us is in Hiroshima, Japan, and for the other in a Jewish American household on Long Island. To some, the concept may seem like a novelty, but for us, it's a reflection of the life we built together, one in which matzoh ball ramen and lox rice bowls are as commonplace as spaghetti and meatballs are in other families. As important as the restaurant is to our lives and livelihood, this book isn't about that. It's about the food that we cook and eat in our Japanese American kitchen. When we started to build our life together, it became clear how much we were influenced by Sawa's mother's home cooking, which is as flavorful as it is nutritious, heavy on vegetables and fermented foods, with lots and lots of variety. (She'd always tell Sawa to eat thirty ingredients a day so she could get nutrition from varied sources.) We wanted to provide the same nourishment for our family, and to yours. Whether or not you have a Japanese parent (or in-law), we still want you to be able to experience the unique pleasure of digging into a heaping platter of golden karaage (fried chicken) or crispy, juicy harumaki (Japanese spring rolls). Love Japan is our way of sharing these meals that we cherish the most with you. Our life together hasn't been a straight path. Balancing restaurant life and family life hasn't been easy. Along the way, we've faced enough challenges to fill a whole other book, and, like everyone else, endured a pandemic. There have also been bright spots, like the birth of our two beautiful children. But through it all, sitting down together at the table has kept us grounded. There's no better day off for us than one spent hanging out at home as a family and cooking together, like we did when we first met. It's different now, with the kids and more responsibilities, but the pleasure and joy of feeding each other still remain. When we start the day, there's usually toasted Rakkenji shokupan (naturally fermented milk bread) on the table. Our Sunday brunch is a Japanese breakfast, with miso soup and rice, delicate tamagoyaki (dashi rolled omelet) and a host of vegetable dishes, such as gomaae broccoli (broccoli with sesame sauce) and spinach ohitashi (spinach with soy sauce and bonito flakes). Lunch might involve onigiri (rice balls) and Japanese sandos (sandwiches), both perfect for eating on the go. Dinner may take the form of a simple noodle dish like yakisoba, roasted kabocha squash smothered in mirinsweetened ground pork, or a hotpot feast, a relaxed, interactive way to cook at the table. It's not all strictly Japanese. There are pizza nights and pho and lots and lots of pasta. The next day, we usually repurpose the leftovers into bento boxes for our kids' lunches. We've seen Japanese food come a long way in this country--it's no longer viewed as just sushi and teriyaki. But many Americans still regard it as the domain of chefs and experts, and we seek to change that. These are dishes you can definitely make yourself, as most of them are simple enough to cook for your family or friends on a weeknight. Japanese home cooking is comforting, humble, and achievable by anyone. The purchase of just a few pantry items can easily make it part of your standard repertoire. We're not rigid about tradition, but the recipes are very much rooted in Japanese flavors, ingredients, and cooking techniques. Our book is a primer for home cooks who are eager to integrate Japanese flavors into their everyday meals. If you are already fluent in Japanese ingredients, we also use them in unexpected and delicious ways that may surprise you. When we cook at the restaurant, we like to create something for people that they wouldn't make at home. At home, we're looking for the opposite--something that we can make over and over again, that is achievable, simple, and satisfying, and that we can potentially execute while holding an infant. As two working chefs, we used to have dinner around 9 or 9:30 p.m. Now we're on the clock, and get food on the table by 6 or 7. Our son is seven years old and eats most everything, while our two-year-old daughter is hopefully following in his footsteps. By a certain time, we have to give them baths and put them to bed, and dinner has to fit into a certain parameter. More often than not, it's about making rice, a protein, and then convincing our daughter to try a carrot. Our cooking has become a lot more practical, but it's still important that pleasure has a place at the table. As much as we look to Japan for inspiration, the cooking in our home is also influenced by what's around us. Seasonal eating is central to both Japanese cuisine and ours. We pack up our kids and a week's worth of compost and go shopping every Saturday, choosing produce from the great vendors that come to our neighborhood farmers' market at McCarren Park in Brooklyn. Depending on where you are, you can find some of the best Japanese ingredients locally. Our favorite vegetables come from Bodhitree Farm, which grows an amazing array of Asian specialty produce. Between spring and early winter, we get a majority of the vegetables we eat at home from them, whether it's shishito peppers, nasu (eggplant), daikon radishes, or satsumaimo (Japanese sweet potatoes). Hauling back a refrigerator's worth every week with two kids is a lot of work, but totally worth it. In this book we wrestled, and wrestled some more, with the details of each recipe, recognizing that everyone's home kitchen is a little different. We've included many cues, through sight, smell, touch, or taste, to guide you through them. Of course, cooking is an imperfect science, and requires you to use your senses, experience, and knowledge of your own equipment. Not everyone has the same set of pots; no two ovens or burners function identically. And we know how subjective taste can be. What is too much salt for some, is not enough for others. So when you are trying out these recipes, keep in mind what you like and the equipment you're using, but most of all, trust your instincts. Nothing would make us happier than seeing you use our recipes as a jumping-off point--like Sawa did with her mother's so many years ago--and eventually making them your own. Excerpted from Love Japan: Recipes from Our Japanese American Kitchen [a Cookbook] by Sawako Okochi, Aaron Israel All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.