Cozy up at your next get-together with friends and family with my homemade Sukiyaki recipe. In this dish, we sear marbled beef and simmer it with tofu, mushrooms, and vegetables in a sweetened soy sauce. This family-style dinner will warm your stomachs and hearts with its authentic Japanese flavors.
The Japanese love cooking nabe hot pots, especially in the cold winter months. While there are many variations, one of the most popular hot pot dishes is Sukiyaki (すき焼き) or Japanese Beef Hot Pot. It’s warm, flavorful, and an easy social meal to share with a close-knit group of family or friends.
Today, I want to show you how you can replicate and enjoy sukiyaki at home.
Table of Contents
What’s Sukiyaki?
Sukiyaki (すき焼き) is a popular Japanese hot pot dish that we often prepare and serve at the table. We slowly grill or simmer well-marbled beef, alongside vegetables, tofu, and mushrooms in a shallow cast-iron pot. The soup broth is rich and bursting with sweet, salty, and savory flavor.
Interestingly, the Kanto region once called their version of sukiyaki gyunabe (牛鍋). Gyunabe’s popularity spread from Yokohama, where many foreigners lived, and then became popular in Tokyo. Gyunabe then influenced the sukiyaki culture in the Kanto region.
When the Great Kanto Earthquake happened in 1923, the gyunabe restaurants in the Kanto (Tokyo) region disappeared. During that time, sukiyaki restaurants in the Kansai (Osaka) region expanded into the Kanto region. Since the two dishes were quite similar, people in the Kanto region started to call their original gyunabe ‘sukiyaki.’
Kansai Style vs. Kanto Style Sukiyaki
Did you know that there are two types of sukiyaki? We have the Kanto-style and the Kansai-style and there are some distinctions between them. As my mom’s side of the family is from Osaka (Kansai) and my dad’s side is from Tokyo (Kanto), I grew up eating a mix of Kansai and Kanto foods without realizing it.
Both regions enjoy sukiyaki with a beaten egg, but people would cook and enjoy the dish differently.
Kanto-style Sukiyaki
The most noteworthy feature of Kanto-style sukiyaki is the warishita (割り下) or sukiyaki sauce. The sauce is made by boiling soy sauce, sake, mirin, and sugar and diluted with kombu dashi to your liking. It plays an important role in determining the overall taste of the dish (we’ll talk about it later).
Also, the Kanto version grills the beef in a cast iron pot. Some people grill the beef directly on the greased pot while others cook the beef with a little bit of the sukiyaki sauce. For my recipe, I used the latter method to avoid marbled beef from getting stuck on the cast-iron pot.
After you enjoy a few slices of the beef, you would then simmer the remaining meat and other ingredients in the warishita until tender. This style of cooking is hugely influenced by the original gyunabe.
Kansai-style Sukiyaki
On the other hand, Kansai-style sukiyaki involves grilling each slice of beef in the cast iron pot. When both sides of the meat are about 80% cooked, we would sprinkle plenty of sugar so that it covers the surface of the meat. Then, sprinkle soy sauce to balance out the flavor.
After enjoying a few slices of beef, you would then add vegetables such as napa cabbage. It doesn’t use dashi stock so the Kansai-style sukiyaki doesn’t have much moisture and the flavor is slightly stronger.
Since the moisture content in vegetables varies depending on the season, the cook needs to adjust the seasoning accordingly in order to achieve the best flavor. Therefore, the skill of the person who makes it greatly influences Kansai-style sukiyaki. This is where the nabe bugyo (hot pot magistrate 鍋奉行)’s skills are shown!
In my recipe below, I use the Kanto-style sukiyaki method because it’s a lot easier for beginner cooks to follow.
Well-Marbled Sukiyaki Beef
Unquestionably, beef is the star ingredient for this hot pot, so I recommend using quality meat when making sukiyaki at home.
The Japanese like to splurge and enjoy really good quality, well-marbled beef for both sukiyaki and shabu shabu. Wagyu (beef from cows raised in Japan) is very expensive ($40/lb), so typically each person only enjoys about 120-150 grams of sliced meat. Because of the higher fat content in each slice, you don’t really need a lot of it.
