🇯🇵 Japanese Cuisine

Takoyaki

Octopus Balls

Prep Time 20 min
Servings 4
Difficulty Medium
Calories 314 kcal

Crispy-on-the-outside, molten-on-the-inside spherical fritters filled with tender pieces of octopus, pickled ginger, and green onion. Drizzled with tangy sauce and dancing bonito flakes, these are Osaka's most famous street food.

Ingredients

  • 200g cooked octopus tentacles, diced into 1cm pieces
  • 200g all-purpose flour
  • 2 large eggs
  • 500ml dashi stock
  • 3 green onions, finely chopped
  • 30g pickled red ginger (beni shoga), minced
  • 30g tenkasu (tempura scraps)
  • Takoyaki sauce for drizzling
  • Japanese mayonnaise for drizzling
  • Bonito flakes (katsuobushi) for topping
  • Aonori seaweed powder for garnish

Instructions

  1. 1 Whisk together flour, eggs, and dashi stock in a large bowl until you achieve a smooth, thin batter with no lumps. The consistency should be much thinner than pancake batter, almost like crepe batter.
  2. 2 Heat the takoyaki pan over medium heat and brush each hemisphere mold generously with vegetable oil. Pour batter into each well until it slightly overflows the edges of the molds.
  3. 3 Drop a piece of octopus, a pinch of pickled ginger, tenkasu, and green onion into each batter-filled well. Let cook for two minutes until the bottom edges begin to set and turn golden.
  4. 4 Using takoyaki picks or chopsticks, carefully rotate each ball ninety degrees, tucking the overflow batter underneath to form a sphere. This takes practice to achieve perfect round shapes.
  5. 5 Continue rotating the balls every minute or so for about six to eight minutes total until they are uniformly golden brown on all sides and the center is molten and creamy.
  6. 6 Transfer the hot takoyaki to a serving plate and drizzle with takoyaki sauce and Japanese mayonnaise. Top with a generous shower of dancing bonito flakes and aonori powder.

Did You Know?

Takoyaki was invented in 1935 by street vendor Tomekichi Endo in Osaka. Today the city has over five thousand takoyaki stalls, and most Osaka households own a takoyaki pan.

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