The Japanese grill From classic yakitori to steak, seafood, and vegetables

Tadashi Ono, 1962-

Book - 2011

"American grilling, Japanese flavors: That's the irresistible idea behind The Japanese Grill. In this bold cookbook, chef Tadashi Ono and writer Harris Salat, avid grillers both, share a key insight--that the live-fire cooking we adore here at home marries perfectly with mouthwatering traditional Japanese ingredients like soy sauce and miso. Packed with fast-and-easy recipes, delicious, versatile marinades and step-by-step techniques, The Japanese Grill will have you grilling amazing steaks, pork chops, salmon, roasted tomatoes, and whole chicken, as well as authentic favorites like yakitori, yaki onigiri, and whole salt-grilled fish. Whether you use charcoal or gas, are a grilling newbie or disciple, we guarantee you will love di...shes like miso-marinated spare ribs, garlic-soy sauce porterhouse, crispy chicken wings, yuzu-chili scallops, and soy sauce-and-lemon grilled eggplant. Ono and Salat include menu suggestions for sophisticated entertaining as well as quick-grilling choices for healthy weekday meals, plus a slew of fast, delectable sides that pair perfectly with anything off the fire. Grilling has been a centerpiece of Japanese cooking for centuries; when you taste the incredible dishes in The Japanese Grill, both contemporary and traditional, you'll become a believer, too"--

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Subjects
Published
New York : Ten Speed Press 2011.
Language
English
Main Author
Tadashi Ono, 1962- (-)
Other Authors
Harris Salat (-)
Edition
1st ed
Physical Description
184 p. : col. ill
Bibliography
Includes index.
ISBN
9781580087377
  • Acknowledgements
  • Introduction
  • The Basics: Japanese Ingredients
  • The Basics: Grilling
  • Classic Yakitori
  • Classic Chicken Leg
  • Chicken and Scallion
  • Minced Chicken
  • Chicken Liver
  • Gizzard
  • Neck
  • Chicken Heart
  • Skin
  • Chicken Oysters
  • Chicken Breast with Wasabi
  • Chicken Tenderloins with Ume Paste
  • Ume-Wasabi Duck Breast
  • Bacon Asparagus
  • Pork Belly
  • Beef Liver
  • Beef Tongue
  • Shiitake Mushrooms
  • Shishito Peppers
  • Asparagus
  • Garlic
  • Poultry
  • Grilled Chicken Breast Teriyaki
  • Chicken Breasts with Yuzu Kosho Marinade
  • Bone-In Chicken Breast with Soy Sauce
  • Pounded Chicken Breasts with Yukari Shiso Marinade
  • Sansho-Rubbed Butterflied Chicken Legs
  • Crispy Chicken Wings with Seven-Spice-Powder Marinade
  • Ginger-Garlic Half Chicken
  • Turkey Burger with Quick Barbecue Sauce
  • Japanese-Style Turkey Pastrami
  • Butterflied Cornish Game Hens with Orange-Soy Sauce Glaze
  • Miso-Glazed Quail
  • Butterflied Hatcho-Miso Squab
  • Green Tea-Smoked Duck
  • FISH AND SEAFOOD
  • Salt-Grilled Head-On Shrimp
  • Salt-Grilled Whole Sardines
  • Whole Red Snapper with Ponzu
  • Yuzu Kosho Bronzini
  • Yuzu Kosho Scallops
  • Garlic-Yuzu Kosho Shrimp
  • Swordfish Teriyaki
  • Salmon with Shiso Pesto
  • Tuna with Avocado-Wasabi Puree
  • Mako Shark with Scallion Oil
  • Mahi Mahi with Sesame-Soy Sauce Dipping Sauce
  • Hot-Oil Halibut
  • Grilled Lobster with Ponzu Brown Butter
  • Squid with Ginger-Soy Sauce Marinade
  • Littleneck Clams with Soy Sauce
  • Foil-Baked Whole Trout with Lemon-Soy Sauce Butter
  • Catfish in Bamboo Leaf
  • Cedar Plank-Grilled Arctic Char
  • Smoked Trout with Wasabi Sour Cream
  • Salt-Cured Salmon
  • Miso-Cured Spanish Mackerel
  • Sakekasu-Cured Black Cod
  • Bronzini Himono
  • MEAT
  • Thin-Sliced Tenderloin with Wasabi Gyu Dare
  • Porterhouse with Garlic-Soy Sauce Marinade
  • Sirloin Steak with Karashi Mustard Gyu Dare
  • Bone-In Rib-Eye with Wasabi Sour Cream
  • Filet Mignon with Ume Gyu Dare
  • "Tokyo Broil" Flank Steak
  • Skirt Steak with Red Miso
  • Hatcho-Miso-Marinated Hanger Steak
  • Grilled Wagyu with Ponzu
  • Scallion Beef
  • Two-Minute Steak with Shiso Butter
  • Japanese Burgers with Wasabi Ketchup
  • Karashi Mustard Short Ribs
  • "Kalbi"-Style Short Ribs
  • Veal Cutlets with Ponzu Butter
  • Veal Chops with Shiitake Dashi
  • Pork Chops with Yuzu-Miso Marinade
  • Ginger Boneless Pork Shoulder
  • Chashu Pork
  • Crispy Pork Belly with Garlic-Miso Dipping Sauce
