Skip to playerSkip to main content
  • 1 day ago
Kitsune udon is an authentic Japanese noodle soup recipe that combines chewy udon noodles, savory dashi broth, and sweet simmered aburaage fried tofu. The broth is usually made with dashi, soy sauce, mirin, and a little sugar to create a clean balance of umami, saltiness, and gentle sweetness. Aburaage is simmered separately in soy sauce, mirin, sugar, and dashi until it absorbs the seasoning and becomes juicy with a rich sweet savory flavor. The udon noodles are warmed in the broth, then topped with the tofu, green onion, kamaboko, wakame, or shichimi for extra aroma. The final kitsune udon is warm, simple, and comforting, making it easy to serve for lunch or dinner with soft tofu, springy noodles, and classic Japanese flavor.
Transcript
00:00Here's the secret behind Japan's most beloved comfort bowl.
00:04Kitsune don isn't about noodles, it's about this golden aborage that soaps up flavour like magic.
00:10For a printable version of this recipe, visit my website, just google Kitsune don statue to find me.
00:16Fill up with enough water to fully submerge 4 pieces of aborage, which is fried tofu pouches.
00:23Bring it to a rolling boil, then add half a teaspoon of salt and slide aborage in.
00:28Use a droplet, a small heap plate, or even a parchment round to keep them under the surface.
00:37Aborage is usually in the refrigerated or frozen section of Japanese or larger Asian markets.
00:43Sometimes it's labelled aborage or fried bean curd.
00:47Boil for 3 minutes, this quick aburanuki oil removal helps the tofu soak up all of our delicious seasoning later.
00:56Rinse the aborage in cold water and squeeze out excess liquid.
01:02Take a small saucepan and add 150ml of dashi stock, 2 tablespoons of sugar, 2 tablespoons of mirin, and 1
01:12tablespoon of sake.
01:15Heat up medium until the sugar dissolves and the liquid starts to steam, about 85 to 90 degrees Celsius.
01:24For plant-based options, swap the bonito konbu dashi for a vegan dashi made with dried shiitake and konbu.
01:31Stir in 2 tablespoons of Japanese light soy sauce, which is usukutsu shoyu.
01:37Bring the liquid almost to a boil, then lower to a gentle simmer and nestle in the aborage.
01:44Drop it back on and simmer for 15 minutes or until the liquid reduces by about one third.
01:51If the bubbles get too rowdy, lower the heat.
01:58Usukutsu shoyu is paler but a touch saltier than regular koikutsu shoyu.
02:03If you only have regular one, start with a little less to keep the colour bright.
02:15Transfer the seasoned aborage and the cooking liquid to a wide shallow container.
02:20Recall, then cover and refrigerate for at least a few hours.
02:25Overnight is even better.
02:27Use within 24 hours for the best texture and balanced flavour.
02:32Noodles and broth time.
02:35Boil 4 portions of udon according to the package.
02:39They can be fresh, frozen or dried or are fine.
02:43Amusing store bought fresh udon today.
02:45And as a weekend project, you can also make your own at home too.
02:50Once cooked, drain and rinse them with hot water to wash off surface starch.
02:56In a saucepan, pour in 1 litre of dashi stock.
02:59Add 4 tablespoons of usukutsu or regular soy sauce.
03:04And 2 tablespoons of mirin.
03:06Bring to a boil for 1-2 minutes.
03:09Turn off the heat.
03:10And add half teaspoon of salt.
03:12Dashi can be made from scratch from tea bag style packets for a fast and great flavour
03:17or from instant granules if needed.
03:21They're bolder and a bit seasoned but they work.
03:23Take the chilled toast pouches and cut each in half diagonally to make meat triangles.
03:31Divide the hot noodles between bowls.
03:34Ladle on the steaming broth.
03:36Add slices of kamaboko fish cake or leave it out for plant-based bowls.
03:43Then lay the glossier parage triangles on top.
03:47Then add a general scatter of finely chopped green onions.
03:51Serve immediately with the steam making the room smell like dashi and good decisions.
03:57This is corn food food at its finest.
03:59The kind of bowl that warms you from the inside out and reminds you why sometimes the simplest dishes are
04:06the most profound.
04:08Want even more delicious recipes?
04:10Grab my free cookbook from the link in the description.
04:14Okay, let's go over the ingredients one more time.
04:17And if you're ready to cook, grab the written instructions by clicking the full recipe box with a picture that's
04:22about to pop up on your screen.
04:24Here we go, the link to the full recipe is on the screen for you now.
04:27And if you want to watch more similar videos, don't miss my wooden playlist popping up on your screen as
04:32well.
04:33Thanks so much for watching and I hope to see you in the next one. Bye.
Comments

Recommended