Okonomiyaki is the famous Japanese savory pancake that is usually cooked at the dining table so you can customize it to your taste. My children loved okonomiyaki growing up – actually, they still love it just as much!
Okonomiyaki (お好み焼き) is a Japanese street food which is very popular among Western visitors who often try it for the first time in Japan. It is a savory pancake with a batter made with loads of shredded cabbage then pan fried with egg, sliced meat and katsuobushi (dried bonito flakes) on top. Finish it off with a drizzle of sweet Worcestershire sauce, mayonnaise and sprinkle aonori (青のり, green seaweed flakes), benishoga (紅しょが, red pickled ginger) and katsuobushi over it to make it a complete okonomiyaki.
The name “okonomiyaki” (お好み焼き) could be translated to “grilled as you like it”. The word “konomi” (好み) means choice/liking and “yaki” (焼き) is “grilled”. The letter “o” (お) before “konomi” is the prefix to make it polite.
As name implies, there are many variations to the ingredients of okonomiyaki and you can use different toppings and eat with different sauces.
About Batter
I used just flour, egg and dashi stock (please refer to Home Style Japanese Dashi Stock) to make batter with cabbage but most okonomiyaki you eat at restaurants and food stands in Japan add grated yamaimo (山芋, mountain yam, Japanese yam) to make the batter creamier and lighter.
Yamaimo is difficult to obtain in Australia and probably in most countries outside of Japan. To come to think of it, the original okonomiyaki did not have yamaimo in it so I am making it just like original version!
You might have heard that the cooking style of okonomiyaki with the batter mixed with shredded cabbage is called “Osaka style” or “Kansai style”. On the other hand, cooking thinly spread batter without cabbage in it, then add topping including cabbage is called “Hiroshima style”. But if you read the history of okonomiyaki, it actually originated in Tokyo and the cooking style was closer to Hiroshima style.
I remember making okonomiyaki without mixing cabbage in the batter when I was little as I was born and grew up in Tokyo. But I married with a man from Kobe which is part of Kansai region, close to Osaka and learnt the Kansai style. I thought it was better to mix cabbage in the batter so that you can eat a lot of vegies without realizing.
About Topping
You can add any kind of topping. I used sliced pork as a main topping but you could use sliced beef or chicken. Seafood such as prawns (shrimp), squid, scallops would also be commonly used in Japan. I have tried all of these ingredients and they are superb. Hiroshima is famous for the Hiroshima style okonomiyaki and, you often get oysters as one of the toppings because Hiroshima is also famous for oysters. Modern version of okonomiyaki even has sliced ham, bacon, even cheese as a choice of topping. And of course, you can mix them, too.
It is important to slice the meat thinly so that it cooks quickly and is easier to eat. If prawns (shrimp) are large, I’d suggest that you slice it vertically into two so that the shape of prawns can be retained when placed on top of the batter. I usually prepare squid by slicing into thin strips, scallops into two or three slices.
My okonomiyaki always has an egg in the middle before placing meat/seafood. To make sure that the egg white does not leak outward when placed on top of the batter, I make a well with shredded cabbage so that the egg is surrounded by the cabbage. I then add meat/seafood on top of it.
After main topping is placed, I add katsuobushi (dried bonito flakes), then drizzle with some batter so that the toppings are intact when turned over and cooked.
About Sauce
Okonimiyaki is typically served with a sweet/fruity version of Worcestershire sauce. And the sauce needs to be rather thick, not watery. Watery sauce like Worcestershire sauce gets absorbed into the okonimiyaki pancake. So I use the Bulldog brand tonkatsu sauce which is the sweetest and thickest of all in Bulldog brand. You can find more details on Japanese sauces in my post Yakisoba (Japanese Stir Fried Noodles).
Just like the yakisoba sauce, there is a Japanese special sauce for okonomiyaki called okonomiyaki so-su (sauce). I don’t use it but you can of course use it if you like. Okonomiyaki so-su can be purchased at Japanese grocery stores and possibly some Asian grocery stores. If you can’t find any of these, you could mix some tomato sauce/tomato ketchup to Worcestershire sauce as a substitute.