  • Japanese-Style Barbecued Baby Back Ribs
  • Pork Spare Ribs with Miso-Sansho Marinade
  • Garlic-Yuzu Kosho Lamb Chops
  • Lamb Shoulder Steak with Japanese Curry Oil
  • Calf's Liver with Ginger-Sesame Oil
  • VEGETABLES
  • Whole Grilled Japanese Eggplant with Lemon and Soy Sauce
  • Corn Brushed with Soy Sauce and Mirin
  • Asparagus with Miso-Mayonnaise Dipping Sauce
  • Portobello with Freshly Chopped Mitsuba
  • Zucchini with Shiso and Olive Oil
  • Tomatoes with Garlic, Sansho, and Olive Oil
  • Foil-Baked Mushrooms with Ponzu Butter
  • Foil-Baked Edamame
  • Foil-Baked Green Beans with Soy Sauce and Garlic
  • Foil-Baked Onions with Soy Sauce
  • Foil-Baked Garlic with Miso
  • Foil-Baked Sweet Potatoes with Salt
  • Foil-Baked Carrots with Salt
  • Foil-Wrapped Taro Root
  • YAKI ONIGIRI
  • Soy Sauce Yaki Onigiri
  • Miso Yaki Onigiri
  • Shiso-Ume Yaki Onigiri
  • Yukari Shiso Salt Yaki Onigiri
  • Ao Nori Seaweed and Sesame Yaki Onigiri
  • Bonito Flakes-Black Sesame Yaki Onigiri
  • PERFECT SIDE DISHES
  • Watercress Salad with Karashi Mustard Wafu Dressing
  • Tomato-Shiso Salad with Garlic Wafu Dressing
  • Wakame Salad with Ginger Wafu Dressing
  • Onion Salad with Soy Sauce and Bonito
  • Green Cabbage Salad with Carrot-Ginger Vinaigrette
  • Daikon Salad with Dried Tiny Shrimp
  • Spinach with Ground Sesame
  • Spinach-Bacon Salad with Creamy Tofu Dressing
  • Pickled Lotus Root
  • Arugula-Jako Salad with Soy Sauce Vinaigrette
  • Spicy Bean Sprouts
  • Romaine Hearts with Miso-Mustard Dressing
  • Crudités with Three Dipping Sauces
  • Tofu Salad à la Provençal
  • Sources
  • Finding Ingredients
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

The land of the rising sun shares its border with barbecue country in this simple and salty collection. Japanese-born Ono, who is executive chef at New York's Matsuri restaurant, and American food writer Salat, present a miso mashup of over 100 recipes covering poultry, steak, seafood, and vegetables. They begin with yakitori, skewered cuts of just about anything grilled, then sauced, then grilled some more to create a caramelized coating. The classic sauce involves sake, soy sauce, and brown sugar in a stock made from chicken bones. And indeed, no part of a hen is neglected, with the liver, gizzard, neck, heart, and skin all deemed skewer-worthy. As the authors note, religious beliefs essentially kept red meat out of the Japanese diet till the mid-19th century. Perhaps that is why the beef entrees seem so diabolically tempting. The brazen, cross-cultural flirtation of skirt steak with red miso is outdone only by the bone-in rib-eye with wasabi sour cream. Either would pair nicely with any of the half a dozen yaki onigiri, grilled rice balls seasoned with various fermented flavors. A handy source list for those wishing to buy ingredients online is provided, and to aid those within striking distance of a Japanese market, there is a list of 22 key ingredients written out in both English and Japanese. (Apr.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Ono (coauthor, with Salat, Japanese Hot Pots), executive chef at New York's famed Matsuri, demystifies the art of grilling and Japanese-inspired marinades. He highlights "Master Recipes" of essential marinades and basic meals. The grilling techniques are described in easy-to-follow, illustrated instructions. Many of the recipes are simple and require just two to four ingredients easily found at most grocery stores. For the specialty ingredients, the authors provide an appendix of sources. After a chapter on classic yakitori (skewered small bites), there are recipes for Japanese American fusion dishes, such as Japanese Style Turkey Pastrami and Karashi Mustard Short Ribs. The book finishes with a chapter on yaki onigiri, Japanese rice balls. VERDICT This beautifully simple book on a topic rarely covered in depth will please Asian cooking enthusiasts and grilling fanatics alike. Highly recommended.-Ann Wilberton, Middletown Twp. P.L., NJ (c) Copyright 2011. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

