Japanese Chicken Meatballs called ‘Tsukune’ are one of the regular yakitori dish items. Soft and bouncy chicken meatballs are skewered and chargrilled with sweet soy sauce, i.e. yakitori sauce. The key to my soft and juicy meatballs is the grated onion and the amount of fat in the chicken mince (ground chicken).
People often think that Tsukune (つくね) is Japanese chicken meatballs. But that is not accurate. Tsukune is a generic name for Japanese-style meatballs. The minced meat (ground meat) does not have to be chicken, it could be pork or even fish.
However, the most popular Tsukune is made with chicken and that’s probably why Tsukune is synonymous with chicken meatballs.
CHICKEN MINCE (GROUND CHICKEN) FOR TSUKUNE
Meatballs for Tsukune have to be soft, bouncy and juicy. To make the texture of the soft and juicy Tsukune, you need to have chicken fat in the mince. The surface of the meatballs needs to be smooth rather than bumpy, which you get when the granular size of the mince is large.
I use a mixture of chicken breast mince and chicken thigh mince, which contains more fat than the breast mince. The breast mince is almost like a paste and it makes the surface of the meatballs smooth. The chicken thigh mince adds fat to the mince that makes the meatballs soft and juicy and compensates for the dryness of the breast mince.
But sometimes, I may have just breast mince. In this case, I add finely minced chicken fat to it so that the meatballs become more moist and soft.
Whenever I trim the fat and remove the skin from the chicken, I save them and freeze them. The chicken skin often has a layer of fat on the inside. I scrape off the fat to make use of it.
You could use a blender to make mince from fillets as well. I tried it with thigh fillets and it worked well. You can mince thigh fillets much finer than those you get from the shop.
HOW TO MAKE Tsukune (Japanese Chicken Meatballs)
The chicken mince mixture to make Tsukune consists of the following (The list is not short, but all the ingredients are available at supermarkets):
- Chicken mince (50% breast mince + 50% thigh mince), or 90% breast mince + 10% minced chicken fat
- Salt
- Egg
- Grated onion
- Grated ginger (juice only)
- Light soy sauce
- Cornflour/corn starch
- Cooking sake
Drop your meatballs into the boiling water and cook them for 5-7 minutes. This is basically the process of making the basic Tsukune.
Once your meatballs are boiled, there are many different ways of using them to make dishes. Today, I made them in Yakitori-style by putting skewers through them and grilling them with a sweet soy sauce.
MY WAY OF MAKING TSUKUNE (Japanese Chicken Meatballs)
In almost all meatball dishes, when you make the meatball, you take a portion of the meat mixture on your palm, place the other hand to cover the meat, then roll the meat inside your hands to make it round. This method sure can make a perfect ball.
I make Tsukune in the different way. Because the mince mixture in my recipe is quite soft and difficult to roll to make a ball, I do not use the traditional method of making a meatball.
What I do is shown in the step-by-step photo below.
I grab a handful of mince mixture with my left hand (I am a right hander), make a circle with my thumb and index finger and squeeze my hand to push the meat through the circle. The meat comes out shaped like a ball. With my right hand, I use a spoon to scoop the meatball off my left hand and drop it into the boiling water.
TSUKUNE VS TSUMIRE
There is a similar meatball called ‘tsumire’ (つみれ) which is also made with minced meat, most commonly with minced fish. Tsumire made with sardines is a popular ingredient to go into Oden (Simmered One Pot Dish) hot pot. People assume that tsumire is fish meatballs, but it is not so.
The difference between Tsukune and tsumire is the way meatballs are formed.
In the case of Tsukune, minced meat is formed into a ball or a sausage shape using hands. On the other hand, tsumire is made by dropping seasoned minced meat into boiling water or soup using a spoon, or by picking up by hand without forming a particular shape.
Photo below is a traditional tsumire server made of bamboo. Place the mice mixture on the half-pipe bamboo server and simply slide a chunk of mince into the boiling broth using a spatula.
I wanted to add this section because my way of making Tsukune is the combined method of making Tsukune and tsumire. I must post a tsumire dish one day.
YAKITORI-STYLE TSUKUNE (Japanese Chicken Meatballs)
When you serve Tsukune as part of a yakitori dish, put 2 or 3 meatballs through a skewer. Then grill them with either salts sprinkled over them or sweet soy sauce basted on them.
Skewer: The best skewer for the meatballs is called ‘teppō gushi’ (鉄砲串, gun skewer). Unlike the standard round bamboo skewer, the teppō gushi is a narrow flat skewer with a handle at one end. The flat skewer prevents the meatballs from rotating around the skewer when turning the balls on the skewer over. You can buy teppō gushi at Japanese grocery stores. Some online shops also sell them.