Japanese grocery stores have packages of thinly sliced “sukiyaki beef.” They also have “shabu shabu beef” but those are thinner than the ones for sukiyaki, so don’t pick the wrong package. We do not want chewy meat for the hot pot. If possible, find a well-marbled piece of meat so that the fat of the meat becomes tender when you eat.
If you can’t find pre-sliced beef, you can try slicing the ribeye at your home. Follow my directions and tricks on How To Slice Meat.
Make Your Own Sukiyaki Sauce (Warishita)
The Kanto-style sukiyaki needs warishita (割り下), the sukiyaki sauce. It’s very simple to make with just 4 ingredients: soy sauce, sake, mirin, and sugar.
Some recipes already include kombu dashi in the sauce while others don’t. I prefer to keep them separate so that the sukiyaki sauce lasts longer in the refrigerator (water/dashi in the sauce will not keep long).
It’s very easy to cook the sauce. Boil the sake and mirin first to let the alcohol evaporate, then add sugar and soy sauce until the sugar is completely dissolved.
Make the sukiyaki sauce ahead and store it in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to a month (or longer!). You can use this sukiyaki sauce for Gyudon (Beef Rice Bowl), Simmered Beef and Tofu (Niku Dofu), Nikujga (Japanese Meat and Potato Stew), simmered fish, and more!
Sukiyaki Ingredients and Substitutions
Besides good quality beef, you will need to prepare a variety of vegetables, a few kinds of mushrooms, grilled tofu (or regular tofu), and shirataki noodles (yam noodles).
Typically we use leafy vegetables such as napa cabbage and chrysanthemum greens, onion, Tokyo negi (long green onion), carrot, and gobo (burdock root).
You can also use more common vegetables like cabbage, spinach, watercress, eggplant, potatoes, or any other Asian vegetable such as bok choy or bean sprouts. These are not classic sukiyaki ingredients, but they will still taste delicious cooked in the sukiyaki sauce!
For vegan/vegetarian, you can use meat alternative products or add more tofu and meaty mushrooms such as king oyster mushrooms.
Cooking Sukiyaki at the Dining Table
We usually cook Sukiyaki in a cast-iron pot over a portable butane stove at the dining table. I recommend getting these items for sukiyaki and other table-top Japanese hot pot dishes.
- Cast-iron sukiyaki pot – I got mine from MTC Kitchen (use JOC10 for 10% off!).
- Iwatani portable butane stove – MTC kitchen sells this and this.
- Butane Fuel for the portable stove
Can we use a donabe (Japanese clay pot) for sukiyaki? The answer is no. You are not supposed to use high heat for the donabe and it’s not meant for grilling/searing the meat.
For the table, each person will need their own set of chopsticks, a medium bowl/plate for the cooked food from the pot, and a small bowl for a beaten egg. Prepare a few sets of communal long cooking chopsticks for cooking the raw meat and vegetables.
It’s a fun dinner for family and friends’ get-together, and not to mention, all you have to do is to chop ingredients before dinner time!
How to Eat Sukiyaki the “Authentic” Way
I am a bit hesitant to talk about the “authentic” way the Japanese enjoy sukiyaki as some of you may not find it appetizing. However, since some of you may eat sukiyaki in Japan and this is the traditional way to enjoy sukiyaki, so you won’t get caught off guard. Whether you follow this method or not, I think it’s worth discussing it here.
In Japan, we enjoy sukiyaki by dipping cooked beef and other ingredients in raw eggs. I know, I can almost hear “eww” from some of my readers but that’s the fact.
In the past, eating meat was officially prohibited until the Meiji era in Japan. Ordinary people were not allowed to eat meat until the Meiji emperor started eating beef. So it was said that dipping sukiyaki in cold eggs helps eliminate the smell of beef and to prevent burning your mouth with hot food. Thanks to improvements in meat quality, it is now common to eat delicious beef. Also, dipping it in an egg gives it a deeper flavor, so this way of eating has continued to this day. It’s a custom that we eat sukiyaki with an egg, but some people skip it.