THE BASICS: GRILLING SETTING UP YOUR GRILL What kind of grill should you use, charcoal or gas? It boils down to heat and convenience. Which is best for you? A totally personal choice. Tadashi, who grills for his family almost every Sunday, three seasons a year, insists on charcoal for its purity of cooking and flavor. Harris also loves charcoal, but keeps a gas grill handy for hurry-up weeknight grilling. For this book, we stick to the two most popular grilling options for our recipes, kettle-style charcoal grills and gas grills, and base our timings on them.   Charcoal grills  Not only do charcoal grills pump out a lot more heat than gas grills, they also surround foods with enveloping rays from the glowing coals, searing and cooking foods in a way gas grills just can't. And besides the high temperatures, charcoal, especially lump charcoal, produces a singular smoky flavor. With charcoal grills, though, you have to start a fire, maintain it, manage temperature, and clean up the ash. It's more work, but  the challenge makes the results that much more rewarding. Gas grills   No doubt about it, gas grills are much more convenient to use than charcoal grills and easier to control, and there's no messy ash to trash after dinner. And gas grills like the Weber we used in our book have special metal bars that vaporize dripping juices, thus adding flavor while eliminating flare-ups. Kamado grills   We also want to mention charcoal-fueled kamado-style grills like the Big Green Egg. These are grills lined with high-fire ceramics or other types of earthenware that do a great job of retaining heat, so you can grill much hotter. They have a cultish following; as fans can attest, foods grilled on them turn out fantastic. If you do use an Egg or any other kamado-style grill for the recipes in this book, follow its user's guide to adjust recipe timing. Charcoal   When grilling with charcoal, a good-quality lump hardwood charcoal is best. These irregularly shaped chunks of natural charcoal are 100 percent hardwood and contain no additives. They burn hotter and faster than charcoal briquettes, so cook foods better. Lump charcoal is more expensive than briquettes, but if it fits your budget, go with it. Otherwise, look for all-natural charcoal briquettes, which are not laced with additives like regular briquettes. Chimney starter   With any type of charcoal, light the briquettes with a cylindrical chimney starter rather than lighter fuel, which infuses food with an unappealing, fuel-tinged flavor. You'll find them at any store that sells grilling equipment. To use : Pile charcoal into the top chamber and stuff crumpled newspaper into the bottom chamber, which has holes on the sides. Set the chimney starter on the lower grate of your grill (which holds the charcoal) and light the newspaper. The coals will ignite; when they're covered with gray ash, they're ready for cooking. (Chimney starters get very hot and must be handled safely. Be sure to fully read the user's guide that accompanies this tool before the first use.)   Japanese Grills Kettle and gas grills rule the American backyard. But Japanese use different kinds of grills that are also terrific and available here. First, let's dispel a myth: In Japan, hibachi aren't grills. There, they are cylindrical or box-shaped containers (earthenware or earthenware-lined) used for smoldering charcoal to heat a room. Somehow, in America, the word hibachi came to mean a small-sized grill or a flat-top griddle. Small Japanese grills are actually called shichirin . These grills are made from earthenware or ceramics; come in different sizes; and are cylindrical, square, or rectangular. Some are small enough to rest on a tabletop, which you see in restaurants in Japan. Charcoal-fired konro are larger grills, typically rectangular shaped, and made from heatproof ceramics or metal. These are the grills used at yakitori joints to sizzle perfect skewers of chicken; their narrow fireboxes concentrate and focus heat from the charcoal while at the same time insulating the hands that turn the skewers. Konro are perfect for Japanese skewer grilling (page 19) but also typically come with removable wire-mesh cooking grates, so you can use those as well. Konro are sold in various sizes; a 54-centimeter version (about 21 inches) is perfect for home use, and, as we can personally attest, an incredible way to grill foods (see "Sources," page 177 , for retailers). With all these Japanese grills, you don't use typical American charcoal, lump or not. Instead, you burn binchotan, an almost magical, artisan-made Japanese charcoal (see "Binchotan," page 12).  