japanese rolled omelette tamagoyaki and chirashi bowl recipe – use real butter (2024)

japanese rolled omelette tamagoyaki and chirashi bowl recipe – use real butter (1) Recipe: tamagoyaki (rolled omelette) and chirashi bowl

The overnight low temperature read 33°F on our deck in Crested Butte on Saturday night. That’s just ONE degree above freezing. I am overjoyed. As we said our good-byes this evening at our annual neighborhood picnic, I noticed everyone had donned their fleece or down jackets. Despite warm (70s) temperatures in Crested Butte during the day, it is deliciously cool when the sun drops low in the sky. You can feel it – the turn that summer takes in the high country when it’s no longer hot from day to night, but hot and cool. A subtle change, but you feel the presence and some of us get a little giddy.


our lovely view on our hike

japanese rolled omelette tamagoyaki and chirashi bowl recipe – use real butter (2)

a carpet of huckleberry plants

japanese rolled omelette tamagoyaki and chirashi bowl recipe – use real butter (3)

Going from Nederland to Crested Butte has me shifting gears. There is a whole different set of trails to run, hike, or forage. Weather patterns are different. And instead of photographing towering moose who could charge me and my camera equipment in an instant, I am stalking adorable beavers swimming recreational laps in their lakes who pose zero threat to anyone who isn’t a tree.


two beavers paddling about like it’s adult swim

japanese rolled omelette tamagoyaki and chirashi bowl recipe – use real butter (4)

moseying along the shoreline

japanese rolled omelette tamagoyaki and chirashi bowl recipe – use real butter (5)

Shortly after we got our place in Crested Butte last year, our favorite sushi bar in town shut its doors for good. Jeremy was pretty heartbroken, but living in Colorado mountain towns, you get used to either doing without or doing it yourself. If it’s food-related, I generally go for the latter. As sushi goes, some recipes come down to whether or not you can source an ingredient. However, there are items you can make from pretty basic ingredients. One of my favorites is tamagoyaki, a Japanese rolled egg omelette.


you will need eggs, mirin, sugar, salt, and dashi (or instant dashi granules)

japanese rolled omelette tamagoyaki and chirashi bowl recipe – use real butter (6)

You can purchase tamagoyaki frozen from some Asian grocery stores, but I have yet to find one that tastes good. My local sushi bar in Boulder makes it in house and it is excellent. There are different levels of effort for producing these omelettes from a plain old egg sheet to a rolled omelette to a fancy one with fish. I decided to try my hand at the basic rolled omelette. For dashi, you can make your own (beyond the scope of this post), use liquid dashi concentrate, or use hondashi instant dashi granules. (I add one teaspoon of granules to a cup of boiling water to yield one cup.)


pour the dashi into the salt and sugar

japanese rolled omelette tamagoyaki and chirashi bowl recipe – use real butter (7)

add the mirin

japanese rolled omelette tamagoyaki and chirashi bowl recipe – use real butter (8)

beat the eggs in a medium bowl

japanese rolled omelette tamagoyaki and chirashi bowl recipe – use real butter (9)

beat in the dashi mixture

japanese rolled omelette tamagoyaki and chirashi bowl recipe – use real butter (10)


The traditional shape of tamagoyaki is that of a rectangle, because there is a specific rectangular pan used to make the omelette. You can use a standard round omelette pan to make your tamagoyaki, just trim the edges so you wind up with a rectangle and no one would be the wiser. I just happen to own a tamago pan because I bought it on a lark over a decade ago and never made tamagoyaki in it until last week. Hey, at least I’m using it now!


the tamago pan

japanese rolled omelette tamagoyaki and chirashi bowl recipe – use real butter (11)

wipe down the hot pan with oil

japanese rolled omelette tamagoyaki and chirashi bowl recipe – use real butter (12)

cook some of the egg mixture in the pan and fold in thirds

japanese rolled omelette tamagoyaki and chirashi bowl recipe – use real butter (13)

fold once more

japanese rolled omelette tamagoyaki and chirashi bowl recipe – use real butter (14)

first sheet is done

japanese rolled omelette tamagoyaki and chirashi bowl recipe – use real butter (15)

