Get to know Yakitori: Japan's delectable street food

Yakitori (or chicken on a skewer) versions, left to right, tare style, torikawa, with shio (or salt) and reba (or livers). (Christian Gooden/St. Louis Post-Dispatch/TNS)
Yakitori (or chicken on a skewer) versions, left to right, tare style, torikawa, with shio (or salt) and reba (or livers). (Christian Gooden/St. Louis Post-Dispatch/TNS)

Just west of Tokyo's Shinjuku station, the busiest train station in the world, the air is said to be heavy with the irresistible aroma of chicken cooking on charcoal grills.

This is Yakitori Alley (though it also has a less appealing name), perhaps the greatest concentration of yakitori street food stalls in all of Japan. If you don't happen to be there, don't worry: Yakitori is popular throughout the country.

And if you aren't in Japan, that's also no problem. You can easily make it yourself at home. It only takes a few minutes to make one of Japan's most addictive street treats.

In its most basic form, yakitori is small pieces of chicken that are skewered and cooked quickly over blazing hot charcoal. It is often eaten as a snack, particularly on the way home from work - which is why you can usually find it near a train station.

It is also popular later in the evening, to enjoy after (or during) a few drinks. It goes especially well with beer.

Not surprisingly, you can get yakitori made from virtually any part of a chicken: skin, heart, liver, even the cockscomb and cartilage from the keel bone between the breasts. But this is America, so I have decided to concentrate only on yakitori from the thigh and the breast. And maybe the skin. And the liver.

No matter what part of the chicken it comes from, yakitori typically is prepared in one of two ways. Shio is just flavored with salt, though after it is cooked, you can add a squeeze of lemon, a spice mix or a hot sauce. Tare is basted with a thickened, sweet soy, mirin and sake sauce.

Shio is typically made with pieces of breast meat. I stuck a few bite-size pieces on a skewer and cooked them relatively quickly on a hot, oiled skillet.

A word about the skillet: Yakitori is meant to be grilled, but I don't have a grill in the test kitchen in the office - because it is in the office, and lit charcoal would suffocate everyone in the building. So I did the next best thing, which is to cook it on a skillet. It didn't have the charcoal flavor, but it was wonderful nonetheless.

Now, a word about the skewer: I actually used two skewers for every piece of yakitori. In Japan, they use special wide, flat skewers, which make it easy to turn the meat. But all I could get here were thin, round skewers. Two of these skewers let you turn the meat with ease.

As I said, the yakitori with shio was wonderful. I used plenty of salt before cooking, bringing the meat just to the point before it is too salty. After it was cooked, I spritzed it with a spray of lemon juice and topped it with togarashi, a spicy, seven-ingredient Japanese spice blend.

Yakitori with tare are usually made with small pieces of chicken thigh meat alternated with a form of onion. In Japan, they use long onion, which is sort of a cross between green onions and a leek. But I couldn't find long onion, so I just used pieces of green onion.

The versatile tare - sauce - could not be simpler to make. It's just two parts soy sauce to one part each of granulated sugar, sake and mirin, boiled together until it is lightly thickened.

I repeatedly basted some of the skewers of yakitori with the sauce while they were cooking, and marinated others in the sauce for 30 minutes before putting them in the pan. There was very little difference in taste between them, so just do whichever you find easiest.

And yes, I have a word about the tare, too: It tastes amazing, and is the perfect accompaniment to both the chicken and the green onions. There should be no problems if you grill with it, but using it in a skillet results in a blackened mess that ferociously sticks to your pan. Still, it isn't too hard to clean: Just soak the pan in soapy water for a few hours and the black mess will lift right up.

Because I'm not squeamish, I also made torikawa and reba - that is, yakitori made with strips of chicken skin and chicken livers. Both are prepared shio style, with just salt.

The torikawa, the chicken skin, was as good as I thought it would be. When chicken skin receives enough heat it becomes crispy, with a rich, irresistible flavor. All it needs to be the perfect (though perhaps unhealthful) snack is plenty of salt, which you give it before cooking.

The reba, the chicken livers, were also as good as I'd hoped. Skewering them and cooking them on a skillet or over a fire does not significantly alter their flavor. They tasted exactly like chicken liver.

I like chicken liver. I was happy.

