Want an easy, one-pan meal that’s ready in just 20 minutes? Try my delicious Soy-Glazed Eggplant Donburi. I sear meaty eggplant slices until golden brown and silky, coat them with a sweet and salty sauce, and serve over hot steamed rice. It’s a satisfying Japanese vegan rice bowl that deserves a spot at your weeknight table. {gluten-free adaptable}

What do you consider a quick meal? For me, anything cooks in one pot or one pan are most ideal. That’s why I often turn to Japanese rice bowls (donburi) when I need something fast and easy-to-assemble. Today’s recipe is Soy Glazed Eggplant Donburi (茄子の甘辛丼), which happens to be plant-based!
Eggplant Rice Bowl – The Most Luxurious Vegan Donburi
Eggplant is undoubtedly the star ingredient that makes the appeal of this rice bowl. Think of it as the tofu of the vegetable world. It is mild and versatile, and it has the ability to take on almost any flavor. What sets eggplant apart from other vegetables is its unique structural integrity, and at the same time, its silky, meaty, and utterly luxurious texture.
That said, it’s very important to cook it right. Here, searing the eggplant until nicely charred delivers the best, deepest flavor. It also renders a buttery tender texture with a crispy edge that is hard to resist. When tossed with a quick sauce of mirin and soy sauce, it makes the most satisfying one-bowl comfort that requires minimal effort.
I could easily cook and eat this eggplant donburi over and over again!

3 Tips to Follow When Cooking the Eggplant
1. Keep the eggplant skin
Eggplant flesh gets tender and soft when it’s cooked through, and if you cook it for too long, the flesh gets mushy. Therefore, it’s very important to:
- Keep the eggplant skin attached to the flesh to maintain its shape.
- Cut the eggplant so the flesh is held by the skin.
For this purpose, I only recommend using Japanese, Chinese, or Italian eggplant. If you use American/glove eggplant, cut into the wedges and use only the part that has skin (and use the middle part for other recipes).
2. Sprinkle salt
Eggplant has soft, spongy flesh with tiny air pockets that acts like a sponge in soaking up oil and liquids. While we like the eggplant to absorb all the good flavors, the challenge is to prevent it from becoming greasy.
The trick to that is by breaking down the air pockets and reducing the sponginess by salting the eggplant first. Salting also prevents the eggplant from discoloring.
Just make sure to wipe off the excess water before frying.
3. Use potato starch/cornstarch
Coating the eggplant with potato starch (or cornstarch) can help:
- Prevents the eggplant from soaking up all the oil.
- Creates a nice golden crust.
- Absorbs all the seasonings.
- Thickens the sauce slightly.
Make sure to remove the excess potato starch and applies only a thin coating.

Itadakimasu!
Eggplant skeptics? This Soy-Glazed Eggplant Donburi might change your mind. I hope you give this nightshade vegetable a chance to reveal its deliciousness to you through this recipe. Once tried, you will not get enough of it.
To enjoy this vegan rice bowl, serve it with miso soup and a side of pickle. Here are some of my suggestions:
Other Delicious Vegan Dishes

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Soy-Glazed Eggplant Donburi
Ingredients
- 2 Japanese or Chinese eggplants (7 oz, 200 g; for a globe eggplant, cut into wedges or rounds with the skin on to hold its shape while cooking)
- ½–1 tsp Diamond Crystal kosher salt (for salting the eggplant)
- 10 shiso leaves (perilla/ooba) (or use 1 green onion)
- 1 tsp ginger (grated, with juice; from 1-inch, 2.5-cm knob)
- 2 Tbsp potato starch or cornstarch
- 4 Tbsp neutral oil (divided)
For the Seasonings
- 4 Tbsp mirin (a fairly close substitute is 4 tsp sugar + 4 Tbsp sake or water; adjust the sweetness to taste; read more about mirin)
- 2 Tbsp soy sauce (or use gluten-free soy sauce for GF)
For Serving
- 2 servings cooked Japanese short-grain rice (typically 1⅔ cups (250 g) per donburi serving)
- ½ tsp toasted white sesame seeds
Instructions
- Before You Start: Gather all the ingredients. For the steamed rice, please note that 1½ cups (300 g, 2 rice cooker cups) of uncooked Japanese short-grain rice yield 4⅓ cups (660 g) of cooked rice, enough for 2 donburi servings (3⅓ cups, 500 g). See how to cook short-grain rice with a rice cooker, pot over the stove, Instant Pot, or donabe.