The main gist of the omelette is to cook a quarter of the egg mixture until it is set and then fold it in thirds. Push the rolled omelette to one end of the pan and add more egg mixture to cook. When it sets, fold the omelette back on the new egg sheet and repeat the process for the rest of the egg mixture. You will wind up with a rolled omelette of several layers. And it doesn’t have to be perfect. I overcooked my egg sheet layers while shooting the process and it was still awesome! Just don’t undercook the egg.


push the omelette to the far end and oil the pan

japanese rolled omelette tamagoyaki and chirashi bowl recipe – use real butter (16)

add more egg mixture

japanese rolled omelette tamagoyaki and chirashi bowl recipe – use real butter (17)

the final omelette

japanese rolled omelette tamagoyaki and chirashi bowl recipe – use real butter (18)

place on a bamboo mat to press into a square shape

japanese rolled omelette tamagoyaki and chirashi bowl recipe – use real butter (19)

slice

japanese rolled omelette tamagoyaki and chirashi bowl recipe – use real butter (20)

My favorite way to enjoy tamagoyaki is in a charashi bowl with a nice assortment of sashimi and vegetables. Make it as simple or as fancy as you like depending on what ingredients you can get your hands on. If you live near a good Japanese or Asian market, you will probably find various fresh sashimi-grade fish. Sometimes Whole Foods or other seafood vendors will have sashimi-grade fish. Sashimi-grade means that the fish has been frozen to low enough temperatures to kill any parasites – that’s why you don’t purchase a hunk of random salmon and slice it up for sushi. Other items that some Asian markets will carry include grilled eel (unagi), octopus (tako), surf clam, masago or tobiko (capelin or flying fish roes). But even if you can’t find good fish, you can always use cooked shrimp, tamagoyaki, vegetables, and whatever else you want.


octopus, salmon, tuna, yellowtail, eel, shrimp, tamagoyaki, shredded toasted seaweed, pickled ginger, green onions, masago, daikon radish sprouts, shiso (perilla) leaves, cucumber, shredded daikon and carrot, wasabi, unagi sauce, toasted sesame seeds, sushi rice

japanese rolled omelette tamagoyaki and chirashi bowl recipe – use real butter (21)

If you go to the trouble of cooking rice, you may as well go the extra little step for seasoning it. Seasoned sushi rice really brings out the flavors of your sushi and other ingredients. It’s just salt, sugar, and vinegar, but it makes a huge difference. Trust me. The rice is the base layer of your chirashi bowl and you can sprinkle sakura denbu (a pink sweetened flake cod condiment) and kampyo (picked gourd) and roasted seaweed strips on top. I could not find sakura denbu nor kampyo anywhere, so I omitted them. If you really like having some seasoning, I think furikake would work. Then arrange your goodies over the rice. I like to drizzle a little unagi sauce over the eel, tamagoyaki, and octopus and then sprinkle some toasted sesame seeds.


rice and seaweed strips

japanese rolled omelette tamagoyaki and chirashi bowl recipe – use real butter (22)

arranging the ingredients on top of the rice

japanese rolled omelette tamagoyaki and chirashi bowl recipe – use real butter (23)

finishing it with a plop of wasabi

japanese rolled omelette tamagoyaki and chirashi bowl recipe – use real butter (24)

The reason I love ordering chirashi bowls at sushi bars is because of the variety in one bowl. It’s hard to get that much variety at home unless you have many other chirashi bowls to make before the fish spoils. Although, it’s a great excuse to have a chirashi bowl party. Like I said, make it as simple or as fancy as you like – but now you can include your own kickass homemade tamagoyaki.


chirashizushi

japanese rolled omelette tamagoyaki and chirashi bowl recipe – use real butter (25)

a bowl of beautiful goodies

japanese rolled omelette tamagoyaki and chirashi bowl recipe – use real butter (26)


