Japanese Style 21st Celebration

Our son just turned 21!! I can’t believe it!! He would have loved to go to Japan this year however that is not possible so I cooked a Japanese style feast for the family at home instead.

Japanese Cheesecake
Black Sesame Ice Cream & Matcha Green Tea Ice Cream
Hokkaido Milk Loaf
Katsu Sando
Okonomiyaki
Japanese Style Salads with Sesame Dressing!!
Miso Soup
I borrowed my friend’s Hibachi
Tsukune with Homemade Togarashi
Chawanmushi
Karaage Chicken
Umeboshi Martini
Nasu Dengaku – Miso Glazed Aubergine (and I used my homemade miso too)
Tempura Veggies

Three Japanese Inspire Cooking Class

We had a most enjoyable evening at Three Japanese restaurant with our INSPIRE aprons on.

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Owners Yasuko & Ken were so generous with their time & knowledge. This is the 3rd class we have run with them, but the first one in their new location in Battery Point. We first met Yasuko when she bought her first Thermomix, she loved it so much that she kept taking it back & forward to the restaurant & then decided they had to buy one another one for the restaurant.

Arwen, Yasuko & Charlie

I just love how passionate Three Japanese are about sourcing quality ingredients – even the crockery is sourced from their hometown Saga in Japan.

The story behind Three Japanese
Ken (Norikazu Hirai) and Yasuko (Yasuko Hayashi) first met at high school in Japan in 1997 whilst playing soccer.
After graduating from high school, Ken started working in a kitchen in Japan, where he learned a variety of cooking styles, he arrived in Hobart in 2012 on a working (surfing) holiday.
Yasuko moved to Osaka to go to university and her first visit to Hobart was through the exchange Uni program. She then took every opportunity to be in Hobart (8 visits!!) until she finally moved here in 2009.
Ken and Yasuko remained good friends throughout this time because of their love of great food!
In 2014, they realised their dream when they had an opportunity to start a restaurant together with Yasuko’s partner Yuya who had been a baker in Japan & then graduated from Drysdale, he was working as a chef at the Source Restaurant (MONA).
This is why they called the restaurant – ‘Three Japanese’.
They love fresh, real food, and use only real Japanese ingredients and freshest local veggies, fish and meat to make delicious authentic Japanese food.

We set the tables ready for our class, everyone was provided with a recipe booklet to take home & emailed a copy in an eBook format.

 

3J TM

Our Menu for the Evening

Japanese Green Tea on arrival

Chawanmushi – Savoury Custard (including the recipe for dashi stock)

The Three Japanese Tasting Plate: Miso Soup: Karaage Chicken: Rice: Tsukudani (preserved seaweed & bonito fish)

Sesame Pudding with Matcha Green Tea Ice Cream

Bonus recipe to take home: Umashi (plum sake) sorbet

(It was so much fun recipe testing: here are the photos of all the dishes I tested. After I showed Yasuko these pictures she told me I had the Japanese spice containers upside down!! I had studied Japanese in high school & didn’t notice the writing upside down!! I even used one the images in the recipe booklet!! When we told our guests & they thought it was very funny too !!)

Savoury custard LS High Res karaage chicken LS High Res Miso LS High Res Taste plate LS High Res MATCHA TEA LS High Res

Chawanmushi had been specially requested & put onto the menu for the night. It is not currently on the menu because they don’t have a commercial steamer at their new venue so we had to bring as many Thermomix as we could to the restaurant as we could to steam approx 20 savoury custards.

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We had 6 Thermomix in the kitchen & one set up in the dinning room to demonstrate through the class. It was well worth it though our guests loved tasting the dish & learning how to cook it. I showed our guests how to make the dashi stock using shaved dried bontio fish flakes & kombu (seaweed). Dashi is the base for a lot of Japanese dishes so it is important as usual to use the best quality ingredients you can get. You can buy powdered dashi but you won’t have that quality & depth of flavour.

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We also used the dashi to make the traditional miso soup demonstrated by Yasuko. The kombu & bonito are not thrown out after making the dashi stock you can then use them with mirin to make tsukuduni a delicious preserve served with rice. Ken our chef came out & demonstrated the tsukudani to the class & showed us his awesome knives. We also showed guests how to make the karaage chicken it is one of the most popular dishes on the menu and very easy to prepare at home. The chicken is marinated for approx 1 hr & lightly coated in potato flour & deep fried. We also came up with some other ways of using the same marinade, either steaming, baking or grilling the chicken.

BLACK SESAME PUDDING MED RESTeapot - med quality

Then Charlie showed guests how to make the sesame pudding & we learned how to make the Japanese brown sugar sauce. The brown sugar is sourced from Okinawa in Japan. Yasuko also showed us how to make matcha green tea – this is the tea that is traditionally used at Japanese ceremonies.

Our guests left full of delicious food & inspiration to cook some of the dishes at home, they could even purchase some ingredients to take home with them. We are so grateful to have the the opportunity to work with Three Japanese again, their passion for their food is infectious.