🇯🇵 Japanese Cuisine

Shabu Shabu

Japanese Hot Pot with Swishing Beef

Prep Time 30 min
Servings 4
Difficulty Easy
Calories 445 kcal

Paper-thin slices of premium beef swished through simmering kombu broth at the table, then dipped in creamy sesame or tangy ponzu sauce. An interactive communal dining experience celebrating the purity of quality ingredients.

Ingredients

  • 500g premium beef sirloin, sliced paper-thin
  • 1 piece kombu seaweed for broth
  • 1 block firm tofu, cubed
  • 200g napa cabbage, cut into pieces
  • 200g shiitake and enoki mushrooms
  • 1 bunch chrysanthemum greens (shungiku)
  • 200g udon noodles for finishing
  • Ponzu sauce for dipping
  • Sesame dipping sauce (gomadare)
  • 2 green onions, thinly sliced for sauce
  • Grated daikon and momiji oroshi for condiments

Instructions

  1. 1 Place kombu seaweed in a large shallow pot filled with cold water and let it soak for thirty minutes. Heat slowly over medium heat, removing the kombu just before the water reaches a boil.
  2. 2 Arrange the sliced beef, tofu, cabbage, mushrooms, and greens on large platters around the table. Prepare individual dipping bowls with ponzu sauce and sesame sauce for each diner.
  3. 3 Set the pot of simmering kombu broth on a portable burner at the center of the table. Keep the broth at a gentle simmer, never a rolling boil, throughout the entire meal.
  4. 4 Using chopsticks, pick up one slice of beef and swish it gently through the simmering broth for five to ten seconds until it just changes color. The meat should remain pink and incredibly tender.
  5. 5 Dip the cooked beef into your preferred sauce and eat immediately. Alternate between meat and vegetables, adding cabbage, mushrooms, tofu, and greens to the broth to cook for a few minutes.
  6. 6 After the meat and vegetables are finished, add udon noodles to the enriched broth and simmer until tender. Ladle the noodle soup into bowls as a satisfying final course to the meal.

Did You Know?

The name shabu shabu is onomatopoeia for the swishing sound the thin meat makes when dragged through the bubbling broth. The meat cooks in just seconds, making it one of the fastest cooking techniques in Japanese cuisine.

From The Culinary Codex — http://theculinarycodex.com/dish/japanese/shabu-shabu/