If you travel to Japan and try sukiyaki there, I actually highly recommend trying it at least once as eggs there are considered safe to consume raw. The sweetness from raw egg coats well with salty, strong-flavored beef and vegetables and it amazingly balances out the flavors very well.
Since raw eggs here in the U.S. are not safe to consume, you can purchase pasteurized eggs. Although I found one at a Japanese market, Nijiya, before, it’s not always there and pasteurized eggs are hard to find elsewhere.
If you have an immersion circulator (sous vide precision cooker), you can pasteurize your eggs at home using the sous-vide method.
Sukiyaki vs. Shabu Shabu
Now that you’re familiar with sukiyaki, you may wonder what is the difference between sukiyaki and another popular hot pot dish, shabu shabu. Let’s take a closer look.
Sukiyaki (すき焼き)
We sear thinly sliced beef and then cooked it alongside other ingredients in a sweet and salty soy sauce-based sauce. It is full of bold flavors straight from the pot. Traditionally, we enjoy all the cooked food after dipping in a beaten raw egg.
- Equipment: Cast-iron pot
- Broth: Warishita (a mixture of soy sauce, sake, mirin, and sugar, diluted with kombu dashi)
- Meat: Well-marbled beef (thicker than shabu shabu beef)
- Vegetables: Napa cabbage, chrysanthemum greens, Tokyo negi, carrot, shirataki noodles
- Tofu: Grilled tofu
- Mushrooms: Shiitake, enoki, shimeji, maitake
- Final course (Shime): Udon noodles
- Dipping sauce: Raw eggs
Shabu Shabu (しゃぶしゃぶ) [recipe]
In this dish, we cook thinly sliced beef or pork and all kinds of ingredients in a clear kombu-based broth. The flavor is subtle and you dip the cooked food in a ponzu or sesame-based sauce.
- Equipment: Donabe (Japanese clay pot)
- Broth: Kombu dashi
- Meat: Well-marbled beef or pork
- Vegetables: Napa cabbage, chrysanthemum greens, Tokyo negi, mizuna, carrot
- Tofu: Medium-firm tofu
- Mushrooms: Shiitake, enoki, shimeji, maitake
- Final course (Shime): Udon noodles, rice
- Dipping Sauce: Ponzu sauce and/or sesame sauce
Despite having different flavors and cooking pots, both sukiyaki and shabu shabu have similar ingredients, such as leafy vegetables, tofu, mushrooms, and so on.
Both sukiyaki and shabu shabu are representative dishes of Japan that eventually spread throughout the country and around the world. With high-prized beef on the table, it is always a delicacy in Japan. People of all ages, from children to adults, love it!
Other Hot Pot Recipes
- Shabu Shabu
- Yosenabe
- Mizutaki (Chicken Hot Pot)
- Chanko Nabe (Sumo Stew)
- Soy Milk Hot Pot
- Nabemonot: A Guide to Japanese Hot Pot
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Sukiyaki
Video
Ingredients
For the Kombu Dashi (for diluting the cooking sauce; as needed)
- 2 cups water
- 1 piece kombu (dried kelp) (2 x 2 inches, 5 x 5 cm; 5 g per piece)
For the Sukiyaki
- 4 leaves napa cabbage (12 oz, 340 g)
- ¼ bunch shungiku (chrysanthemum greens) (3.5 oz, 100 g)
- 1 Tokyo negi (naga negi; long green onion) (white part only; or 1 leek/4 green onions)
- 6 inches gobo (burdock root) (1.6 oz, 45 g)
- ½ onion (3.5 oz, 100 g)
- ½ package enoki mushrooms (1.75 oz, 50 g; skip or use other mushrooms)
- ½ package maitake mushrooms (1.75 oz, 50 g; skip or use other mushrooms)
- 2 shiitake mushrooms (1.75 oz, 50 g; skip or use other mushrooms)
- ½ package broiled tofu (yaki dofu) (one package is 9 oz, 255 g; or use medium-firm (momen) tofu)
- 1½ inches carrot (optional, for decoration and color)
- ½ package shirataki noodles (3.5 oz, 100 g; or cellophane/yam noodles)
- ½ lb thinly sliced beef (chuck or ribeye) (or slice your own meat; skip for vegan/vegetarian and use more tofu, mushrooms, and vegetables)
- 1 Tbsp neutral oil (or 1 small piece of suet (raw beef fat))
For Serving
- 2 large eggs (50 g each w/o shell) (optional, for dipping; for safety, buy pasteurized eggs or make sous vide eggs; skip for vegan)
For the Shime Finishing Course
- 1 serving udon noodles (cooked and drained)
Instructions
To Make the Kombu Dashi and Sukiyaki Sauce
- Gather all the dashi and sauce ingredients. Tip: You‘ll use the dashi and sauce to adjust the seasoning of the broth as you cook. This recipe makes more dashi than you need for this dish and you‘ll likely have leftovers.
