Sozai Friends YAKISOBA
Sozai Friends YAKISOBA
Fancy some Yakisoba for dinner?
Yakisoba is a Japanese stir fried noodle, with meat or fish and lots of healthy vegetables. ‘Soba’ usually means ‘buckwheat noodle’ but for Yakisoba classically uses wheat based egg noodle like ramen.
Very simple and quick to make, it is a lovely meal for lunch and dinner for the entire family!
YOU WILL LEARN
-How to make YAKISOBA sauce from scratch
-How to cut the ingredients
-How to stir-fry and cook the perfect YAKISOBA
INGREDIENTS for 2
2 dried oriental noodles (available to purchase in most super market)
2 cabbage leaves
50g green beans
1 carrot
200g raw or cooked king prawns
1 small ginger (about 10g)
2 tsp soy sauce
2 tsp fish sauce
2 tbsp oyster sauce
1 tsp Worcester sauce
1 tsp mirin
1 tbsp green nori sprinkles (optional) or 1 sheet sushi nori seaweed
½ tsp shichimi togarashi pepper (optional) or chili pepper
1-2 tbsp vegetable oil or rapeseeds oil or sunflower oil
KITCHEN UTENSILS
1 medium nonstick frying pan
1 saucepan
1 small bowl
1 kitchen tongue
1 spoon
Instructor : Akemi Yokoyama
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We’d love to welcome you and one other house hold member for this class. Please create another account if you’re more than 3 people. The children under 16 years are free to join.
You'll receive booking confirmation email. And a zoom link will be announced 24 hours before the class. Please check your junk email holder in case. Please note, if your zoom screen name is different from your booked name, the admin might not recognise you, therefore you won't be able to enter the class.
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T&C
Instructor
Sozai Expert
We are happy to create memorable dinner for all of our customers.
Thank you so much for everything. With Sozai catering team, a perfect organisation is guaranteed!
Pre-booking
Welcome and class, what I say of it, brilliant
Follow up notes fabulous
Thank you and well done. I will recommend you and definitely think about buying classes for presents, including for myself!
Thank you, Master Suda and Sozai for a fascinating Japanese Cookery Lesson today.
The knife skills of Master Suda are amazing, as are his knives. His preparation of the sea eel was a work of art. It was wonderful just to see him at work, though I don't think I'll be trying this at home.
I found the tempura section very instructive. I have never seen, nor read, about making tempura this way before – sprinkling batter into the hot oil before frying the floured and battered vegetables. I think I will try at home now. The results look wonderful.
I really enjoy these sessions as they give an insight into "true" Japanese cookery and to the different styles and skills.