Yakisoba Recipe – Japanese Cooking 101 (2024)

7In Main Dish/ Noodle/ Video

Jump to Recipe Jump to Video Print Recipe


Yakisoba is Japanese stir fried noodles. It is served with Yakisoba sauce, similar to Tonkatsu or Okonomiyakisauce. Yakisoba is usually fried with sliced pork and vegetables like cabbage and bean sprouts. It is a very popular casual food (or snack) everyone likes in Japan. You can find Yakisoba at many places like Okonomiyaki restaurants, festivals, supermarket delis, and of course, home.

Yakisoba is a great light or quick meal. Kids stop at a little shop for Yakisoba after school, and people stop for it at a food court in a mall during shopping. One of the best Yakisoba can be found at summer night festivals. Street vendors cook Yakisoba on a big grill. I don’t know what they do to it, but they make superb Yakisoba. If you are making your own Yakisoba, you can put your favorite meat and vegetables; chicken, beef, or even squid. The must-have toppings are Aonori and Benishoga. The fragrance of Aonori and spicy Benishoga accentuate the flavor of Yakisoba so well. Even when your Yakisoba is mediocre, they can upgrade the dish for you.

We use Chuka Men, Chinese style noodles, in Yakisoba, but the dish is not Chinese at all. It is actually very Japanese, and nothing like Chow Mein other than they are both noodle dishes. Yakisoba sauce is very similar to Okonomiyaki sauce (you can even substitute Okonomiyaki sauce for Yakisoba sauce), though it is a little bit more like Worcester sauce and thinner. We made the Yakisoba sauce using Tonkatsu sauce and Worcester sauce which are in our pantry. You can of course purchase Yakisoba sauce if available, but this may be a good alternative.

Chuka Men for Yakisoba is usually sold as packages offresh noodlesin the refrigerated section at Japanese or some Asian markets. Each package of noodles (square) is for one serving, and sometimes comes with Yakisoba seasoning powder. The seasoning powder is a convenient thing and doesn’t taste bad, I admit, so you may opt to use that as your Yakisoba sauce. For people who do not have access to any Asian markets at all, dried spaghetti can be used instead of Chuka Men. Similar to what we did in Ramen, boil dried spaghetti in boiling water (2L) with baking soda (2Tbsp), and cook according to the package. You may not want to use fresh pasta because it may be too soft to stir fry after boiling. We know it is not exactly the same as Chuka Men, but it can be a pretty good substitution for those who cannot get Chuka Men.Get all the ingredients ready, fry them together, and enjoy your own Yakisoba!

Yakisoba Recipe – Japanese Cooking 101 (1)

Print Recipe

5 from 1 vote

Yakisoba Recipe

Course: Main Course

Cuisine: Japanese

Keyword: noodles, Yakisoba

Servings: 2

*Links may contain ad. #CommissionsEarned

Ingredients

  • 1/3 lb pork thinly sliced
  • 1 small onion
  • 2 cup cabbage cut into about 2″ squares
  • 2 cup bean sprouts
  • 1/2 small carrot
  • 1/4 green bell pepper
  • 1 Tbsp oil
  • Aonori
  • Benishoga
  • 2 packages Chuka Men Chinese style noodles
  • salt and pepper

Yakisoba Sauce

US CustomaryMetric

Instructions

  • Cut sliced pork into bite size pieces. Prepare the vegetables: slice onion, carrot, and bell pepper thinly; cut cabbage into 2″squares; wash and strain bean sprouts. Mix all the ingredients for Yakisoba Sauce.

  • In a large frying pan, add oil and heat at medium high heat. Cook meat first until browned. Add onion, carrot, and bell pepper and cook about 1-2 minutes. Then add cabbage and bean sprouts, and cook until vegetables are wilted. Once water seeps out from vegetables, add Chuka Men, stir under the vegetables, lower heat and cover, and cook about 2 minutes until noodles soften.

  • When noodles get loose and soft, keep stirring to mix with vegetables, then add sauce and coat the whole thing for a couple of minutes. (Season with salt and pepper to taste.)

  • Place Yakisoba on the plate; sprinkle with Aonori and put Benishoga on top.

Video

noodlesSobaYakisoba

Yakisoba Recipe – Japanese Cooking 101 (3)

About JapaneseCooking101

Noriko and Yuko, the authors of this site, are both from Japan but now live in California. They love cooking and eating great food, and share a similar passion for home cooking using fresh ingredients.Noriko and Yuko plan and develop recipes together for Japanese Cooking 101. They cook and shoot photos/videos at their home kitchen(s.)

Yakisoba Recipe – Japanese Cooking 101 (2024)

References

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Duncan Muller

Last Updated:

Views: 6191

Rating: 4.9 / 5 (59 voted)

Reviews: 82% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Duncan Muller

Birthday: 1997-01-13

Address: Apt. 505 914 Phillip Crossroad, O'Konborough, NV 62411

Phone: +8555305800947

Job: Construction Agent

Hobby: Shopping, Table tennis, Snowboarding, Rafting, Motor sports, Homebrewing, Taxidermy

Introduction: My name is Duncan Muller, I am a enchanting, good, gentle, modern, tasty, nice, elegant person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.