- To make the cold brew Kombu Dashi, put 2 cups water and 1 piece kombu (dried kelp) in a measuring cup or pitcher. Set it aside to steep for a minimum of 30 minutes, or make it ahead up to overnight.
- To make the sukiyaki sauce, combine ½ cup sake and ½ cup mirin in a small saucepan. Bring it to a boil and reduce the heat to simmer and let the alcohol evaporate for a minute or so.
- Add 3 Tbsp sugar and ½ cup soy sauce and mix together. Bring it back to a boil. Once the sugar is completely dissolved, turn off the heat and set it aside.
- Transfer the sauce to a pitcher and bring both the dashi and the sauce to the table. Tip: You can make the sukiyaki sauce ahead and store it in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to a month.
To Prepare the Sukiyaki Ingredients
- Gather all the sukiyaki ingredients. Feel free to customize the portions to suit your personal preference. Here, I used the entire package of grilled tofu (twice as much) since we love tofu.
- Cut 4 leaves napa cabbage into pieces 2 inches (5 cm) wide.
- Cut the pieces in half or thirds down along the thick white center of the leaves.
- Cut ¼ bunch shungiku (chrysanthemum greens) 2 inches (5 cm) wide.
- Slice the white part of 1 Tokyo negi (naga negi; long green onion) diagonally into ½-inch (1.3 cm) pieces.
- Scrape off the outer skin of 6 inches gobo (burdock root) with the back of a knife. The gobo‘s flavor is just under the skin, so don‘t use a vegetable peeler and peel that flavor away. Once you scrape off the skin, shave the gobo into superthin strips using a vegetable peeler.
- Soak the gobo strips in water for 5 minutes, changing the water once. Drain well.
- Cut ½ onion into ½-inch (1.3 cm) slices widthwise. Next, discard the bottom part of ½ package enoki mushrooms and tear it into smaller clusters.
- Cut off and discard the root ends of ½ package maitake mushrooms and separate the maitake bunch into 2 small clusters.
- Cut off and discard the stems of 2 shiitake mushrooms. Optionally, you can cut a flower pattern on the shiitake mushroom caps: First, cut a sliver off the top of the mushroom cap by making 2 incisions in the shape of a “V". Bevel these cuts toward each other by inserting the knife at an angle.
- Make a second cutout in the same manner to form an "X" with the first cutout. You can keep this "X" pattern or add one or two more cutouts. Watch my video on "shiitake hanagiri" that demonstrates this Japanese cutting technique.
- Cut ½ package broiled tofu (yaki dofu) into smaller pieces. We usually double the tofu portion and cut one block into 6–8 pieces.
- If you‘d like to make flower-shaped carrots (optional), first slice 1½ inches carrot into ¼-inch (6 mm) rounds.
- Here, I stamp the carrot coins with a vegetable cutter into a floral shape for decoration.
- Rinse and drain ½ package shirataki noodles. Cut the noodles in half. Add the shirataki noodles to boiling water to remove any odor. Once the water is boiling again, cook for 2 minutes, drain, and set aside.
- Place ½ lb thinly sliced beef (chuck or ribeye) and suet (if using) on a plate. Put all the ingredients on a big platter or bamboo tray for the dining table. I prepared my eggs sous vide (read the blog post) for dipping the cooked sukiyaki ingredients. I also cooked and drained 1 serving udon noodles and set them aside for the final course.
