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An amateur teen chef is keeping people entertained on TikTok by cooking elaborate meals for his family. TikTok is obsessed with this teen's homemade hibachi dinner Skip to main content
Kamameshi (釜飯 "kettle rice") is a Japanese rice dish traditionally cooked in an iron pot called a kama. Many varieties exist, but most consist of rice seasoned with soy sauce or mirin, and cooked with meats and vegetables. In modern times, it is often considered a type of takikomi gohan (mixed rice dish).
They are commonly confused with the hibachi barbecue grill, which is called shichirin in Japanese, and has a charcoal or gas flame and is made with an open grate design. With a solid griddle-type cook surface, the teppan is capable of cooking small or semisolid ingredients such as rice, egg and finely chopped vegetables. [1]
Garnering over 100 million views on TikTok, Tini Younger's (@tinekeyounger on TikTok) mac and cheese is a classic recipe that quickly went viral. The recipe includes traditional ingredients, such as a variety of cheeses, flour, milk, and cream. [48] However, the recipe calls for a "surprise ingredient" of Carnation evaporated milk. [48]
I decided that the best recipe to test would be risotto: it combines both sautéing aromatics and boiling liquids, and requires a consistent source of heat to successfully extract the starch from ...
miso-braised vegetables or mushrooms; marinades: fish or chicken can be mixed with miso and rice wine overnight to be grilled; corn on the cob in Japan is often coated with shiro miso, wrapped in foil and grilled; sauces: sauces like misoyaki (a variant on teriyaki) dips: used as a dip to eat with vegetables (e.g., cucumbers, daikon, carrots, etc.)
In Kansai-style sukiyaki, meat is heated in the pot first. When the meat is almost cooked, sugar, sake and soy sauce are added, then vegetables and other ingredients are added last. The vegetables and meat used are different between the two styles. Because beef was expensive in the past, the use of pork was common in northern and eastern regions.
Proportions vary, but there is normally three to four times as much dashi as soy sauce and mirin. For oyakodon, Tsuji (1980) recommends dashi flavored with light soy sauce, dark soy sauce, and sugar. For gyūdon, Tsuji recommends water flavored with dark soy sauce and mirin. Donburi can be made from almost any ingredients, including leftovers.