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Hayashi rice is a Japanese hashed beef rice recipe that turns tender beef, onions, and a rich demi-glace style sauce into a comforting homemade meal. This dish usually starts by cooking sliced beef and onions until savory and soft, then simmering them with tomato, red wine, Worcestershire sauce, butter, mushrooms, and stock for a deep, slightly tangy flavor. As the sauce thickens, it coats the beef with smooth richness while balancing sweetness, acidity, and umami. Mushrooms add extra depth, while warm steamed rice absorbs the sauce and makes every bite hearty without feeling complicated. The final hayashi rice is rich, cozy, and easy to serve for lunch or dinner, with tender beef, glossy sauce, and a polished Japanese-style finish that tastes special but stays simple at home.
Transcript
00:00Just made this and it turned out so much better than the cubes, raves one of my readers.
00:04But what makes from scratch beef hayashi rice worth the effort? Well actually, it's effortless
00:09when you know how. So let's get started. For a printable version of this recipe,
00:15visit my website, just google hayashi rice statue to find me. Before we start, slice half an onion
00:20into thin wedges or slices, mince two garlic cloves, slice four bottom mushrooms, and cut one
00:27bell pepper into bite-sized irregular pieces. Also, make 300ml of beef bouillon using your
00:34regular cubes. I'm using no, but any brand is fine. With the package though, the ratios aren't
00:40standardized, so the wrong dilution can turn the sauce salty or thin. For example, this one is
00:46one cube for 300ml, but this one is one cube for one litre. If you use one litre cube with
00:52300ml water,
00:54it's going to be concentrated and overly salty. So either cut the cube into thirds or make one
01:01litre and save the leftovers for another recipe. Alternatives would be other instant stocks like
01:07chicken bouillon, consuming cubes, or fond de veau. And if you use unsalted stock, adjust the saltiness
01:13accordingly. Toss 200g of thinly sliced beef with a pinch of salt and pepper and half tablespoon of
01:20all-purpose flour until every strand looks matte and velvety. No chunky clumps.
01:26Let's talk beef for a second. I'm using thinly sliced beef. Either round or boneless beef short rib works
01:33great. Look for sukiyaki shabu shabu packs or shaved beef. Preheat a large pan over medium to medium low
01:40with one teaspoon of neutral oil until it shimmers. Then add the beef and dough sliced mushrooms in a loose,
01:47single layer. Say until the undersides are well browned, flip once, brown the second side,
01:54and pull them out. Preserve every bit of fond in the pan. That's your flavour piggy bank.
02:00Now for the onions. This is where the magic really starts. Add a thinly sliced onion with a pinch of
02:07salt
02:07and cook, scraping occasionally until the onions turn golden and sweet. If the onions threaten to
02:14scorch, splash in a spoonful of water. Scrape and keep going. Stir in the minced garlic and bell pepper
02:22for about 30 seconds until fragrant. Pour in 4 tablespoons of red wine. Raise the heat and deglaze the
02:30pan, scraping up every browned bit as the wine bubbles. Reduce until the sharp alcohol aroma fades,
02:37and the pan looks nearly syrupy. This moves all the fond into your soul space and concentrates flavour.
02:44For wine, a dry red like mellow or carbonate works great. Return the beef and mushrooms to the pan
02:52and sprinkle another half tablespoon of flour over the mixture, tossing for 30 to 60 seconds. This quick
03:00flour a minute removes raw notes and primes the starch to thicken smoothly later.
03:07Then stir in one and a half tablespoon of ketchup, one and a half tablespoons of Worcestershire sauce,
03:14and half the spoon of soy sauce. Cook for about one minute until glossy. If it still smells sharp,
03:20keep moving until the aroma turns jammy and savoury. Pour in the 300 milliliters of bouillon and add one
03:29bay leaf. Bring to a gentle simmer, about 85 to 96 degrees celsius, and cook for 5 minutes, stirring now
03:37and then, until the sauce slightly coats the back of a spoon. The ideal texture is just looser than curry.
03:44If you tilt the pan, it should flow slowly and cling in a thin film. If you like a subtle
03:51bitterness
03:51depth, stir in up to half teaspoon of instant coffee powder or dark chocolate now. Tasting as you go,
03:59this is my secret ingredient I use for curry all the time. Once it looks like this, turn off the
04:06heat
04:07and season with freshly ground pepper and one pinch of nutmeg. Then, mount with one tablespoon of cold
04:14unsalted butter, swirling until the sauce turns satiny. Aim to finish below about 80 degrees celsius,
04:21so the emulsion stays stable. Glossy sauce, not oily and slick.
04:31Mount freshly cooked rice on one side of a warm plate, and ladle the hayashi sauce alongside.
04:37This dish is meant to be served with rice, so don't skip it. Add a pinch of parsley for colour,
04:43and that's our beef hayashi rice. Enjoy this for your weeknight dinners.
04:48Want even more delicious recipes? Grab my free cookbook from the link in the description.
04:54Okay, let's go over the ingredients one more time, and if you're ready to cook,
04:58grab the written instructions by clicking the full recipe box with a picture that's about to pop up on
05:03your screen. You'll find the full recipe with all the tips I couldn't fit into this video right on my
05:09website. The link's on the screen now, and if you're in the mood for more, my beef playlist is waiting
05:15for you next. Thanks so much for watching, and I'll see you again soon.
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