Sylvia Wakana - Nabe Recipe

Nabe (Japanese Hot Pot) / 鍋


Japanese hot pot is a popular comfort dish during the colder seasons. It’s healthy, easy-to-make, fast, and versatile making it one of my favorite dishes to make on busy days.

Nabe is the overarching word for hot pot dishes in Japan. There are a huge variety of kinds made with all different bases (like dashi or miso) as well as specific kinds like oden or sukiyaki. There are also regional varieties that use ingredients that are specific to the region.

Tools for making nabe

Nabe is most often made in pots made of clay (donabe) or cast iron (tetsunabe). These pots and ingredients are usually placed in the center of dining tables on tabletop stoves and are perfect for sharing with loved ones or friends – it’s a very social type of food. As you are cooking the ingredients in front of you, usually extra uncooked ingredients are off to the side so you can add items as you go to enjoy them freshly cooked and to prevent the veggies from getting soggy or overcooked.

I personally use a donabe to make nabe typically (I have some linked in the “Shop this post” section below as well as on my Tools page) but really you can use any wide pot. I’ve even used my Our Place pan for nabe since it’s quite deep (you can use code “Sylvia10” for $10 off your Our Place order).

If you don’t have a tabletop stove, you can make everything on your range and just take the hot pot off and serve immediately. You just won’t be able to do rounds of ingredients unless you keep going back and forth.

What can I put in nabe?

The nabe recipe I am sharing today is a type of Yosenabe, or a combination nabe that basically has no rules. You can put absolutely anything you want inside. That is one of my favorite things about this kind of nabe. It’s perfect for when you’re trying to clean out your fridge or didn’t have time to go grocery shopping for something specific. Here are some ideas for what you can put in nabe:

  • Mushrooms (enoki, shiitake, oyster, etc.)
  • Napa Cabbage
  • Green Onion or Nira
  • Bok Choy
  • Carrot
  • Thinly cut Pork or Beef
  • Chicken
  • Fish
  • Shrimp
  • Clams
  • Noodles (shirataki, udon, etc.)
  • Tofu
  • Fishcake
  • Spinach
  • Kimchi

And the list can go on and on!

Accompaniments

Lightly flavored nabe are often eaten with dipping sauces like ponzu or sesame sauce. Some nabe with stronger flavors don’t need any sauce as the broth is flavored enough (although I like strong nabe soup for taste and dipping the ingredients in ponzu). Sukiyaki is often dipped into raw beaten egg.

I also like to sprinkle shichimi togarashi (Japanese dried chili spice) or add rayu (hot oil) on top to make my nabe a little spicy.

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Nabe (Japanese Hot Pot) / 鍋

Japanese hot pot is a popular comfort dish during the colder seasons. It's healthy, easy-to-make, fast, and versatile making it one of my favorite dishes to make on busy days.
Prep Time15 minutes
Cook Time15 minutes
Total Time30 minutes
Course: Main Course
Cuisine: Japanese
Keyword: japanese cooking, japanese recipe, nabe, nabe recipe
Servings: 2

Equipment

  • Donabe or Wide Pot

Ingredients

  • 1/2 – 1 lb thinly sliced pork
  • 1 package fish cake/balls
  • 1/2 napa cabbage
  • 1 bunch shungiku (crysanthemum greens)
  • 1 bunch green onions
  • 1 pack shimeji mushrooms
  • 4 shiitake mushrooms
  • 1 pack tofu cut into large cubes
  • carrots thinly sliced

Broth

  • 4 cups dashi
  • 4-5 tbsp miso
  • 1 tbsp sake
  • splash soy sauce

Extras

  • ponzu for dipping
  • shichimi togarashi or rayu

Instructions

  • Prepare your ingredients. Typically for napa cabbage or anything leafy I cut the leaves in half to make it more manageable when eating. I cube the tofu and for carrots, I sometimes use vegetable cutters to make cute shapes.
  • In a donabe or wide pot, put in the broth ingredients (dashi, miso, sake, soy sauce) and bring to a boil.
  • Add in a variety of ingredients to fill the pot. Boil until the ingredients are cooked.
  • Take out the ingredients as they are cooked and put in your own personal bowl along with some broth that you can sip. Add shichimi togarashi or rayu if you'd like it a little spicy. Or use ponzu in a separate bowl to dip the cooked ingredients in before eating.
  • As the ingredients get eaten, add more into the pot to continue enjoying.

Notes

Recipe by: Sylvia Wakana (http://sylviawakana.com)

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