To Cook the Beef
- Set a portable gas cooktop at the dining table. I use this cast-iron sukiyaki pot that I got from MTC Kitchen (use JOC10 for 10% off) and an Iwatani portable butane stove. Give each person a medium-sized bowl to put the cooked food from the pot.
- Heat the cast-iron sukiyaki pot (or any pot) on medium heat. When it’s hot, add 1 Tbsp neutral oil (or the suet). Then, pour in barely enough sukiyaki sauce to cover the bottom of the pot, about ⅛–¼ inch of sauce.
- Place a few slices of well-marbled beef in the pot. When the bottom side of the meat is cooked, flip and cook the other side. Enjoy some (or all) of the sweet and caramelized meat now to consume this good-quality beef at its best. You can eat a few rounds of meat first or leave the meat in the pot and continue to the next step.
To Enjoy with Pasteurized Raw Egg (optional)
- How to Enjoy Sukiyaki in Japan: In Japan, we prepare a raw egg for each person at the table. Everyone cracks their own egg in their individual small bowl, beats it, and dips the cooked ingredients in the egg to enjoy. While raw eggs are safe to consume in Japan, US raw eggs are not recommended for consumption unless they are pasteurized. Therefore, I pasteurize my eggs using the sous vide method. When you get a chance in Japan, please try this traditional way to enjoy sukiyaki.
- If you are using 2 large eggs (50 g each w/o shell) that are pasteurized, dip the cooked beef in the beaten egg to enjoy. The salty and savory sukiyaki ingredients become mild and sweet after dipping in the egg. If you‘re not using eggs, drizzle in a bit of kombu dashi to dilute the sauce in the pot, to your liking; otherwise, it might taste too salty.
To Cook the First Round of Sukiyaki
- Add some vegetables, tofu, mushrooms, and other ingredients (except the udon) to the pot. Pour in enough sukiyaki sauce to partially submerge the ingredients in the sauce, about one-third of the way or about ¼ inch of sauce. If you aren‘t using eggs for dipping, drizzle in a small amount of kombu dashi into the pot to dilute the sauce to your liking. Bring to a gentle simmer. Then, turn down the heat and simmer until cooked through. You can add more beef now, as it cooks fast. Taste the sauce and drizzle in a tiny bit of dashi or water if it‘s getting too salty.
- Transfer some of the cooked ingredients to the individual bowls and enjoy the first round of sukiyaki. Taste the food and adjust the seasoning in the pot as needed; drizzle in a bit of dashi or water if it‘s too salty or add a few drops of sukiyaki sauce if it needs more seasoning. Tip: Adjusting the seasoning as you go is a normal part of cooking and enjoying Sukiyaki.
To Cook the Second and Third (Optional) Rounds
- When there is less cooked food in the pot, portion what‘s left into the individual bowls. Then, start cooking the second round by adding more ingredients to the pot (repeat the previous step). While it's cooking, you can continue to eat the rest of the first round of sukiyaki or any side dishes. Eventually, you can cook a third round to finish any remaining uncooked ingredients. Tip: Continue to adjust the broth seasoning. If your sukiyaki sauce runs out, add soy sauce and sugar to the broth in a pinch. If your dashi runs out, use water instead.
To Enjoy the Finishing Course (Shime)
- We usually end the sukiyaki meal with a final course (shime) of udon. When most of the ingredients have disappeared, add the cooked udon noodles to the remaining broth in the sukiyaki pot. Heat through and enjoy.
To Store
- You can keep the Sukiyaki leftovers in an airtight container and store in the refrigerator for up to 3 days or in the freezer for a month. Tofu does not freeze well, so remove it before freezing. Store leftover kombu dashi in a bottle or airtight container in the refrigerator for 4–5 days (and use it for Miso Soup) or in the freezer for 2 weeks. Store leftover sukiyaki sauce in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to a month.
Notes
Nutrition
Editor’s Note: This post was originally published on February 11, 2015. It’s been republished on January 29, 2023, with new images, blog content, and a revised recipe.
oh no you changed the sukiyaki sauce recipe. can you please post the old recipe. I thought it was 1cup soy, sake, mirin, and sugar. also unsure of the dashi ratio to sukiyaki sauce now. please can I have the old recipe my family loved it
Hi Jill. Don’t worry, everything is the same, except that I added more sugar to the sukiyaki sauce.