Japanese Rolled Omelette (Tamagoyaki) and Chirashi Bowl
[print recipe]
tamagoyaki from Sushi Made Easy

japanese rolled omelette (tamagoyaki)
5 eggs
2-3 tbsps dashi stock (I made a cup of stock from 1 cup boiling water and 1 tsp hondashi granules)
1 tsp sugar
1 tsp mirin
1/2 tsp salt
vegetable oil for cooking

Make the tamagoyaki: Beat the eggs in a medium bowl until well blended (we don’t want big globs of egg white floating around). Mix the dashi stock, sugar, mirin, and salt together in a small bowl and stir until the sugar and salt have dissolved. Beat the dashi mixture into the eggs until incorporated. Heat your tamago pan or a small omelette pan over medium flame. Dip a paper towel into a small bowl of vegetable oil so that it soaks up some of the oil. Using tongs or chopsticks, evenly oil the pan with the oil-soaked cloth.

Pour one-fourth of the egg mixture into the pan and cook until it is set and almost cooked. Grab the far end of the egg sheet with chopsticks and fold a third of the sheet over on itself toward you like would a business letter. I find a spatula helps too. Fold the egg sheet toward you again so that it is folded in thirds. Push the egg to the far end of the pan. Evenly oil the rest of the pan. Pour another fourth of egg mixture into the pan making sure it gets under the folded egg omelette (you want them to connect). When the egg has set and is almost completely cooked, fold the omelette in thirds toward you (just like before, but you are making layers). Repeat until all of the egg is used up. When the omelette is done, remove it to a bamboo mat (optional: line it with plastic wrap) and gently press the omelette into a square shape. Slice into 1/2-inch thick slices crosswise to the folding pattern. Makes about 12 slices.

chirashi bowl
1 cup seasoned sushi rice, recipe below
1 tbsp shredded nori (toasted dried seaweed sheets)
1 tsp sakura denbu (sweetened flaked cod condiment), I could not source any
1 tbsp chopped kampyo (pickled gourd), I could not source any
2 slices each from an assortment of sashimi grade fish like sake (salmon), hamachi (yellowtail), maguro (tuna)
1 shrimp, peeled, boiled, and butterflied
2 slices of unagi (grilled eel)
2 slices of tako (octopus)
1 slice of tamagoyaki (egg omelette) cut in half, recipe above
1 tbsp masago (capelin roe) or tobiko (flying fish roe)
3-4 slices of cucumber
1 shiso leaf (perilla)
1 tbsp green onions, chopped
2 tbsps daikon radish, shredded
1 tbsp daikon radish sprouts
2 tbsps gari (pickled ginger)
1 dollop wasabi
unagi sauce
toasted sesame seeds

seasoned sushi rice
2 cups sushi rice (uncooked)
2 cups water
3 tbsps rice vinegar
1 tsp salt
2 tbsps sugar

Make the sushi rice: I use a rice cooker. Combine the water and rice and cook per the instructions on your rice cooker. If you don’t have a rice cooker, you can try these instructions (I’ve not done them myself): Wash, drain, and soak the rice in water for at least 30 minutes, then drain. Combine the rice and measured water in a saucepan and cover. Place the pan over moderately high heat. When the water boils, reduce the heat and cook for about 10 minutes. Turn off the heat and allow the rice to steam undisturbed for at least 10 minutes (don’t remove the lid or you’ll ruin it). Combine the vinegar, salt, and sugar in a bowl and stir until salt and sugar are dissolved.

Wet a mixing bowl large enough for the rice. Wipe off excess water. Wet the tub a second time with vinegared water (1 cup water + 2-3 tablespoons vinegar). Wipe off any excess. Heap the cooked rice in center. Allow rice to cool in the tub for 10 minutes. Pour the dressing over the rice and mix the dressing evenly with a large spoon or rice paddle. While mixing, fan the rice to cool it. The rice is ready to use when it reaches body temperature.