INDISPENSABLE TOOLS No matter how kitted-out your charcoal or gas set-up, you need the right tools to grill successfully. You don't need a ton of stuff, just these indispensable tools:   Grill brush   A heavy duty, steel-bristled brush will let you scrape off the gunk that accumulates on your cooking grate. Use it before and after you grill so foods won't stick. Preheat the grill, then brush the cooking grate like you mean it. Oil wad   This one's a DIY (do-it-yourself) tool--either a wad of paper towels or an old kitchen towel. It works in tandem with the grill brush to ensure that food won't stick. Dunk the wadded paper or towel in a small container of vegetable oil (1/2 cup is fine). Preheat the grill, then scrape the cooking grate with your grill brush. Now grab the oil-soaked wad with tongs and completely coat the cooking grate with oil. It might get a little smoky when you oil the grate, but don't worry, that will dissipate quickly. Tongs  Buy a pair of sturdy, 16-inch-long steel tongs to safely turn foods on the grill without burning yourself (and also do the oil-wad trick described before). Use tongs, not a monster fork, to turn foods; you don't want to pierce your precious (and expensive) steak or chop and let all its luscious juices run out. Kitchen chopsticks   Called saibashi in Japanese, these super-sized kitchen chopsticks (14 inches long and up) are incredibly handy for turning delicate or small ingredients on the grill--scallops or spears of asparagus, for example. You can find these inexpensive wood or bamboo chopsticks at Japanese food markets. Spatula   A spatula is critical for flipping fish fillets, burgers, or any other delicate foods that can break apart on the grill. Use a spatula with a blade at least 6 inches long. An all-metal spatula, the kind that does yeoman's work on the kitchen stove, is great. If you're grilling fish fillets, keep two handy, which makes turning easier. Basting brush   We baste like nobody's business in this book, so a sturdy basting brush is a must. The best choice is a natural boar-bristle brush with a long handle that will keep your hand safely away from the heat. Make sure to hand-wash these brushes in hot, soapy water after each use. Avoid nylon bristles as they can melt if they touch the grate. An alternative is a brush with silicone bristles, as silicone can withstand higher temperatures. Spray bottle   Keep a water-filled spray bottle handy to kill flare-ups before they scorch and blacken your food. Hand fan   Use a sturdy hand fan or paddle fan two ways: to fan coals when you start your fire so they reach grilling temperature quicker and to fan coals when they're losing power, to revive them with a blast of oxygen-rich air.    Binchotan Made from the branches of Japanese oak, binchotan is a revered, traditional white charcoal. While the word dates back to the 1700s, charcoal-making in Japan reaches back over a millennium and has played a central role in Japanese cooking since. What makes binchotan so special? Produced by artisans following the laborious methods handed down through the generations, the oak is fired in an earthen kiln for about a week, producing charcoal so hard it clinks like glass when struck together. Binchotan , which still keeps the natural shape of the branches from which it's derived, burns for hours, smokeless and odorless, at a whopping 1,800˚F. It's an integral element of chanoyu , the Japanese way of tea, where it's used for ritualistically heating the water. It is also essential for Japanese grilling because the very action of its intense infrared rays creates umami flavor compounds in ingredients--so just grilling something on binchotan makes it taste better. The best binchotan comes from one tiny area in Japan, the Kishu region of Wakayama Prefecture, and is expensive; only certain oak of a certain age can be used, and few charcoal artisans plying this trade remain. But pricy or not, binchotan is the charcoal of choice for chefs devoted to grilling. Because it's so hard, lighting binchotan is tough; you have to place it over a live fire to ignite it. Once lit, it often takes an hour or more for the charcoal to become coated with white ash and reach cooking temperature. But because it burns so long, you can very carefully transfer red-hot binchotan from a grill to a hikeshi tsubo (fire-extinguishing pot), a special earthenware jar that will hold and eventually extinguish the charcoal, so you can use it again and again, until it reduces to dust.    