I changed the recipe from the original 4 servings to 2 servings. With x2 and x3 buttons, it’s easier this way to multiply.
So, if you liked the 4 servings, click x2 button. And you can reduce 2 Tbsp of sugar from the sukiyaki sauce recipe.
Hope this helps! I really like the new sauce recipe though. 🙂
Hi, I made this last night and I had the old recipe that I had printed out which says to use 1 1/3 cup sukiyaki sauce with 1 cup of dashi broth for the first serving and I think it was perfect. I looked on your new recipe and it doesn’t say to do this? I agree with other comments, that just the sukiyaki sauce alone would be too strong.
This was the first recipe, and I have made many, that I thought I should comment on. All the others were spot on and delicious!
Hi Patti! Thank you so much for your feedback.
My previous recipe (for 4 servings) uses 1 cup of sukiyaki sauce + 1/3 cup dashi (see my video from 2015 here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JMTJXarcCLc) and mentioned that the leftover sukiyaki sauce can be saved.
One of the reasons I updated this sukiyaki recipe is that I wanted to cook the recipe properly. My previous recipe was published in 2015, and since then, I had sukiyaki in Japan many times and I realized my previous recipe uses too much broth to cook the ingredients. This time around (in 2023), I wanted to replicate the sukiyaki sauce from the sukiyaki restaurant and explain how sukiyaki is cooked and enjoyed in Japan. So, I updated the recipe.
Regarding the saltiness of the sukiyaki… If some people do not use raw eggs (or sous vide eggs), I understand that cooked food can be salty. That is one of the reasons why we eat sukiyaki with eggs to make it more mild and sweet, and we also eat it with steamed rice. Even for the Japanese people, sukiyaki is rather (sweet) salty and strongly flavored food. You mentioned about the commenters who also said salty… they used my previous recipe and not the new recipe I just published.
In my previous recipe, I should not have specified the amount of kombu dashi because the amount of kombu dashi depends on the vegetable amount you add or how much water has released from the veggies. It should be adjusted based on the cooking broth and everyone’s broth should be slightly different. In Japan, we adjust the broth’s flavor with sukiyaki sauce and kombu dashi (or water) throughout the cooking. It’s not a fixed sauce/broth. I completely failed to give instructions on this in the previous recipe. Also, for those who use eggs, kombu dashi is not needed as much as for those who don’t use eggs.
I really hope that this time I explained well. I really shouldn’t wait for 8 years to fix this and I apologize it took so long to correct it.
You can find pasteurized eggs which are safe to use for this! I can’t wait to try it!
Hi Julie! Yes. It’s a bit pricey, but please enjoy! The egg makes the sukiyaki extra good – sweet and mild, not so salty from the sukiyaki sauce. 🙂
Aloha Nami! I’ve made this recipe before in a nabe pot, bit I wonder if it can also be done in an Instant Pot? I know that’s not great for eating sukiyaki with others at the table, but I’m really making it for lunch for the week. I make double the recipe & I love the taste as the days go by & the flavor grows. I was assuming I could just sear the meat using the sautée function, then add the sauce, dashi & other ingredients. But how long would you recommend cooking under high pressure? Or would it not be advisable to even try cooking it this way? どうもありがとうございました!
Aloha Sean! I haven’t tried, but I’m sure you can do it. A couple of things I want to mention.
Thinly sliced meet usually gets harder when you cook for a longer time, so I highly recommend using more marbled fatty meat for tender texture. Rib eye or chuck is good.
Now if you eat sukiyaki, the first meat you add in the pot is for making good dashi/flavor for the sukiyaki, assuming that it’s going to be tougher.
But when you add in while cooking sukiyaki, you usually have to pick up and enjoy after a quick cooking. It’s best when it’s not overcooked. So you kind of keep an eye on YOUR meat. 😉
Since you cook in your IP, you need to remember it’s probably not the “best” sukiyaki type dish. But I see it’s a great lunch menu type of sukiyaki.