Assemble the chirashi bowl: Place the sushi rice in a bowl with a 2-cup capacity. If using, sprinkle sakura denbu (a pink, sweet, flaked cod condiment) and kampyo (pickled gourd) over the rice. If not using, don’t worry about it. Sprinkle the shredded seaweed over the rice. Arrange your assortment of sashimi: salmon, yellowtail, tuna, shrimp, eel, octopus, tamagoyaki, and fish roe on the rice with the cucumber slices, shiso leaf, green onions, shredded daikon radish, and daikon radish sprouts. Make room at the edge for some pickled ginger and wasabi. Brush or drizzle a little unagi sauce over the eel, tamagoyaki, and octopus. Sprinkle withe toasted sesame seeds. Serves 1.


japanese rolled omelette tamagoyaki and chirashi bowl recipe – use real butter (27)

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japanese rolled omelette tamagoyaki and chirashi bowl recipe – use real butter (32)

August 10th, 2014: 10:08 pm
filed under appetizers, asian, eggs, fish, recipes, savory, sushi, technique

japanese rolled omelette tamagoyaki and chirashi bowl recipe – use real butter (2024)

FAQs

What is a substitute for dashi in tamagoyaki? ›

If you don't have dashi also known as Japanese soup stock, you can replace it with 3 tbsp water + 1/4 tsp dashi powder, or 3 tbsp water + 1/2 tbsp soy sauce. You may substitute monkfruit erythritol sweetener with any other neutral flavored sweetener of choice.

What is tamagoyaki made of? ›

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 are the two main ingredients of dashi? ›

Dashi most commonly utilizes a combination of kombu (kelp seaweed) and katsuobushi (dried bonito flakes), but other ingredients used to make dashi are shiitake mushrooms and niboshi (small dried fish).

What if I don't have dashi? ›

Chicken broth is neutral, slightly sweet, slightly salty, and has some umami when done well. That hits all the checks for a dashi replacement, plus it's a more familiar flavor for a lot of people.

What is the best material for a tamagoyaki pan? ›

Cast iron and copper are favorable materials for crafting authentic tamagoyaki pans because they are great conductors of heat.

Is tamagoyaki sweet or salty? ›

Lightly sweet yet savory, Tamagoyaki (Japanese Rolled Omelette) is flavored with dashi stock and makes a delightful Japanese breakfast or side dish for your bento lunches. Tamagoyaki (卵焼き or 玉子焼き) is a sweetened Japanese omelette that resembles mini bars of golden pillows.

Is tamagoyaki served hot or cold? ›

Tamagoyaki tastes good both hot and cold. Therefore, you can see Japanese people eating these lovely egg rolls as breakfast, packing them in lunch bento box, serving them as a side dish, and making them as midnight snacks.

Why is my tamagoyaki Brown? ›

Soy Sauce - Adding soy sauce to Tamagoyaki tends to discolor it, so many people only use salt to season it. I like the boost in umami that soy sauce provides, so my solution is to use Usukuchi soy sauce. This light-colored soy sauce seasons the Tamagoyaki without darkening its vibrant yellow hue.

What is a Japanese omelette pan? ›

Makiyakinabe are square or rectangular cooking pans used to make Japanese-style rolled omelettes (tamagoyaki). The pans are commonly made from metals such as copper and tin, and can also be coated with a non-stick surface. Dimensions and proportions of the pan vary among regions of Japan, but it is always rectangular.

Can you use vegetable broth instead of dashi? ›

In lieu of dashi, a homemade vegetable broth can be used. Not only does this serve as a dashi substitute, but it also adds a layer of flavor complexity while keeping the dish plant-based and accessible to those on a vegetarian or vegan diet.

Is ramen broth the same as dashi? ›

The broth is the most important part of the ramen — it's where most of the flavor comes from. Typically, ramen broth is a combination of pork or chicken stock and dashi. Dashi is a simple Japanese soup stock containing kombu and bonito flakes.

Is dashi same as soy sauce? ›

Dashi is Japanese soup stock that is often used in combination with soy sauce to season Japanese dishes. It is the very foundation of Japanese cuisine. The quality of the dish will be determined by the quality of Dashi.

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