About Mayonnaise
There was no mayonnaise on okonimiyaki originally, but it grew in popularity quickly so now it is more common to be served with rather than without mayonnaise. My children think that okonimiyaki has to have mayonnaise on it but I disagree. I think that the flavor of okonimiyaki gets somewhat lost by adding mayonnaise. But it is just my opinion.
So I initially made okonimiyaki for this post and took many photos without mayonnaise. When I showed my photos to Nagi, the first comment from her was “where is the mayonnaise?”. I said that my okonimiyaki did not have mayonnaise on it and this is my home cooking blog. But she insisted that I should make one with mayonnaise because that is how my children know okonimiyaki – and probably many readers.
If you say “mayonnaise” in Japan, it usually means Kewpie mayonnaise. It is so popular and widespread in Japan that I am not surprised if every household has a tube of Kewpie mayonnaise in the fridge. When I was little, we ate fresh salad with mayonnaise as there was no concept of French salad dressing at my household 50-60 years ago.
Kewpie mayonnaise is different from Western style mayonnaise and I like Kewpie flavor better simply because it has much milder acidity and contains umami in it.
You can buy Kewpie mayonnaise at Asian/Japanese grocery stores and nowadays even in Coles and Woolworths in Australia.
About Garnish
To tell you the truth, I decided to make okonomiyaki because I had left over aonori and benishoga and three bottles of different kinds of Bulldog sauces from Yakisoba (Japanese Stir Fried Noodles) which I posted few weeks ago. Okonomiyaki garnish is very similar to those used for yakisoba. I even top with extra bonito flakes. Yum!
About Teppan
Okonomiyaki is usually made on teppan (鉄板, iron plate) just like street food yakisoba. I happen to have an electric teppanyaki (鉄板焼き, grilled food on iron plate) plate (photo below) which is perfect to make two okonomiyaki at once.
When children were little, we often had teppanyaki dinner at home with all sorts of meat, seafood and vegetables cooked on teppan. As it was entertaining, they get to eat different vegetables/meats and they can cook themselves. I must post teppanyaki one day.
If you have a BBQ set with a flat iron plate on it instead of griddle or grill plate, it would be perfect for okonomiyaki. But of course you can make it on a fry pan at home like this photo below.
Okonomiyaki is very easy to make once you know the steps to put ingredients on the fry pan or iron plate. No skills are really required because it is part of fun if you mess up. To show you how simple it is, I added step-by-step photos at the end after the recipe. I used my electric teppanyaki plate for that.
I hope you like okonomiyaki.
Yumiko
- 2 tbsp vegetable oil
- 1½ cups flour
- 350ml (11.8oz) dashi stock
- 1 egg
- 140g (4.9oz) shredded cabbage
- 70g (2.5oz) shredded cabbage
- 2 eggs
- 120g (4.2oz) thinly sliced pork (Note 1)
- ¼ cup katsuobushi (dried bonito flakes)
- Bulldog tonkatsu sauce (Note 2)
- Kewpie Japanese mayonnaise (optional, Note 3)
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Place flour and dashi in a bowl. Mix well until the batter becomes smooth and lump free. I use a whisk.
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Add cabbage, an egg and mix well.
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Heat 1 tablespoon of oil in a large fry pan or an iron plate over medium heat.
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Using a ladle, pour little bit less than half of the batter (Note 5) onto the fry pan/iron plate and spread the batter to make a round pancake (diameter is about 18cm/7”).
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Place half of the Topping cabbage on the pancake. Make a well in the middle of the cabbage. Crack an egg in the well.
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Spread half the pork over the pancake covering the entire surface. Then sprinkle half the katsuobushi over it.
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Fill a bit of batter in a ladle and drizzle it back and forth in across the surface (Note 5). Do not cover the entire surface. All you need is to drop some batter across the meat pieces so that they don’t get separated when cooked.
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Cook for about 10 minutes until the bottom of the pancake is light golden brown and when you lift the pancake with a spatula, the pancake does not bend much.
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Turn it over with a spatula and cook for another 10 minutes or until the bottom of the pancake is light golden brown.
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Turn it over again so that the topping side is facing up. Stick a chopstick in the centre of the pancake and remove it to see if the middle of the pancake is cooked through. If the chopstick is clean and dry, then it is ready to eat.
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Transfer the pancake to a plate.
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Repeat for the second pancake.
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Drizzle sauce over the surface of the pancake, then Kewpie mayonnaise in the same way if using. Sprinkle aonori, benishoga and katsuobushi if using.
