Yosenabe (Japanese Hot Pot) - RecipeTin Japan (2024)

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Yosenabe (Japanese Hot Pot) - RecipeTin Japan (1)

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Yosenabe (Japanese Hot Pot)

Prep Time

20 mins

Cook Time

15 mins

Total Time

35 mins

One of my favourite hot pots, yosenabe is packed with seafood, chicken and vegetables. Unlike shabushabu, you don’t need dipping sauces for this as yosenabe is cooked in flavoured soup. You can cook them all and serve, or let people cook piece by piece for entertainment. Cook Time assumes the hot pot is cooked at once.

Recipe Type:Main

Cuisine:Japanese

Serves: 2

Author: Yumiko

Ingredients (tbsp=15ml, cup=250ml)

Fish and Meat

  • 150g (5.3oz) white meat fish fillets, cut into bite size pieces (I used blue eye cod)
  • 4medium size prawns(shrimps), deveined (note 1)
  • 4mussels, beard removed, shell cleaned
  • 150g (5.3oz) chicken thigh fillets, cut into bite size pieces

Vegetables

  • 10Chinese cabbage leaves(350g (12.3oz))
  • ½bunch spinach(100g (3.5oz))
  • 50g (1.8oz) carrot, diagonally sliced into 5cm (2”) lengths
  • 2stems of shallots(scallions), diagonally sliced into 5cm (2") lengths
  • 6shiitake mushrooms, stem removed (note 2)
  • 150g (5.3oz) or ½ packof firm tofu, cut into 6 small blocks
  • 150g (5.3oz) or ½ pack of knotted shirataki, rinsed and drained (note 3)

Soup Stock

  • 600ml (20.3oz) dashi stock (note 4)
  • 40ml (1.4oz) light soy sauce (note 5)
  • 1tbspsake(Japanese rice wine)
  • ½tbspmirin

Topping (optional)

  • Shichimi togarashi(more details in my post Tonjiru)

Instructions

Make Chinese Cabbage Rolls (note 6)

  1. Boil Chinese cabbage in a large pot for about 8-10 minutes or until the thickest part of the stem becomes tender. Transfer the leaves from the pot to a strainer and drain.

  2. Using the same pot and water used for Chinese cabbage, blanch spinach for a minute until the colour of the leaves become bright green colour. Drain in a strainer and run cold water over the spinach to quickly cool it down so that it is no longer warm.

  3. Hold the bunch of Chinese cabbage vertically and squeeze out excess water. Do the same for the spinach.

  4. (Please see the photo steps below the recipe for the remaining steps below) Place a bamboo sushi mat (if you have one) or two layers of baking sheets made into a square with the width of the baking sheet on the cutting board.

  5. One leaf at a time, Chinese cabbage leaves need to be placed horizontally with the inside of the leaves facing up, slightly overlapping each other.

  6. Starting from the end closest to you, place a Chinese cabbage leaf on the mat/paper.

  7. Place a second leaf wrong way around so that the root end of the leaf is placed next to the tip of the leaf of the first cabbage leaf. Make sure that two leaves overlap slightly for continuity.

  8. The 3rd leaf will now be placed in the same direction as the first leaf. Repeat with two more leaves.

  9. Take half of the boiled spinach leaves and place them horizontally on your end of the Chinese cabbage, leaving a 1cm (3/8”) gap.

  10. Starting from your end of the mat or baking paper, pick up the end of the mat/paper using both hands and start rolling the cabbage slowly using the mat/paper to support. Place the middle fingers and the index fingers onto the vegetables to secure them when rolling.

  11. Once the mat/paper goes over the rolled part of Chinese cabbage (be this time, Chinese cabbage covered the spinach (see the 3rd photo in the photo steps), move one hand to the outside of mat/paper to support the roll while pulling the mat/paper forward using the other hand.

  12. When completely rolled, squeeze the roll while the mat/paper is still on the roll so that excess water will be removed while keeping the log shape (excess water will make the soup stock thinner). If you tilt the roll vertically, water drains better.

