Japanese chicken and egg with onions, simmered in a sweet dashi sauce, and served over rice. So simple. So good.
Course Main Course, Main Dishes
Cuisine Asian, Japanese
Keyword donburi
Prep Time 10 minutesminutes
Cook Time 10 minutesminutes
Total Time 20 minutesminutes
Servings 1large bowl
Calories 873kcal
Ingredients
2boneless skin-on chicken thighs
1/2cupdashi(see note)
2tbspmirinor sake plus 1/2 tsp of sugar
2tbspshoyu (soy sauce)
1tspsugar
2largeeggs
1smallonionsliced
1scallionthinly sliced
shichimi togarashito garnish
cooked riceto serve
US Customary - Metric
Instructions
Crack eggs into a bowl. Break yolks and mix a little, but leave the yolk and white streaky and separate.
Combine dashi, mirin, shoyu, and sugar. Stir well to combine.
Sear chicken, skin side down. Remove the pan from the heat. Slice the chicken and set it aside (note that it should not be cooked through at this point).
Place the pan back over medium heat. Add the onions and dashi mixture. Bring to a simmer, cook for 1 minute.
Add chicken, skin side up. Simmer until chicken is cooked through and the onions are soft and translucent (about 3-4 minutes).
Pour the eggs into the pan and stir once or twice to distribute everything evenly. Cover, and cook until the egg is barely set (about 1 minute).
Transfer mixture to a hot bowl of cooked rice. Garnish with mitsuba/scallions and shichimi togarashi and serve immediately.
Notes
Dashi note - You can use scratch-made dashi (i.e. with katsuobushi and kombu), or instant dashi. Note that many types of instant dashi contain a great deal of added salt, so you may wish to reduce the added soy sauce, then adjust to taste.Scallions and mitsuba - The scallions are often replaced by mitsuba in Japanese oyakodon recipes, but this leafy herb is often hard to find outside of Japan. Other alternatives include parsley, celery, and cilantro leaves.Serving size note - The recipe as given makes an extremely large single serving or two average size servings. The recipe is easily scaled down by half, but if you want to make more you may want to do so in batches. You can cook an extra large batch in a big frying pan, but you may find it tougher to spoon out individual portions without breaking the eggs up and mixing everything together. Still, this is more of an aesthetic issue than anything - everything will taste great regardless.