"Yum!" thought Amy Kaneko when she tasted the Japanese home cooking she'd married into. Even better, turned out it uses easy-to-find ingredients, and she couldn't believe how simple the techniques are for food this delicious. This terrific cookbook showcases 70 of Amy's favorite recipes, includingTonkatsu (crispy pork cutlets in a tangy sauce) and Onigiri (cute little rice balls stuffed with salmon). A glossary describes the more unusual ingredients and a source list makes it a snap to find and use Japanese specialties such as daikon, miso, and wasabi. It's tasty, it's practical, it's a wow with family and friendsso Let's Cook Japanese Food!
I identify so much with Kaneko's experiences as an expat in Japan. Her anecdotes remind me a lot of my own experiences with my homestay family in Osaka. Her portrayal of everyday Japanese food is spot-on for me - omu-raisu, hamburg, cream stew (yeah, really!). The only gripe I have is that some recipe directions are vague, but if you are an experienced cook, they're largely sufficient. This book is perfect for expat cooks who are homesick for "real" Japanese food.
I use this book a lot to make all kinds of home-style Japanese recipes. I appreciate that she walks you through the more old-school options (curry from scratch without the store-bought roux, e.g.), and that the recipes are for the kinds of food you'd expect your mom or aunt to make.
Great explanations and easy to follow methods. We tried the agedashi dofu and several of the soups. All yummy! If you have never made Japanese food at home before, start with this. Great for beginners.
Good Japanese cookbook with five sections to reminisce traditional Japanese home-cooked food. I would say the introduction section is the gist of the book. Authentic and and contemporary.
Great cookbook for people who love to eat Japanese food but are a bit intimidated by how complicated it seems to prepare it. I've been making simple Japanese dishes for years, but I wanted to add more than just onigiri, sushi and udon into the mix. Amy Kaneko's book provides a good variety of dishes that are not that difficult to prepare and are sure to whet your family's appetite. Even the most finicky of eaters will find some of Amy's recipes tasty.
This book features a glossary to help you understand the various Japanese ingredients, and the author even helps solve your shopping woes by providing alternative ingredients to items you might not be able to find in your market (although most of what's in the book should be found in the Asian food aisle at any major grocer). There's even a list of Web sites that sell many of the ingredients used in the recipes, should you be at a complete loss at your local supermarket.
On the purely physical side, "Let's Cook Japanese Food!" is a book with beautiful art direction. The colors and patterns featured on the cover and pages are vibrant and cheerful, and they complement the photos of food very well. Even if you don't feel like cooking, this book is great to thumb through because it's nice to look at.
Love it! So nostalgic. Let's Cook Japanese Food! has quite a bit of Japanese home-style recipes, just what I've been looking for. The recipes are easy to follow. The beginning has an "Ingredients and Equipment" section, which actually seems pretty helpful for a broad spectrum of people with varying degrees of familiarity of Japanese ingredients. This section shows how to achieve an authentic Japanese home-style flavor using ingredients found at your local market, which is super handy if you don't have an Asian market nearby or don't want to spend a fortune at your local Asian market (^_^)...like me...who always goes overboard.
Don't get me wrong, while I really like this cookbook because it highlights a lot of dishes that are very familiar and nostalgic to me, it is a pretty standard, fairly basic book. If you're looking for more advanced dishes served outside the dinner table, this probably isn't the book for you. And unlike most Japanese cookbooks I've come across, there actually isn't a Bento section.
After reading Bento Box in the Heartland, I wanted to try some Japanese cooking. I made the onigiri from that book, and found this Japanese cookbook while browsing the book shop. It has a lot of different recipes, all the type of thing home cooks really make in Japan. I just tried the recipe for Okaasan no Potato Sarada (My MIL's Potato Salad). It is fabulous. I love the idea that there are Japanese adaptations of food from other countries, who knew?
I'll try a few more things, including her instructions for making rice the Japanese way. I do wish there was a photograph of every dish, that is helpful for me (my only criticism so far).
There are many dishes I miss from Japan. and would like to learn to make. I've searched for easy to follow recipes and had no luck. This is the first cookbook I've found that teaches how to cook real everyday Japanese food. Written by an American who married a Japanese man it explains things in an easy to follow way. I liked that she includes substituion ideas in case you can't find an exotic ingredient. There are lots of color pictures and a guide to ingredients that you could use at the supermarket. A great book! Everything I've tried making from this book has worked.
The author of the cookbook married a Japanese man and spent several years living in Japan where she was taught how to cook by her mother-in-law. The book is not just recipes, but is interspersed with stories about the recipes and about Japanese foods in general, making it a much more interesting read.
I just browsed through and the recipes look fairly easy, don't have too many weird ingredients, and look like the sort of thing people probably make for dinner at home in Japan (I recognize several dishes--rolled sweet eggs, curry--not from "Japanese" restaurants but from reading manga). They have the breaded pork cutlets my husband loves--I'll definitely have to try that recipe!
I enjoyed this cookbook b/c it is how to cook homestyle Japanese food, and it's from the perspective of a non-Japanese woman who married into a Japanese family and had to learn how to cook things for her husband. I'm really looking forward to cooking things from here when I have more money to spend on food, as her recipes are simple and straightforward.
This book is great for beginners. The recipes are pretty easy & the ingredients are pretty basic. I'm lucky enough to live near a Japanese market, so I just got the basic ingredients the author lists and started my journey to making Japanese food! The pictures are visually appealing--a bonus. ;) I definitely recommend this book.
Great book to learn how to cook Japanese food. I learned how to cook udon and Japanese stir-fry for the first time during the pandemic. However, it doesn't give you complete instructions like how to make the Japanese egg with the special yolk, so I had to find a video on YouTube to supplement. Overall really good book and easy to follow the instructions.
Easy-to-prepare. The recipes in this book can be incorporated in everyday meals, granted you have access to a Japanese market that carries the hard-to-find ingredients. Definitely healthy stuff, but I'd switch the canola oil to pure coconut oil (non-flavored) to reap the most benefits.