  13. Repeat and make one more log. Cut the log into roughly 4cm (1 1/2") disks.

Soup Stock

  1. Mix the Stock Ingredients together in a bowl or a jar.

To Cook at Once on Stove

  1. Group each ingredient together and place them in a wide shallow pot. I always place prawns and shells in the centre for dramatic effect when cooked.

  2. Pour the soup stock into the pot and heat over high heat with a lid on. Once it has started boiling, turn it down to medium low heat to simmer for about 5-8 minutes until all ingredients are cooked through.

  3. Serve immediately.

To Cook on Dinner Table

  1. Place ingredients on a large plate, grouping each ingredient together, accompanied by a pair of long chopsticks or tongs to pick up the ingredients (particularly seafood and met) and drop them into the pot.

  2. Add the soup stock into a pot and place it on a portable cook top. Bring it to a boil.

  3. Let each individual pick the ingredients of their choice and cook in the pot or let someone pick some ingredients and cook them in the pot for the others. You may need to adjust the heat depending on how full/empty the pot is.

How to Eat Yosenabe

  1. You will need a ladle or a large spoon to pick up delicate ingredients and soup from the pot as well as small bowls for individuals.

  2. Using individual’s chopsticks or a ladle/spoon, take food from the pot into an individual bowl. Add some soup stock with a ladle/spoon to the bowl.

  3. Add a dash of shichimi togarashi to the bowl, if you are using it.

Recipe Notes

1. My prawns were about 40g (1.4oz) each. I did not remove the head, nor the shells because I wanted to extract good flavour out of them. You can remove the head and shells if you like.

2. To decorate the surface of shiitake with flower pattern, I made 3 incisions crossing in the centre, then made v-shape cuts along these lines.

3. Shirataki is made from konnyaku potato flour. Details are in my Sukiyaki post. As you can see in the photos, my shirataki are knotted so that they are easier to pick up and do not spread everywhere unlike in the loose noodle style. You can buy knotted shirataki in Japanese/Asian grocery stores.

If you only have loose shirataki, that’s also OK. You have to spread the noodles on the cutting board, about 20cm wide, and cut them in half so that you can pick up shirataki easier.

4. Because yosenabe soup stock is quite simple and does not contain strong flavours, it is important to use good dashi stock full of dashi flavour. I would recommend making awase-dashi which uses bonito flakes and konbu. Please refer to Home Style Japanese Dashi Stock.

You could also use instant dashi stock if you like. These days, you can even buy instant awase-dashi stock at Japanese and some Asian grocery stores in Sydney.

5. Light soy sauce is used to keep the colour of the soup stock lighter. Ordinary Japanese soy sauce is fine if you don’t have light soy sauce. But if you are using ordinary soy sauce, you would want to add a good pinch of salt to the sauce as the light soy sauce contain more salt.

6. I made Chinese cabbage rolls because they look lovely and more professional as well as reducing the cooking time in the pot with other ingredients.

If it is too fiddly, you don’t need to make Chinese cabbage rolls. You could simply cut each leaf in half vertically, then cut them into 5cm (2") lengths. While part of Chinese cabbage could be sliced diagonally if you wish so that they cook faster.

Spinach can be cut into two or three to shorten the length. They don’t need to be pre-cooked but the white part of the Chinese cabbage leaves need to be cooked ahead of other ingredients as they take longer to become tender if they are very thick.

Yosenabe (Japanese Hot Pot) - RecipeTin Japan (2024)

FAQs

What is the difference between sukiyaki and Yosenabe? ›

Sukiyaki: thinly sliced beef, tofu, vegetables and starch noodles stewed in sweetened shouyu and eaten with a raw egg dip. Yosenabe: Yose (寄) means "putting together", implying that all things (e.g., meat, seafood, egg, tofu and vegetables) are cooked together in a pot.

