Wafu Cooking: Everyday Recipes with Japanese Style by Sonoko Sakai

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Notes about Recipes in this book

  • Buckwheat okonomiyaki with eggs and bacon

    • mara_965ssy on March 23, 2026

      Preferred the Smitten Kitchen okonomiyaki recipe but adding bacon was nice because bacon. Might also try including buckwheat flour in SK version.

  • Five dal masala

    • mara_965ssy on March 23, 2026

      I really wanted for this to be a flavor bomb — look at the ingredient list! Not sure if it was the dal mix I used, but it didn’t pack the depth I expected. Ended up adding fish sauce to bring more umami.

  • Homemade tonkatsu sauce

    • mara_965ssy on March 23, 2026

      Prefer smitten kitchen version of sauce. I think it has ginger and a bit more sweetness.

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  • ISBN 10 0593535278
  • ISBN 13 9780593535271
  • Linked ISBNs
  • Published Nov 12 2024
  • Format Hardcover
  • Page Count 352
  • Language English
  • Countries United States
  • Publisher Knopf

Publishers Text

In this dazzling and wholly original cookbook, culinary authority Sonoko Sakai redefines what Japanese cooking can be. Wafu (literally “Japanese style”) food is fusion at its best, combining flavors, ingredients, and techniques from around the globe with a distinctly Japanese personality.

Wafu Cooking is a collection of recipes that captures the cultural exchange between Japan and the rest of the world in dishes that have come to Japan from abroad and been “wafu-ed” to suit local tastes, and in Japanese dishes that are reimagined through an American lens. From Dashi Cheese Grits with Honey Miso Butter, Collard Greens and Cabbage Miso Soup with Crispy Bacon, and Fish and Lotus Chips to Caesar Salad with Aonori Croutons and Bonito Flakes, Shio Koji Marinated Roast Chicken, and Miso Apple Pie, these are recipes that reflect—and celebrate—the multinational, interconnected way in which we all eat today. Sakai also introduces the essential building blocks of Japanese cuisine—dashi, miso, and soy sauce—that can be used to give any dish a wafu twist.

A book that reflects as much the author’s own journey—a life spent in New York, Los Angeles, Mexico, and elsewhere—as it does the foods of Japan, Wafu Cooking is an utterly unique, thoroughly modern cookbook.

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