- Slice 2 Japanese or Chinese eggplants lengthwise into ¼-inch slices. Then, sprinkle with ½–1 tsp Diamond Crystal kosher salt. Set aside for 15 minutes, then wipe off the moisture with a paper towel.
- Rinse 10 shiso leaves (perilla/ooba) and pat dry with a paper towel. Cut off and discard the stems.
- Roll up the shiso leaves and cut them into chiffonade strips.
- Peel the ginger skin and grate the ginger (I use a ceramic grater). Then, measure 1 tsp ginger (grated, with juice) and set aside.
- Put 2 Tbsp potato starch or cornstarch in a small tray. Then, thinly coat both sides of the eggplant slices with the potato starch.
To Cook
- Heat a frying pan over medium heat. When the pan is hot, add 2 Tbsp of the 4 Tbsp neutral oil and distribute it in the pan. Then, add the eggplant slices in a single layer. Cook until the bottom side is golden brown, about 3–4 minutes. Until then, do not touch the eggplants in order to achieve a nice sear.
- When the bottom side is nicely seared, drizzle another 2 Tbsp of the oil on top of the eggplant and flip the slices to cook the other side for an additional 3–4 minutes.
- Once the second side is cooked to a golden brown color, reduce the heat to medium low. Add 4 Tbsp mirin, 2 Tbsp soy sauce, and grated ginger.
- Bring it back to a simmer and spoon the sauce over the eggplant a few times. If the sauce thickens too fast (due to the potato starch), add 1 Tbsp water at a time to loosen it a bit. Remove from the heat when the eggplant is well-coated with the sauce.
To Serve
- In individual donburi bowls (a bit bigger than rice bowls), divide the 2 servings cooked Japanese short-grain rice and drizzle some sauce on top of the rice.
- Then, place the eggplant slices on top. For presentation, I overlap each slice slightly. Garnish on top with ½ tsp toasted white sesame seeds and shiso leaves. Serve immediately.
To Store
- You can keep the leftovers in an airtight container and keep them for 3 days in the refrigerator or for up to a month in the freezer.
Just made this for my family. Absolutely phenomenal.
Hi Michelle! Thank you for trying Nami’s recipe and for your kind feedback!
We are so happy to hear you enjoyed the dish!😊
Konichiwa Ms. Nami! I just want to say thank you for all your wonderful recipes! We are currently in Japan and we are enjoying it here and loving all the yummy Japanese food! Your website is my go to for recreating the food we have tried and they never fail us! ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ Arigato gozaimasu!
Hi Roselle, Thank you very much for your kind words to Nami.
We are so glad to hear you’ve been enjoying the recipes and everything else that we share. It means so much to us.
Happy cooking!
[…] Soy-Glazed Eggplant Donburi Eggplant Agebitashi Eggplant Unagi Donburi Miso Pork and Eggplant Stir Fry Miso Dengaku […]
Hi, I made this today for lunch and it was so delicious! And yet so quick and easy! I discovered your site some weeks ago and I find myself checking it almost daily for inspiration, I love your recipes! And before that I had no idea about Japanese cooking, I now love it! So I wanted to say thank you for your great work, your site is so informative and inspiring. Greetings from Vienna
Hi Maro! Nami and all of us at JOC are so glad to hear that you enjoyed the recipes and everything else that we share. It means so much to us.
We hope you keep continue to enjoy learning Japanese cooking and our beautiful culture.