What is the Japanese version of hot pot? ›

Yosenabe is a basic Japanese hot pot where you can cook whatever ingredients—chicken, seafood, tofu, and all kinds of vegetables—in a delicious dashi broth.

What is the meaning of Yose Nabe? ›

Literally meaning “put everything in a pot”, yose nabe brings together all sorts of ingredients, from meat and seafood to vegetables and tofu in stock.

Is shabu shabu or sukiyaki better? ›

From a diner's point of view, the best way to understand the difference between the two is to know that sukiyaki is sweeter, tastier and heavily reliant on the quality of its base whereas shabu-shabu is milder, simpler yet places heavy emphasis on the quality of the ingredients.

Why is sukiyaki so expensive? ›

Some higher quality beef comes from cows that are fed beer and frequently massaged to fatten them up just right. Such stock is treated as a high-end brand in Japan. High-class restaurants that specialize in sukiyaki or shabu-shabu are generally very expensive due to the high quality of meat used.

Is Hotpot the same as shabu? ›

Traditional Chinese hot pot generally comes already loaded with meat, seafood, and vegetables, but with shabu shabu you'll be given plates of meat, vegetables and other items (dumplings and udon, for example) to cook in the broth.

Is Hotpot junk food? ›

Hotpot can be a healthy meal, but it depends on the soup, the ingredients chosen, how much is eaten, and what it's accompanied with,” said Anna Lim, the lead clinical dietitian at Pulse TCM. It can easily become a meal heavy on calories, fat and sodium if you aren't careful.

What is the difference between shabu shabu and nabe? ›

There is another dish similar to nabe called shabu-shabu. However, the star of shabu-shabu is the meat. It is very thinly sliced and placed in the boiling broth for a short time until cooked and then can be dipped in various sauces before eating. With nabe, everything is cooked together in one pot at the same time.

Is Japanese hot pot healthy? ›

The broth used to cook the dish is typically made from dashi, a Japanese stock made from kelp and bonito flakes, which is high in nutrients and has been shown to have anti-inflammatory properties. Not only is shabu shabu a nutritious choice, but it can also have other health benefits.

What do you call a Japanese hot pot? ›

Nabe (鍋) is the term used to describe Japanese hot pot dishes as well as the hot pot itself. Nabe is a popular winter dish that is typically cooked and eaten at the table. Common ingredients found in nabe include vegetables, mushrooms, meat and seafood.

What are the two types of hot pots? ›

Hot Pot Variations
  • Shabu Shabu in Japan: You cook meat and veggies in a soup stock called Kombu Dashi.
  • Cambodian Hot Pot: Called Yao Hon, Cambodian hot pot is known for the use of coconut milk in the soup base.
  • Thai Hot Pot: Known as Thai Suki, Thailand's version has a lemongrass-spiced chicken broth.

What is yose in Japanese? ›

Yose (Japanese: 寄席) is a form of spoken vaudeville theatre of Japan cultivated since the 18th century. The term also refers to the exclusive theater where yose is held.

What is Yosenabe in English? ›

Yosenabe or nabe, which literally means 'hot pot' is a dish served in a clay pot and placed at the center of a table over a portable stove.

What is kani nabe in Japanese? ›

Kani Nabe かに鍋: Crab hotpot.

What are the two types of sukiyaki? ›

There are two main styles of sukiyaki preparation, the Kanto (Tokyo) style of eastern Japan, and the Kansai (Osaka) style of western Japan. Kanto style sukiyaki is done by heating sukiyaki sauce (warish*ta) in a pot before adding all the ingredients to simmer together. Kansai style sukiyaki is eaten in stages.

What is the other name for sukiyaki? ›

In the Kansai District, the dish was called “sukiyaki,” as it is called today, but in the Kanto District the dish was called “gyu-nabe,” and it became tremendously popular among common people.

What is sukiyaki similar to? ›

Sukiyaki is similar to shabu shabu, as it is also cooked in a hot pot and uses similar ingredients like tofu and vegetables. The main differences however, are the cooking style and the broth.

References

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