Yes, You Can Make Those Little Japanese Omelets at Home Recipe | Extra Crispy (2024)

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Yes, You Can Make Those Little Japanese Omelets at Home Recipe | Extra Crispy (1)

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When I visited Japan, I did what many tourists do on their first bleary-eyed mornings in the Land of the Rising Sun: I went to the Tsukiji Fish Market. The inner market is famous for its pre-dawn tuna auction, but what fewer people talk about is the outer market: the ring of pickle shops, kitchenware stands, and produce vendors that lines the perimeter of the fish market itself. It’s where many locals grab a quick breakfast on the go. Street food in general isn’t huge in Tokyo, but the outer market has a handful of vendors hawking food-to-go, including several tamagoyaki stalls, which I quickly zeroed in on.Tamagoyaki is a Japanese omelet that’s typically made by rolling several thin layers of egg (mixed with soy, mirin, sugar, and sometimes dashi, in which case it’s called dashimaki) on top of each other while they cook in a small rectangular pan designated solely for this purpose. They can skew savory or sweet, and some of the vendors near Tsukiji bolster theirs with seafood or seaweed, though plain is the most common. Neatly pressed yellow slices of tamagoyaki show up all over the place in Japanese cuisine: in bento boxes, sushi restaurants (in Jiro Dreams of Sushi, an apprentice goes through ten years of preparation before being allowed to make it), and sometimes with breakfast (where it’s admittedly not the start of the show—that would be grilled fish and pickles—but plays a valuable supporting role).I’d had tamagoyaki before, but never seen it made, and I stood rapt while the vendors tilted their makiyakinabe pans over an open flame, carefully sending thin streams of egg batter across the surface, then using oversized chopsticks to elegantly roll each cooked layer into a neat rectangle. I’m not squeamish about eating mackerel for breakfast, but in those first early-morning hours at Tsukiji, I could think of nothing I wanted more than tamagoyaki. Served hot, tamagoyaki almost melts in your mouth; when cool or at room temperature, the eggs settle into themselves, becoming dense, soft, and deeply satisfying. I wolfed down an entire tray of the stuff on the street, like a lady.Tamagoyaki isn’t hard to find in Japanese restaurants where I live, in New York, but too many versions are chalky and dry, lacking the silky-smooth texture and nuanced salty-sweet flavor I’d fallen hard for in Japan. I wanted to make my own, but I don’t have room in my tiny apartment for single-use kitchen items like makiyakinabe pans; plus, I doubt my abilities to roll such perfect and neat little egg layers. I needed to find another way.This is where Yuji Haraguchi steps in. The owner of Okonomi restaurant and the newly opened Osakana fish market in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, Haraguchi has been serving traditional Japanese breakfasts to New Yorkers since Okonomi opened in 2014. Haraguchi’sichiju-sansai set breakfast involves grilled fish (all domestic), rice, pickles, miso soup, vegetables, and, most importantly to me, a small cube of tamagoyaki. Okonomi’s tamagoyaki tastes different—fresher, softer, lighter—than anyone else’s I’d eaten here, and it looks different, too: a perfect, shiny-smooth cube of yellow egg cake, with a burnished brown top, and no folded egg layers in sight. I had to find out how he made it.Turns out, Haraguchi had many of the same concerns as me when developing his tamagoyaki recipe: namely, a lack of space and a lack of the desire to spend hours carefully rolling thin sheets of egg just so (“The traditional technique is hard!”). He also has a lack of open flame in his restaurant; everything at Okonomi is cooked on an induction burner or in the convection oven. So he developed a technique for baked tamagoyaki that’s simpler, lighter, and arguably tastier than the traditional stovetop method.Haraguchi’s method is to blend together eggs with sugar, white soy sauce, dashi, mirin and soy milk creamer, then pour the mixture into a baking sheet and cook it in the oven. “When we first made it, I have to say, it was really bland,” says Okonomi’s head chef, JT Vuong. “But we’ve found the perfect amount of sugar and salt, while still keeping the flavor straightforward.”White soy sauce is less fermented (and therefore lighter in color), but saltier-tasting than regular brown, and the soy milk adds richness and creaminess, albeit to subtle effect. “Heavy cream and dairy in general aren’t a big part of Japanese cuisine,” says Haraguchi, who wanted to develop a dairy-free recipe to serve alongside his seafood-heavy breakfast spread. “Soy milk doesn’t overpower the flavor profile.” The finished product is a tamagoyaki that’s at once creamy, custardy, delicate, and delicious. Here’s how to make it at home.Baked TamagoyakiRecipe adapted from Okonomi in Brooklyn. Makes one 9 x 9-inch cake.All ingredients should be chilled prior to mixing.

By Jamie Feldmar

Recipe by Extra Crispy

Yes, You Can Make Those Little Japanese Omelets at Home

Yes, You Can Make Those Little Japanese Omelets at Home Recipe | Extra Crispy (2)

Credit: Photos by David Williams

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Ingredients

Ingredient Checklist

Directions

Instructions Checklist
  • In a large mixing bowl or container, combine all ingredients and blend thoroughly, either using an immersion blender or whisking well by hand. Try to avoid incorporating too much air into the mixture, as it will lead to unattractive bubbles in the tamagoyaki.

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  • Chill the mixture overnight in the refrigerator to allow flavors to meld.

