Thursday, April 18, 2024 | Shawwal 8, 1445 H
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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Takara's Nikuyaki Udon: Stir-fried Udon noodle with beef

Niku Yaki Udon (1)
Niku Yaki Udon (1)
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BEST JAPANESE FLAVOUR


Takara is located inside the Intercontinental Hotel Muscat and is one of the country’s best Japanese restaurants offering some of the most delicious and authentic Japanese flavours to the Sultanate. The restaurant currently has different promotions from Hana Nights that allows ladies to spoil their appetite every Tuesdays to Unlimited Ala Carte Weekend Lunch.


For today’s recipe, Chef Rajesh is showcasing how to prepare a good Nikuyaki Udon. The Japanese word Niku means meat in English and yaki means something cooked in hot plate/pan. Udon is a type of thick noodles made from wheat.


INGREDIENTS:


Teriyaki Sauce (Yield: 1900ml)


500ml Kikkoman soy sauce


65ml Japanese sweet cooking sauce Mirin


375gm White sugar


1900ml Water


65gm Carrot


25gm Ginger


65gm white onion


65gm Leeks


25gm Garlic


250gm Bone of chicken/beef or offcuts part of beef meat


50gm Katakuriko (Potato starch) or Cornflour


100 gm Beef Meat, strip loin — thinly sliced


30 ml Olive


Salt and pepper, to taste


150gm Udon Noodle (Thick noodle made from wheat can find in market dried or frozen)


5ml Sesame oil


10ml Tonkatsu sauce (From grocery)


20ml Teriyaki sauce prepared


Mix vegetable (All julienne cut) (80gm)


15gm Carrot


15gm Mix bell pepper


15gm white onion


10gm Spring onion


10gm Bakchoy


15gm Button mushroom


Garnish:


5gm Spring onion (finely chopped or julienne)


5gm Sesame Seed


PREPARATION METHOD


Teriyaki Sauce


Grill the beef or chicken bone either in an oven or thick hot pan until golden brown. Grill or sauté all the vegetables (carrot, ginger, white onion and garlic) together until you get its natural aroma.


Take a large stockpot with a thick base, mix soy sauce, mirin, sugar and water. Heat the pot on fire with a high flame, stir continuously until boiling.  Put those sautéed vegetables and grilled bones in it and reduce the fire. Simmer continuously at the temperature of 800C to 850C for 2hrs, do not cover while simmering.


Reduce the sauce by 30% by simmering heat. (do not high the flame, it will burn your sauce and taste will be bitter)


Once sauce ready, strain carefully. Keep the liquid and discard impurities.


Take one bowl, mix katakuriko with water just to dilute. Reheat the strained sauce until it boiled, pour diluted katakuriko slowly and stir it continuously. Switch off the fire.


Teriyaki sauce is ready. Cool down and store in the freezer.


Nikuyaki Udon


Slice beef thinly. Cut all the vegetable in julienne.


Boil Udon noodles until soft (if frozen boil for 3 minutes, if frozen boil for 5 minutes) and strain from the water.


Heat nonstick pan, add olive oil, add mix vegetable and sauté for 1 minute then add sliced beef and cook for 1 minute in high flame.


Add boiled udon noodle and stir well.


Add teriyaki sauce, tonkatsu sauce, sesame oil, salt and pepper. Stir well until all the ingredients mixed well.


Pour the noodles on the plate and garnish with spring onion and sesame seeds.


ABOUT THE CHEF


Chef Rajesh Thapa

Executive Chef


Head Chef


TAKARA Japanese Restaurant


Born in Nepal, Chef Rajesh Thapa, at a very young age has been inspired by the local chefs of Kathmandu. It is from these chefs that he first learned his culinary experience.


After years of mastering many of the Nepalese styles of cooking, he moved to Dubai in 2008 and begin venturing into multi-cuisine speciality and working with some of the best 5-star hotels in the country. Working in different restaurants, he eventually gravitated towards Japanese culinary. He would spend the next 10 years working with Jumeirah Group where he pre-opened several of their world-renowned restaurants.


As the head chef of Takara, he has dedicated his time into making sure that he prepares not only the freshest ingredients but the best that Japanese dishes have to offer.  One of his missions is to train other chefs to become better especially at the Japanese style and art of cooking and inspiring the next generations of Head Chefs.


 



 


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