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Cut the pancake into quarters and serve immediately.
1. There is no rule as to which part of pork to use. As long as it is not for stewing, you can use any kind. I sometimes use thinly sliced pork belly.
You could use beef or chicken instead of pork, or mixture if you want. But the meat needs to be thinly sliced.
You could also use seafood such as squid, prawns, scallops. In the case of squid, I find that slicing it into thin strips work the best. You may also want to slice prawns and scallops thinly if they are large.
2. Bulldog brand tonkatsu sauce is available at Asian/Japanese grocery stores. It is like a thick sweet Worcestershire sauce. You could also buy sauce specialized for okonomiyaki at Japanese grocery stores if you wish. Okonomiyaki sauce is sweeter and less spicy than Tonkatsu Sauce. As a last resort, you can substitute with a mixture of Worcestershire sauce, tomato sauce/ketchup and sugar (2:2:1 ratio respectively).
3. This is Japanese mayonnaise which is quite different from Western style mayonnaise. It has less acidity in it and the flavor is enhanced with umami. You can buy Kewpie mayonnaise at Asian/Japanese grocery stores and sometimes at super market in Australia.
4. Aonori is dried seaweed flakes and benishoga is red pickled ginger. In the section “About Yakisoba Garnish” in my post Yakisoba (Japanese Stir Fried Noodles), you can find more details of these ingredients.
Although these are optional, I strongly recommend to eat okonomiyaki with them on top as it enhances the flavor of okonomiyaki.
5. The reason for taking a little bit less than half of the total quantity of batter is that you will need a small amount of batter to pour over the topping. You don’t need to be accurate about the quantity. If you took too much for the first pancake, then make the second panbcake slightly smaller. But make sure that you leave a small amount of batter when the batter for second pancake is placed on the pan.
The recipe is to make one pancake at a time but if you are making two at once by using two frying pans, a BBQ iron plate or an electric teppanyaki plate, then it’s easier to equally divide the batter. But don’t forget to leave some to spread over toppings.
6. If you have a hot plate like mine or a portable cooktop which can be placed on the dining table, then you can leave the pancake on the plate or the fry pan, add sauces and garsnishes and turn the heat off. You can then divide the pancake to eat directly off the plate/fry pan which is more fun!
Sarah says
What pork did you actually use in this dish? From your photos I see that it looks like ham.
Yumiko says
Hi Sarah, it was very thinly sliced pork sirloin.
Melissa Baker says
Thank you for this fab recipe!
So delicious and easy to make.
Yumiko says
Hi Melissa, it is easy to make, isn’t it?
Itsuki says
Really loved this recipe! It tasted really good with the cabbage added, thank you for putting this here!
-Itsuki
Yumiko says
Hi Itsuki, you are most welcome. I’m glad you enjoyed it!
Fiona Simpkin says
Hi Yumiko
Mine did not work. Compared to another recipe and saw it uses 6 eggs not 1 for the batter. Is your proportion right?
Cooked in oven for 39 minutes but still doughy.
Oh well good to experiment
Yumiko says
Hi Fiona, I am sorry that it did not turn out to be what you expected. But my ingredient proportions are pretty normal by Japanese standard. I have never heard of using 6 eggs for the batter unless you are making a large number of servings. My batter contains 1/2 egg per serving and 1 egg on topping. Some recipes may use 1 egg in the batter per serving.
Also you don’t cook okonomiyaki in oven. My recipe certainly did not say that. Is it a recipe by a Japanese person?
You may want to cook it in a frying pan next time.
Rachel says
Hi Yumiko I made these, thank you again for the help with reading my dashi mix. I really enjoyed, however i think i made them a little thick due to trying to fit in my pan. Next time i will do on the BBQ. I love the garnishes.
Yumiko says
Hi Rachel, making Okonomiyaki on the BBQ is a great idea!
Robbie says
Hi Yumiko, thanks for sharing this recipe – I thought the ingredient proportions were perfect, and also really appreciate the additional information/thoughts you include!
For anyone else like me who uses sachet portions of katsuobushi (e.g. Marutomo 2.5g) and might be wondering how many to use – I used two of those pouches total and it was plenty (for me).
Yumiko says
Hi Robbie, thank for the additional information!