Since instant pot does not release any moisture (not evaporating steam), the sauce will not be reduced like when you cook over stovetop. So watch on liquid amount and seasoning. You most likely need to adjust the liquid amount – 1/2 cup of liquid less over all.
You might want to test and see. I usually test a few times when I convert regular recipes to IP recipes. 🙂 Good luck!
ありがとう for reading my blog! xo
https://www.justonecookbook.com/pressure-cooker-nikujaga/
Sukiyaki rules! I’d love to make it at home.
I have a one-burner portable induction cooktop. Could I use it as the tabletop heat source for sukiyaki?
Also, do I serve both udon and shirataki noodles?
Hi Jane! That’s what I use too. You can use both – udon is always added at the end when there is no more ingredients left in the pot. 🙂
You are the best! I have seen so many recipes for sukiyaki and all of them had the same ingredients but, you gave American alternatives thank you so much! Will be sure to try this one!
Hi Billy! I’m happy to hear you liked the recipe. Hope you enjoy this sukiyaki recipe! Thank you for your kind comment! 🙂
Konichiwa Nami San! I really like your website and recipes. I learn so much about Japanese cuisine and ingredients from you. I have a question about YAKI TOFU, I have never seen this ingredient before in any of the Asian grocery stores in my area. Is it something I can make by simply broiling tofu in the oven?
Arigatō
Konnichiwa Britt! Thank you for reading my blog! I’m happy to hear it’s useful. 😀
Yaki Tofu is very Japanese and I don’t think Chinese or “Asian” grocery stores sell it (correct me if I’m wrong, anyone…).
Yeah, it’s pretty much broiled tofu. It gives nice color in the sukiyaki BUT taste wise, I don’t think it’s that significant, especially in sukiyaki which is pretty salty and sweet (strong flavor) unlike other light flavored hot pot like shabu shabu.
So… is it worth “broiling” the tofu… I might not recommend… but if you want to take a good picture etc, sure! 😀
That makes sense because most of the Asian grocery stores here in Orlando are Chinese. There is a Vietnamese grocery store and also one Korean store but no Japanese although most of these stores sell some Japanese ingredients.
I made a king crab nabe with a kombu dashi and used aburaage instead of the yakitofu. I blanched it first to remove excess oil like you have suggested in other posts ???? My husband, who doesn’t much care for tofu, exclaimed that this was one of his favorite parts of the nabe, aside from the crab! It really soaked up the dashi like a sponge!
I hope this was an authentic substitute. ????
Hi Britt! YUM! Your nabe sounds excellent! One of my favorite ingredients for nabe is…. mochi in aburaage. I look forward to eating it, and luckily my family is not a huge fan so I usually eat them all by myself. I put the instruction in this post. If your husband likes aburaage AND mochi, I think he’ll enjoy it.
https://www.justonecookbook.com/taiwanese-hot-pot-and-homemade-meatballs/
But… now that you told me it’s hard to find Japanese ingredients, maybe you have to get mochi (kiri mochi) on Amazon since Chinese stores don’t carry it…
Yes, it was an authentic sub! 😉
I had to substitute a lot of the vegetables, but this turned out really well despite my using a shabby old pot to cook it on the oven 🙂 In the UK eggs are pretty safe, and you’re right about how delicious this is when served with them. Many thanks for an awesome and fool-proof recipe!
Hi Ki! Wow thanks so much for trying this recipe with ingredients you can get in your local area! It really inspires me when I hear stories like yours. Thank you for making the effort to cook Japanese food! I know a lot of people don’t cook at all when the ingredients are not found… so I really appreciate it! I’m happy to know you tried it with raw egg too. It gives another layer of deliciousness. Thank you for your kind feedback!
I used your recipe to make sukiyaki for my husband recently and he LOVED it. He grew up here in Alaska eating mostly Japanese food at home. His elderly mother stopped being able to cook many years ago and he has truly missed it. I will be trying more of your recipes for sure! Thanks for sharing!
Hi Katie! Aw, I’m so happy to hear your husband enjoyed this dish! It’s the nostalgic flavor that you won’t forget. 🙂 Hope I have some recipes that he grew up eating on my blog. 🙂
Nice, first time cooking and I love how it turned out. It was great! Thanks for the recipe.