MANAGING HEAT Managing heat on a stovetop is easy: just adjust the burner's controls this way or that and choose cookware like copper or cast iron to improve heat retention. Managing heat on the grill, on the other hand, is a whole different ballgame. On the grill, of course, you're dealing with direct flames, so you have to know how to do two things. First, you have to gauge temperature using either "hand over fire" technique or a grilling temperature (see "Temperature Chart," below). And second, depending on the recipe, we grill one of three ways: direct, two-zone, or indirect.    Flare-Ups When fat drips from foods and hits red-hot coals, the fat smokes--then flares. These mini-fires can spell disaster for the grill, coating ingredients with black soot or scorching them beyond repair. A cover helps fight flare-ups by cutting off oxygen; otherwise use these two methods: First, leave enough room on the grill to shift foods. As soon as there's a flare-up, move an ingredient to another part of the grill while the flare-up burns out. Another option is to spray down those flames with a water-filled spray bottle. (You can do both options concurrently, of course.) Either way, you want to grill on coals, not shooting flames, so tamp down flare-ups right away.   Grill Marks The gorgeous crosshatched grill marks that you see on the meat, chicken, and fish photographed for this book were created by Tadashi, who did the grilling for the pictures, and who is a pro chef. But with a little practice, home cooks can also sear these distinctive marks on the foods they prepare. Here's how: Sear your ingredient for about 1 minute. Now, without flipping, give the ingredient a quarter turn (so it shifts 90 degrees). When it's time to flip the ingredient , repeat this process on the other side. Grill marks aren't a must, but they do make foods look pretty--and mouthwatering.   Secrets to Great Grilling Here are the ten most important things to keep in mind when grilling: 1. Know thy grill. Your particular grill might be smaller or larger than the ones we used to test our dishes, or it could be a Big Green Egg. Adjust timing accordingly. Test for doneness when your food looks done. 2. Marinate with a flat-bottomed vessel. Use a baking dish, sheet pan, or even a plate to marinate. A flat bottom provides more surface area than a bowl, so the ingredients will better absorb the marinade. 3. Make sure the coals are hot. For charcoal grills, don't start grilling until the charcoal is fully lit, glowing, and covered in a fine gray ash. Use a hand fan to hasten this process. 4. Preheat your grill. Make sure the grill--and especially the cooking grate--is adequately preheated before starting to grill. Preheat the grate for at least 5 minutes. For a gas grill, close the cover to preheat. 5. Brush and oil the cooking grate every time. Repeat: brush and oil your cooking grate every time you grill to keep food from sticking to the grate. We can't emphasize this enough. 6. Keep the vents open. For charcoal grills, make sure the vents on the bottom and cover are open to allow oxygen to fuel your fire. Also, make sure the vents on the bottom aren't clogged, so air can get in. 7. Use the cover strategically. We'll tell you which foods must be grilled covered. The cover traps heat, so thick cuts of meat cook evenly, and also cuts the flow of oxygen, reducing flare-ups. 8. Add more coals. Keep the temperature consistent by adding more charcoal to the grill before the fire gets too weak. After coals burn for about 1 hour, it's time to replenish. For gas grills, always keep an extra tank on hand so you don't run out. 9. Keep your grill clean. Brush the cooking grate after grilling, while it's still hot. When the grill cools, scoop out the leftover ash. For gas grills, clean the briquettes or lava rocks once they cool and keep the gas jets unclogged. Wipe down the grill regularly with soap and water. 