Skip to main content

East Asian

Udon Soup With Chicken, Spinach, and Mushrooms

This classic Japanese soup is both nourishing and comforting—just the thing for those midwinter blues.

The Unlikely Ingredient That's Key to Making This Hearty Vegetarian Soup

You probably have it in the fridge already.

Soy Sauce Chicken

A whole chicken, poached in a ginger and anise–scented soy broth, is a popular dish served at Chinese New Year celebrations.

What's With All the Hype Around Matcha?

It's not matcha-do about nothing! The powdered Japanese green tea is versatile and delicious.

Japanese-Style Curry (Karei Raisu)

I love the classic combination of beef, potato, and carrot cooked in a saucy, slightly sweet curry and ladled next to white rice. You can use whatever meat and vegetables you want, but for me, curry has two unbreakable rules: First, make sure that meat is nice and fatty. Second, embrace the premade blocks of Japanese curry roux. Curry is not health food, but neither are the deep-fried pork cutlets called tonkatsu, and I’m not planning to give those up either, no matter what my wife says!

How to Hack a Steamer Basket Out of a Pie Plate

One kitchen tool solves your problem of not having a bamboo steamer basket. And it'll cost you less than a quarter.

Stir-Fried Chicken With Black Beans

Fermented black soy beans—a Chinese cousin to miso paste—are the key to this flavorful weeknight stir-fry.

Time Changes Everything—Especially Kimchi

Listen to a classic Bob Wills song while you're preparing the vegetables for this tangy Korean staple.

Japanese-Style Fried Rice (Chahan)

There is no better use for leftover rice than chahan. A brief trip in a pan resurrects the grains and a few pantry ingredients—little more than eggs, oil, and salt—transform tired rice into a super-satisfying meal. To give the humble dish a little flair, I whip up a saucy broth filled with vegetables and shrimp and pour it on at the last minute. Of course, you can add any ingredients you like—peas or asparagus, kimchi or Japanese pickles, pork, or even, as I do at Morimoto Napa, duck confit.

Stir-Fried Noodles With Pork, Cabbage, and Ginger (Yakisoba)

The most popular person at any Japanese street festival is the yakisoba guy. Standing at a small cart with a hot griddle, he wears a twisted hair band and holds two giant spatulas, one in each hand. With great energy and fanfare he stir-fries a heap of vegetables and pork with chukasoba noodles—the yellow, springy Chinese-style wheat noodles more commonly known as ramen. He finishes with a glug of the special bottled sauce that tastes like a spicier version of tonkatsu sauce, and customers walk toward him like zombies. At home, however, the dish is best cooked one portion at a time.

Cornmeal Bao With Turkey and Black Pepper Sauce

These pillowy steamed buns are delicious in all the same ways as Parker House rolls, with the sweet flavor of cornmeal.

Sweet Potato and Brussels Sprout Okonomiyaki

For this nontraditional okonomiyaki recipe, you need to julienne the potato. Use a mandoline with the shredder attachment, or slice it very thinly into planks and then crosswise into very thin strips. Makes a terrific appetizer!

5 Genius Ways to Use Up Turkey Day Leftovers

We asked five chefs to come up with new ways to use up Thanksgiving turkey. Here are their recipes.

Dashi Stracciatella

Sometimes all your body wants is a vacation from intense eating. That's where this feel-good (but fill-you-up) broth comes in.

We Cooked With MSG. Here's What Happened.

The much-maligned ingredient is also a source of pure umami. Is it worth cooking with?

Is This the Best Chinese Cookbook Ever Written?

Scholar Carolyn Phillips has written the first English-language cookbook to encompass all 35 cuisines of China. Cookbook critic Paula Forbes dives in, head first.
18 of 69