Thank you for reading Nami’s posts!🤗
Hi! Love this recipe, Thank you! Your recipes are all so yummy!! Thank you for sharing!
I’m just wondering if we can make this in advance and keep it in the fridge? how do we serve it (or heat it up) the next day?
I understand it doesn’t take long, but sometimes when we are preparing many dishes we try to prep as much as we can 😀 Heee.. hope you’ll be able to advice. Thanks in advance!
Hi Aida! Thank you very much for trying Nami’s recipe and for your kind feedback!
We are glad to hear you love this recipe!🥰
You can keep all the sauce left in the pan with the cooked eggplant in the air-tight container and reheat it in a microwave the next day.
We hope this helps!
Nami-san, thank you I love this eggplant recipe! The texture of crispy and soft eggplant with the flavorful sauce is wonderful.
However, I have a small house and avoid cooking fried food because the smell lingers. Using your recipe I modified it by baking uncoated zucchini slices, then making a sauce using mirin, yuzu marinade, fresh ginger and cornstarch. Chopped green onion to finish it. It’s not as great as your recipe but the flavors are similar.
Hi Elizabeth! Thank you very much for your kind words to Nami and for sharing your tip with us!
Baked Soy-Glazed Eggplant sounds delicious! 🤩 Happy Cooking!
Oh, I see that I had a big typo! I meant eggplant, not zucchini. Gomen nasai.
no problem!😉 Zucchini is also good too.
Loved these eggplants. Very easy, and only a few ingredients. Will definitely makes these again!
Hi Jamie! Thank you very much for trying Nami’s recipe and for your kind feedback!
We are so happy to hear you loved this dish! 😊
Happy Cooking!
Holy smokes! I never knew eggplants could taste so good. Great recipe!
Hi John! 😁 We are so happy to hear you enjoyed Eggplant!!
We hope you try other Eggplant recipes from our site too.
https://www.justonecookbook.com/search/?q=eggplant
Thank you for trying Nami’s recipe and for your kind feedback!
Wow, this recipe is fantastic! My 3 year old even loved it, so I’m going to be making this on a regular basis now. 🙂
Hi Alisha! Yay! We are so happy to hear your family enjoyed this dish!
Thank you very much for trying Nami’s recipe and for your kind feedback.😊
Wowowow this was soooo delicious!! I added sliced onion to mine right before the sauce, and I am telling you it’s one of the best eggplant dishes I’ve ever had. Excited to cook this for guests! :3
Hi Lela! Aww.🥰 We are so happy to hear this is the best eggplant dish you’ve ever had!
Thank you very much for trying Nami’s recipe and for your kind feedback!
Thank you for the wonderful recipe. My gal refused to touch eggplants until I made her this and she now loves it. It’s such a wonderful dish! May I ask what other I ingredients (meat or other veggies?) I can use use to replace the eggplants with this same recipe?
Hi Jen! Thank you very much for trying Nami’s recipe and for your kind feedback!
We are so happy to hear this recipe helped to enjoy Eggplants!🥰
You can add ground meat, zucchini, bell pepper, onion, mushroom, etc., and see if you like it.
We hope this helps!
Just made this for lunch and wow – so easy and so good! Can’t wait to make it again and again 😍
Hi Bedelia! We are so happy to hear you enjoyed this dish!
Thank you very much for trying Nami’s recipe and for your kind feedback. 🥰
Delicious as always! Thanks for sharing!
Hi Silvia! We are glad to hear you enjoyed this dish!
Thank you very much for trying Nami’ recipe and for your kind feedback.
I added shiitakes to mine
Hi, tonie! Awesome! Thank you very much for trying Nami’s recipe and sharing your cooking experience with us!
This was so delicious! I sautéed some kale in the leftover sauce. I didn’t have ginger and used garlic instead (had to improvise) and I bet it’ll be even better with the ginger. I can’t wait to cook more of your recipes!
Hi Jessica! Thank you very much for trying Nami’s recipe and sharing your cooking experience with us!
We are so happy to hear you enjoyed this dish! Happy Cooking!