So glad you liked it! Thank you so much for your kind feedback. 🙂
I live in the U.S. and love Japanese hot pots like this. Sukiyaki is one of my favorite things to make. I actually never had issues eating raw eggs where I live but I had picked up a little tip for people afraid to try it with the egg. If you hold the raw eggs in a small heatproof bowl over low heat while whisking it just a few seconds, it will be safe eating it raw. Just don’t stop whisking slowly with a fork or whisk or you’ll have scrambled eggs. ^^ Hope that helps.
Hi Tina! Really! That’s a great tip! I guess it’s enough heat for safely consuming the raw egg. Sukiyaki without raw egg is not the same. This is a wonderful tip. Thank you for sharing!
Hi, Nami.
I’m Jessica from the U.S. I was wondering, and this may be a very stupid question, but is the yaki tofu literally just broiled tofu? I have very few options in my area of rural Missouri, so I was wondering if I could just broil extra firm tofu in my oven? I’m afraid throwing just regular, uncooked tofu will throw off the consistency of the meal.
Also, are there sides that frequently go with this, or drinks? I’m considering throwing a small sukiyaki party if this goes well when I make it tonight. 🙂 For now, I’m making it sans-tofu. Hopefully, it will turn out just fine! I also had to substitute sweet sherry and water for the sake and mirin, because nowhere around here sells either one unless I feel like driving an hour and a half to spend $30 on sake. v.v
Anyway, thanks for all the great recipes! For health reasons, my husband was recommended the Traditional Asian Diet by our doctor, so your blog has been an excellent resource for us, as our entire family (including two toddlers) is now following said diet. Again, thank you so much!
Hi Jessica! You’re right. Yaki Tofu is basically a drained firm tofu that has broiled over a direct heat over a grill. Because of that, tofu stays stronger and less likely to break in the hot pot. I don’t think oven works, but if you have a shichirin (wire over charcoal grill), you can make Yaki Tofu. 🙂
Yes, dry sherry or Chinese rice wine is good sub for sake. By the way I met a Japanese company this week and they told me about Takara Sake is selling sake online.
http://www.takarasake.com/Shoppingpage.php?productId=2
and Mirin:
http://www.takarasake.com/Shoppingpage.php?productId=34
Probably shipping is costly, but I thought I’d share. 🙂
I’m so happy to hear you started to cook Japanese foods. Hope to share more easy and delicious recipes. 🙂
Thank you so much for your recipe! My husband and I cooked this dish tonight and it was delicious!! 🙂
Hi Claudia! I’m so happy to hear you enjoyed this recipe! Thank you for your kind feedback! 🙂
This looks amazing! Thanks for the recipe!
Thank you Anna! 🙂
I substituted 1/2 cup of shoyu with 1/2 cup of hondashi soba tsuyu as I ran out of shoyu, and diluted the sauce a little with water. It was delicious and I have made this twice within the past month using various vegetables. Without the Katsuodashi (bonito flakes) and meat, you can make a delicious and healthy vegan/vegetarian sukiyaki anyone would love. Thank you Nami-san! oishikatta desu.
Hi Seira! Yokatta! Arigato for your kind feedback. You’re right – this recipe can be easily converted to vegetarian/vegan without using katsuobushi and beef. Thank you for pointing that out for my vegetarian/vegan readers! 🙂
In the US you can boil the egg for 1- 1:30 to get rid of any harmful contaminants
Yeah, we can’t do the same thing with American eggs, unfortunately, not fresh enough. 🙂
sukiyaki is my favorite food since I’m half Japanese. my wife, who’s American tried to make it. it was good except the noodles were like rubber. what did she do wrong?
Hi Chris! What types of noodles did you use? Are you taking about Shirataki noodles (yam noodles) or Udon noodles that you put at the end?
Since you mentioned “rubbery” texture, I think you’re talking about shirataki noodles. Have you had Konnyaku (konjac) before? Shirataki noodles are similar texture. I think you can say it’s rubbery texture but that’s how it is, even without cooking. 🙂