 

Yakitori With Shio

Note: Togarashi and (sometimes) yuzukosho are available at international markets.

Yield: 10 servings

1 pound boneless, skinless chicken breasts

2 teaspoons salt

Oil (for cooking on stove only)

Lemon wedges, optional

Togarashi (seven-ingredient chile pepper mix), optional, see note

Yuzukosho (chili pepper paste), optional, see note

 

1. If grilling, soak bamboo skewers in water at least 30 minutes and set grill for direct heating. Lightly oil a large skillet if using the stove.

2. Dice chicken into bite-sized pieces of equal size. Thread 3 to 4 pieces on each skewer (or 2 skewers side by side, for easier turning). Sprinkle the chicken on each skewer with a good pinch or two of salt.

3. Place skewers on grill directly over heat and cook, turning once or more, until thoroughly cooked, or cook several skewers at once in a skillet over medium-high heat, turning once or more, until thoroughly done. Remove from heat and serve with slices of lemon, togarashi and yuzukosho if desired.

Per serving: 66 calories; 3 g fat; 1g saturated fat; 33 mg cholesterol; 10 g protein; no carbohydrate; no sugar; no fiber; 486 mg sodium; 3 mg calcium

Recipe by Ochikeron via YouTube

 

Yakitori With Tare

Yield: 10 servings

1/2 cup soy sauce

1/4 cup granulated sugar

1/4 cup sake

1/4 cup mirin

1 pound boneless, skinless chicken thighs

3 to 4 green onions

Vegetable oil (if using stove)

 

1. If grilling, soak bamboo skewers in water at least 30 minutes and set grill for direct heating. Lightly oil a large skillet if using the stove.

2. Mix soy sauce, sugar, sake and mirin in a small pot and boil for 8 to 10 minutes until the sauce becomes slightly thickened. Set aside. Slice the thick part of the onions into 1-inch pieces and set aside

3. Dice chicken into bite-sized pieces of equal size. Thread 1 piece on a skewer (or 2 skewers side by side, for easier turning). Thread 1 piece of onion on the skewer or skewers and keep alternating until you have 2 pieces of onion and 3 pieces of chicken on each skewer.

3. Place skewers on grill directly over heat or in prepared skillet in batches over medium-high heat. Baste with the sauce a few times while you cook, turning at least once, until thoroughly done. Remove from heat and serve.

Per serving: 121 calories; 5 g fat; 3 g saturated fat; 43 mg cholesterol; 10 g protein; 9 g carbohydrate; 8 g sugar; no fiber; 884 mg sodium; 7 mg calcium

Recipe by Japanese Cooking 101

 

Torikawa (Crispy Chicken Skin)

Yield: 4 servings

Skin from 4 chicken thighs or 2 chicken breasts

Salt

Vegetable oil (if using stove)

 

1. If grilling, soak bamboo skewers in water at least 30 minutes and set grill for direct heating. Lightly oil a large skillet if using the stove.

2. Slice skin into thin strips. Thread strips of skin from 1 thigh or 1/2 breast onto 1 skewer (or 2 skewers side by side, for easier turning), and sprinkle generously with salt. Place skewers on grill directly over heat or on a large skillet over medium-high heat. Turn a few times until thoroughly cooked and mostly crispy. Remove from heat and serve.

Per serving: 154 calories; 16 g fat; 6 g saturated fat; 30 mg cholesterol; 3 g protein; no carbohydrate; no sugar; no fiber; 596 mg sodium; 2 mg calcium

Recipe by Daniel Neman

 

Reba (Chicken Livers)

Yield: 8 servings

1 pound chicken livers

Salt

Vegetable oil (if using stove)

 

1. If grilling, soak bamboo skewers in water at least 30 minutes and set grill for direct heating. Lightly oil a large skillet if using the stove.

2. Thread 1 liver on a skewer (or 2 skewers side by side, for easier turning), and sprinkle generously with salt. Place skewers on grill directly over heat or on a large skillet in batches over medium-high heat. Turn a few times until thoroughly cooked. Remove from heat and serve.

Per serving: 97 calories; 6 g fat; 4 g saturated fat; 196 mg cholesterol; 10 g protein; 1 g carbohydrate; no sugar; no fiber; 331 mg sodium; 5 mg calcium

Recipe by Daniel Neman

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