Shabu shabu hot pot meat dish from Japan

Shabu Shabu | Japanese Food Guide

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Shabu shabu is still a relatively new Japanese dish, having been inspired by the Chinese-style hot pot. It was brought to Japan by a restaurant named Suehiro from Osaka. The owner invented the name which derives from the sound the food makes when being swished around in the boiling water. It was officially registered as a trademark in 1955.

How To Eat Shabu Shabu

Very high-grade beef, pork, or another meat or fish, is sliced no thicker than one to two millimeters. And then, it is laid out on a plate. With shabu shabu you prepare your own food. One slice is swished around in the boiling water using your chopsticks for three or four seconds. You do this until the color of the meat changes.

The meat is then dipped into a sauce based on soy sauce or ground sesame and eaten. The boiling water contains dashi stock and kelp for flavor. Tofu and vegetables are eaten as side dishes. You will have a bowl of rice as well. And once the meat and vegetables are finished you will put the left-over rice in the pot and eat it as a soup.

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