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In Japan, many teppanyaki restaurants feature Kobe beef [7] or Wagyu beef. [9] [2] Side dishes of mung bean sprouts, zucchini (courgettes) (though this is not a popular vegetable in Japan and rarely found in that market), garlic chips (crisps), or fried rice usually accompany the meal. Some restaurants provide sauces in which to dip the food.
Thinly sliced beef is usually used for sukiyaki, although in the past, in certain parts of the country (notably Hokkaidō and Niigata) pork was also popular. Popular ingredients cooked with the beef are: Tofu (usually seared firm tofu). Negi (a type of scallion). Leafy vegetables, such as Chinese cabbage and shungiku (garland chrysanthemum leaves).
Shabu-shabu (しゃぶしゃぶ): hot pot with thinly sliced beef, vegetables, and tofu, cooked in a thin stock at the table and dipped in a soy or sesame-based dip before eating. Sukiyaki (すき焼き): thinly sliced beef and vegetables cooked in a mixture of soy sauce, dashi, sugar, and sake. Participants cook at the table then dip food into ...
Beef-and-Bean Chili. When team sweaters, hats, and scarves aren't enough to keep your tailgate party warm, whip out some hot beef and bean chili. It warms the soul. Get Ree's Beef-and-Bean Chili ...
Beef tallow and butter are different, but have a few similar qualities. “From a saturated fat perspective, they are almost equal, and both should be consumed moderately,” Gans says.
gyūtan (牛タン), beef tongue, sliced thinly. butabara (豚ばら), Pork belly; atsuage dōfu (厚揚げ豆腐), thicker variety of deep-fried tōfu; enoki maki (エノキ巻き), enoki mushrooms wrapped in slices of pork; asuparabēkon (アスパラベーコン), asparagus wrapped in bacon
The FDA has banned red dye No. 3, as the synthetic additive is known to cause cancer. Nutritionists Ilana Muhlstein and Robin DeCicco discuss what this means for American health.
Motsunabe - a nabemono dish of beef or pork offal. (Fukuoka) Mentaiko spicy fish eggs (Fukuoka) Champon - a ramen-like dish of noodles, seafood and vegetables cooked in the same pot. Castella - a sweet, rectangular sponge cake, introduced to Nagasaki by the Portuguese in the 16th Century. Now popular throughout Japan.