Flavouring: The flavour can be either salty or sweet. The salty Tsukune is simply made by sprinkling some salt over the meatballs when grilling. The sweet flavour is made by basting the meatballs in a condensed sauce that is made of soy sauce, mirin and sugar.
I hope you enjoy Japanese Chicken Meatballs (Tsukune) as much as Yakitori (Japanese Skewered Chicken).
Yumiko
Tsukune (Japanese Chicken Meatballs) is a regular Yakitori dish items. Soft and bouncy chicken meatballs are skewered and chargrilled with sweet soy sauce, i.e. yakitori sauce. The key to my soft and juicy meatballs is the grated onion and the amount of fat in the chicken mince (ground chicken).
Don't forget to see the section 'MEAL IDEAS' below the recipe card! It gives you a list of dishes that I have already posted and this recipe so you can make up a complete meal. I hope it is of help to you.
- 450g / 1lb chicken breast mince (ground, note 1)
- 50g / 1.8oz chicken fat finely minced (note 1)
- ½ tsp salt
- 1 egg (large)
- 1 tbsp grated onion
- 1 tsp ginger juice (squeeze the juice out of grated ginger)
- 1 tsp light soy sauce
- 1½ tbsp cornflour/corn starch
- 1½ tbsp sake
- 40ml / 1.4oz soy sauce (normal Japanese soy sauce)
- 40ml / 1.4oz mirin
- ½ tbsp sugar
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Add all the Sauce ingredients to a pot and bring it to the boil. Turn down the heat to medium or medium low and simmer for about 4-5 minutes to reduce the quantity by about a third (note 2).
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Add chicken mince, chicken fat and salt in a bowl and mix well until the chicken mince becomes sticky.
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Add the remaining ingredients, except 1 tablespoon of sake, to the bowl and mix well.
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Add the remaining sake to the bowl gradually while mixing. The mixture is quite soft but do not add all of the sake specified if the mixture is too soft to grab by hand and form a ball.
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Boil water in a pot. Coat a cutlery spoon with oil (not in ingredients).
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Grab chicken mince with the left hand (I am a right hander) and squeeze out mince through the thumb and the index finger. The mince will come out forming a round shape (note 3).
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Take the meatball with the spoon and drop it into the pot. Repeat this for the rest of the mince (see the step-by-step photo in post).
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Boil meatballs for 5-7 minutes until cooked through (note 4). Take the meatballs out and put aside. Cook them in batches so that the surface of the boiling water is filled with no more than one layer of the meatballs.
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Heat griller, griddle or BBQ (note 6). Oil the rack/grill where you place the meatballs.
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Thread 3 Tsukune onto flat skewers (note 7).
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Baste tsukune with the sauce using a brush and cook under the griller or on the griddle/BBQ for 1-2 minutes until the meatballs are slightly burnt.
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Turn over the skewers and cook further 1-2 minutes. Then baste with the sauce, cook 30 seconds on both sides.
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Serve immediately.
1. You could have a mixture of 250g / 8.8oz breast mince and 250g / 8.8oz thigh mince, or 100% thigh mince.
You could have just 500g / 1.1lb of breast mince but the meatballs may be slightly dry.
2. The time taken to reduce the sauce depends on the size of the pot. The larger the diameter of the pot, the faster it reduces.
3. The size of the circle made with your thumb and index finger determines the size of the ball and therefore the number of meatballs made in total.
My meatball was 3-3.5cm / 1¼” in diameter and I made 24 meatballs.
4. Cooking time depends on the size of the meatballs. When the meatball is floating and feels light when you pick it up, it is cooked through.
5. I made Tsukune on skewers, but you could cook individually if you like. Or two/four meatballs on each skewer instead of three.
6. The heat can be strong. Because Tsukune is already cooked, all you need to do here is to coat with sauce and get them burnt slightly to give better flavour to them.
7. The flat bamboo skewers used in Yakitori are called 'teppō gushi' (鉄砲串, gun skewer) as the shape is like a gun (in the old days). You can buy teppō gushi at Japanese grocery stores. Some online shops also sell them.
8. Tsukune can be frozen. After boiling, cool them down and freeze them in an air tight container or a freezer bag. To grill, thaw them, then grill as per the instructions.
9. Nutrition per skewer.
serving: 103g calories: 169kcal fat: 8.6g (13%) saturated fat: 0.4g (12%) trans fat: 0.0g polyunsaturated fat: 1.8g monounsaturated fat: 3.5g cholesterol: 70mg (23%) sodium: 594mg (25%) potassium: 280mg (8%) carbohydrates: 6.4g (2%) dietary fibre: 0.4g (2%) sugar: 3.9g protein: 14g vitamin a: 3% vitamin c: 0.7% calcium: 1% iron: 3%
Originally published in November 2016, improved photos and contents with Meal Ideas in April 2020 (no change to recipe).