  • The next day, preheat the oven to 300°F and remove the egg mixture from the refrigerator. Line a 9 x 9-inch baking sheet with walls at least ¼ inch high with parchment paper. Gently re-whisk the eggs for a few seconds to re-incorporate all ingredients, then pour the eggs through a strainer into the baking sheet.

  • Bake at 300°F for 10 minutes, then lower the temperature to 200°F and continue baking for 1 hour and 15 minutes. The tamagoyaki is done when it’s set along the edges and still jiggling ever-so-slightly in the center, and the top has become an even golden brown color.

  • Allow tamagoyaki to cool at room temperature, then cut into square or rectangular slices using the tip of a very sharp knife. The remaining tamagoyaki can be sealed in plastic wrap in the refrigerator for 2-3 days.

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Yes, You Can Make Those Little Japanese Omelets at Home Recipe | Extra Crispy (2024)

FAQs

What is the Japanese omelette that splits open? ›

Omurice or omelet rice is fried rice wrapped in fluffy scrambled eggs. To serve, slice the omelet lengthwise, gently open it up like opening up a book, and allow the fluffy scrambled egg inside to bloom.

What is a Japanese egg dish called? ›

Tamagoyaki is a Japanese omelet that's typically made by rolling several thin layers of egg (mixed with soy, mirin, sugar, and sometimes dashi, in which case it's called dashimaki) on top of each other while they cook in a small rectangular pan designated solely for this purpose.

What to eat with a Japanese omelet? ›

Other than its unique texture, tamagoyaki differs from Western style omelets in its flavor as well. Tamagoyaki has an umami flavor, sometimes with a hint of sweetness, depending on which version you have. It is often served with grated radish and soy sauce.

What does Japanese omelette taste like? ›

Unlike the typical Western omelette, Japanese tamagoyaki uses an egg mixture flavored with dashi, soy sauce, mirin, and sugar. This seasoning gives it a lightly sweet and savory taste.

What is the Japanese omelet on a stick? ›

Tamagoyaki has a really unique taste, with a dense spongy texture and a subtle sweet note. People in Japan eat it in the morning like we could eat egg & soldiers here in UK. It's also sold in food markets on a stick, and it's a must in bento boxes and with other foods like sushi.

What is the grumpy Japanese egg? ›

Gudetama, stylized in all lowercase (Japanese: ぐでたま) is a fictional character created in 2013 by the Japanese company Sanrio, and is a perpetually tired, apathetic anthropomorphic egg yolk. The name "Gudetama" is a portmanteau or blend word of the Japanese words for lazy (ぐでぐで, gudegude) and egg (たまご, tamago).

What gender is Gudetama? ›

According to Gudetama's designer, the character is an unfertilized egg. Therefore it has no gender. That's so progressive!

What is lazy egg in Japanese? ›

The name “Gudetama” combines the Japanese phrase “gude gude,” which means lazy, with “tama,” a shortened form of “tamago,” the Japanese word for egg.

Why are Japanese eggs so orange? ›

Why are the eggs in Japan orange and is it safe to consume them raw? First, the color is different than what you're used to back home because the chickens in Japan are fed a highly nutritious feed which may include either carotene, yellow flower petals or carrot powder.

What does Tama mean in Japanese egg? ›

卵 or Tamago is the Japanese word for Egg and is a staple ingredient in creating our best dishes! 🥚☀️ Order yourself a handcrafted Marugame Udon meal today via FoodPanda or GrabFood. 6 Shares. Kathleen Kewley Morada.

What is breasts and eggs in Japanese? ›

Breasts and Eggs (Japanese: 夏物語, Hepburn: Natsu Monogatari, lit. 'Summer Stories') is a novel by Mieko Kawakami, published by Bungeishunjū in July 2019. It features a completely rewritten version of Kawakami's 2008 novella Chichi to Ran (乳と卵, lit.

Is Japanese omelette fully cooked? ›

Japanese omelettes aren't runny. If prepared well, they are cooked just enough to hold their shape. You can find pictures of omelettes online that make them look quite wet and, that is a testament to how well the cook is able to keep the shape of the omelette.

What is a Japanese omelette pan called? ›

Makiyakinabe are square or rectangular cooking pans used to make Japanese-style rolled omelettes (tamagoyaki).

Why are Japanese omelette sweet? ›

Tamago (a.k.a. tamagoyaki) is a Japanese omelet. It's made by rolling together thin layers of fried eggs, then slicing the log into rectangles. Since the egg is mixed with dashi, sugar, and mirin, the finished product has a complex and subtly sweet flavor.

What do you call an open omelette? ›

Frittatas are oftentimes called "open-faced omelettes." This is kind of true. And it does beg the question of what exactly is the difference between frittatas and omelettes. Both contain more eggs than they do dairy and are cooked in a skillet on the stovetop.

What is Osaka style Japanese omelette? ›

Okonomiyaki is an Osaka speciality whose name literally means 'grilled as you like it'. Traditionally, it's a filling omelette-style dish that's packed with vegies and seafood, then drizzled with various sauces.

Is omurice uncooked egg? ›

Omurice or omu-rice (オムライス, Omu-raisu) is a Japanese dish consisting of an omelette made with fried rice and thin, fried scrambled eggs, usually topped with ketchup.

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