Shop 251, 747 Botany Road, Rosebery NSW 2018
http://www.chefsarmoury.com
http://www.chefsarmoury.com
Fun way to cook
After the session I bumped into a fellow food blogger Yee from Brunch Lunch Munch who had found out about the cooking class through my last post on the Wagyu tasting event. The next free cooking class is How to Make Japanese Soups and Stocks on 19 June — bookings essential.
RECIPE NOTES – Chef's Armoury
The Takoyaki Pan
Make sure you choose a heavy cast iron takoyaki pan, as these are best for even heat distribution. The pan must be properly seasoned. Before first use and any time when the pan starts to stick, fry some vegetable scraps in the pan with neutral oil such as rice bran or grapeseed.
Basic Takoyaki Batter – makes about 60 balls
300g plain flour
3 eggs
1 heaped tablespoon kuzu
1 litre pre made dashi stock
2 tsp salt
2 tsp soy sauce
1.5 cups finely diced cabbage
1.5 cups finely sliced shallots – green part only
Mix all ingredients well and chill in fridge for 1 hour. The batter should have a consistency of pouring cream. There are some pre seasoned takoyaki flours on the market that you can simply add water and egg.
The Takoyaki Pan
Make sure you choose a heavy cast iron takoyaki pan, as these are best for even heat distribution. The pan must be properly seasoned. Before first use and any time when the pan starts to stick, fry some vegetable scraps in the pan with neutral oil such as rice bran or grapeseed.
Basic Takoyaki Batter – makes about 60 balls
300g plain flour
3 eggs
1 heaped tablespoon kuzu
1 litre pre made dashi stock
2 tsp salt
2 tsp soy sauce
1.5 cups finely diced cabbage
1.5 cups finely sliced shallots – green part only
Mix all ingredients well and chill in fridge for 1 hour. The batter should have a consistency of pouring cream. There are some pre seasoned takoyaki flours on the market that you can simply add water and egg.
Other visits to Chef's Armoury:
• 19 June 2010 - Japanese Stocks and Soups
• 15 May 2010 - How to make Takoyaki (fried balls of octopus)
• 27 Mar 2010 - Wagyu Tasting
• 30 Jan 2010 - Professional Knife Sharpening Service
SNAPSHOT REVIEW:
PROS: Free lesson, Tasty sample, Fun way to cook
CONS: Takes a bit of time to cook a batch of takoyaki
MUST TRY: Visiting Japan one day for culture and food
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Kenko Ofu Mayonnaise $7.95, Bulldog Osaka Takoyaki Sauce $7.50
9 comments:
OOh,I'd love to learn how to make tokoyaki! Free cooking class? Are they still running it? (i'll check out the site) Having a tokoyaki pan around seems quite cumbersome though.
hey Simon, it was great to get to meet you at Chef's Armoury :) Very good and extensive coverage on how to make takoyaki too!! Great job!!
Ooooo looks yum and loads of fun cooking it too!
Wow these look great! I wonder if you could adapt the pan to cooking other stuff too like poffertjes, hehe! Or maybe Yorkshire puddings, multiple usage would make it easy to justify the purchase!
I had booked a spot at this class but couldn't make it! :( I love takoyaki...
oh yum!!! I gotta get myself one of those pans and make some at home. Sadly I would put on 4 kilos in the first day making them!
hi renita, they have listed another one as yet but that's not to say they might again. the pan isn't too big and worked well on a little portable korean gas burner thingie.
hi YW, great to meet you too. you sure got the hang of cooking up some tasty tokoyaki. looking forward to reading your blog post if you do one. i'll be sure to add your link it to my review.
hi brenda, the chef of the day said it's a great thing to have at a party when guests are arriving and you could get them to cook their own nibbles hehe
hi yaya, actually funny you mention that. the chef mentioned you can adapt for sweet style dumplings as well. perhaps even put a little bit of chocolate in the middle and then cover with sugar after. i think you're only limited by your cooking imagination.
hi maria, hopefully you'll be able to get to one of their other classes. they seem to have a couple of other free events coming up.
hi maria, it would get quite addictive i think making tasty little dumplings. best to have a few other people over to share the food and also the cooking. :-)
How awesome they are having free classes! I wish they would do something like that here in Melbourne! It's cool to see that no matter how messy the first pour of batter is, the takoyaki turns out perfectly round! Yum!
hi april, i'm sure if you search hard enough you'll discover some free cooking classes somewhere in melbourne. it is quite amazing how after that first turn they look like perfect — and so yummy! :-)
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