Meal Ideas
A typical Japanese meal consists of a main dish, a couple of side dishes, a soup and rice. I try to come up with a combination of dishes with a variety of flavours, colours, textures and make-ahead dishes.
The flavouring of the Tsukune is sweet soy sauce. So I avoided side dishes with sweet flavours. If your Tsukune is flavoured with salt, one of the side dishes can be a sweet dish such as Simmered Pumpkin (Kabocha no Nimono).
Tonjiru adds a wider range of vegetables to the meal as well as the different colours.
- Main: Tsukune (Japanese Chicken Meatballs) – can be made ahead up to boiling the meatballs, then grill on the day
- Side dish 1: Sesame Bean Sprouts – make ahead
- Side dish 2: Wasabi Dressing and Watercress Salad – or any other green salad
- Soup: Tonjiru (Pork and Vegetable Miso Soup) – can be made ahead
- Rice: Cooked Rice
SH says
Dear Yumiko! This is very good recipe. My family loved it. I served them with the soup as you suggested and they go so well together. One thing though I found they didnt look as brown as yours or others you get a Japanese stalls in the supermarket. Taste wise was great though but they look paler.
Yumiko says
Hi SH, next time when you make Tsukune, you could try the following to make the colour darker:
(1) Condense the sauce a tiny bit more to make it thicker. But do not over-condense as it becomes too strong.
(2) Baste a couple more times while grilling Tsukune.
I hope these help!
Hazel bello says
Yumiko
My first experiment making Japanese ground chicken meatballs which by mistake trying to do two recipes at a time. By mistakes, made the sauce for sweet sour instead . Tasted alright n my ground chicken very moist.
Yumiko says
Hi Hazel bello, the sweet & sour flavour wouldn’t make tsukune like a part of yakitori but I am sure it was tasty.
Tunadip says
Hi! Just cooked this for dinner tonite! Very nice sauce and the chicken balls were flavourful. Thanks v much!
Yumiko says
Hi, good to hear that you enjoyed it. Thanks for the 5 stars!
Karen says
I didn’t put on stick. I stirfryed in pan with sauce, peppers, onions, and pineapple w/toasted seasame oil and green onions. One of my favorites dishes!
Yumiko says
Hi Karen, it sounds yummy!
Kelli says
This recipe looks and sounds delicious! I’m from North America. Is “cornflour” really cornflour, or is it corn meal or corn starch? I don’t eat corn so need to know so I can substitute with the correct ingredient, i.e. potato starch, arrowroot, etc. Thank you!
Yumiko says
Hi Kelli, it is corn starch. In Australia, we call it cornflour. I will update the recipe to clarify that. Thanks for asking!
Maggie says
Looks delicious! Wondering if I can put the meatballs in the oven if I don’t have a grill, griddle or BBQ?
Thank you!
Yumiko says
Hi Maggie, yes you can. Set the oven high because all you need is to baste sauce and burn the surface a little.
chris says
I’d like to make this for a Christmas party, but have a question about “chicken fat,” if I use all breast meat. Can I use the fat that renders off and floats to the top of stock? I usually have at least a half inch, nicely solid, at the top of refrigerated, homemade stock.
Yumiko says
Hi Chris, I’ve never tried that. Fat is fat but the difference is that the fat on the top of stock will become liquid when heated while the fresh fat retains tissues. It is worth trying but I’d suggest that you reduce the amount of fat to, say half.
Dorothy Dunton says
I totally agreed with Marissa! This will be my new way to shape meatballs! I have a meat grinder attachment for my KitchenAid mixer which I use quite often as I can control the amount of fat that goes into the ground meat. So many times beef has too much fat and chicken ends up dry.
Yumiko says
Hi Dorothy-san! This method of making meatballs works best when the meat mixture is a bit soft so that it can easily come out and shape a ball. To come to think of it, I never used this method to make Western style meatballs! I must try that to see if it works well.
Marissa says
I always learn interesting things from your posts, Yumiko. Thank you!
These meatballs look wonderful and the by hand meatball method is genius!
Yumiko says
Hi Marissa, thank you! And by hand meatballs are so easy to make!
Nagi@RecipeTinEats says
MUM!!! I LOVE TSUKENE! I just realised I’ve never actually made this myself so it’s good that I have the recipe. I think we need to have another yakitori family lunch soon…
Yumiko says
When we do another Yakitori day, you can make tsukune!