10. Remember, grilling is an art. That's the fun and beauty of it. When you're cooking over fire, you're really cooking--that's why we love grilling! So use your judgment: remember, the recipes in our book are guidelines. Grill according to your gut, your equipment, your ingredients, and your environment (grilling in Denver, the Mile High City, say, requires more time than grilling in Death Valley).    CLASSIC YAKITORI SOUL FOOD, COMFORT FOOD, DRINKING FOOD--yakitori is all this and more. The word literally means "grilled bird," but yakitori can also include beef, pork, duck, and veggies. No matter which ingredients you use, yakitori is always bite-sized pieces, impaled on skewers, and grilled over fire, preferably one fueled with Japanese binchotan (see "Binchotan," page 12). Chicken remains the primary ingredient for yakitori--some old school joints serve nothing but--prepared either seasoned with salt or basted with tare (pronounced "tar-eh"), or sauce. But the tare isn't brushed on willy-nilly. The secret to great yakitori is grilling the chicken partway, coating with the sauce, and then grilling the coated chicken. So you grill both the chicken and the sauce. This one-two punch is the reason why yakitori comes out double-caramelized and so lip-smacking delicious. And it's why yakitori is one of the most popular and beloved foods in Japan.   Although there were references to it some two hundred years earlier, yakitori really caught the fancy of the general population in the nineteenth century when Japan reopened to the West and its citizens began consuming meat again (see "Meat in Japanese Cooking," page 2). Interestingly, the most prized meat at that time was chicken, not beef, and high-end "chicken cuisine" restaurants began popping up all over Japan, especially along routes to important shrines. It was the leftover bits of chicken from these restaurants that ended up spawning another enterprise: skewering and grilling scraps of chicken as yakitori. Eventually, yakitori became woven into the fabric of Japanese life, especially after World War II, with the skewers offered at yatai (mobile food stalls) and mom-and-pop joints. A singular yakitori culture and connoisseurship were born, with this simple cooking often raised to a level of culinary art. Customers enjoy every part of the chicken imaginable--and some unimaginable--and feast on heirloom breeds, birds of different ages, even fighting cock, reveling in a celebration of chicken-y flavors and textures. In fact, Tadashi's earliest childhood memories include tagging along as his father slipped out of the house to meet his pals for yakitori and beer at "Beautiful Land," the corner hole-in-the-wall where Tadashi developed a lifelong devotion to these skewers.   Because yakitori places are so widespread in Japan--and because most people there live in homes without outdoor space--grilling skewers is usually left to professional cooks. But here in America, where a Weber is almost a birthright, we've made it our mission to show you how you can prepare these delicious skewers at home. They're fast and easy to prepare; easy to handle on the grill; and, most importantly, easy to grab hold of and eat. Once you try yakitori at home, we personally guarantee you'll get hooked!   A couple of practical things to keep in mind: Tare or salt?  Chicken yakitori is typically grilled two ways: double-caramelized with the tare or grilled straight up with just salt. Depending on the part of the bird, we suggest the most popular option in the recipes that follow, but feel free to switch if you'd prefer--ultimately it's up to you. Also, some chicken yakitori recipes, and some nonchicken yakitori, have other traditional flavor pairings, which we stick to, rather than the tare or salt. Accents   We recommend the two primary accents, shichimi togarashi (page 7) and sansho (page 7), depending on the skewer; but again, feel free to switch up, or even mix the two together to make your own custom blend. Excerpted from The Japanese Grill: From Classic Yakitori to Steak, Seafood, and Vegetables by Tadashi Ono, Harris Salat All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.