Prawn, Shiitake & Tofu Ankake Donburi

I made a very similar dish earlier on Monday. I had just gotten home from uni, starving, cold, and just a tiny bit cranky. In such a volatile state, it was very likely I would’ve succumbed to the lazy option of a bowl of cereal. Oddly enough, I prepared a prawn & tofu stew of sorts using mirin, sake, miso, smoked pancetta (yea, odd one out) and lots of negi. It worked and I think a part of me was shocked it had because honestly, cranky cooking isn’t always a very wise thing to do.
I wanted to recreate the flavours for a donburi. Why I was so motivated to have a donburi was also due to my newly purchased bowl. You can check it out in the pictures. It’s even got a cute little ceramic cover like those claypots you normally see at Chinese restaurants. Was unbelievably chuffed all of yesterday about my bowl. I even got it out and showed it to the flatmate and her boyrfriend too. I was all giggles and big grins. And you know what else I absolutely love about my new bowl? If I wanted to have pickles with my donburi, all I need to do is to flick over the cover which is helping to keep my just-cooked meal nicely warm, put the pickles on the underside of the cover which when flipped, acts as a little side-dish. How awesome is that! Most donburi bowls I find are a little too large so I end up filling it up to only halfway which looks a little silly. And if I fill it all the way, it’s too much food for me to consume at a go (actually I lie, sometimes I can eat a horse if you could bang it up into a soup and therefore downsize it into mouth-friendly portions- sorry if that was crude). This guy is just purrr-fact.

In my walk-in kitchen – and I call it that because it’s so ridiculously small and crappy I could cry – I own very little. 1 cereal bowl, 2 plates, 2 Cath Kidston mugs (1 given to me for my birthday), 1 milkpan and small frying pan (given to me by S’s mum for my birthday as well), 1 glass mixing bowl, 1 colander, some cooking utensils and cutlery. That is literally owning next to nothing. And I don’t complain because the kitchen has very little to offer as well: no oven, 2 ridiculously tempermental electric hobs, zero work space, 1 crapbag microwave/grill, next-to-zero pantry cupboard space – and that is something we can’t change since we’re all moved in and literally living in the coolest, trendiest bit of Central London. So gifting myself this humble bowl makes me very happy and even happier to use it. (I thought about an ice cream maker but that in comparison to my small kitchen would be a monster of gadget.)
But anyhow, another recent purchase was the Everyday Harumi cookbook, just one of the cookbooks I’ve had on my Amazon wishlist for a while now. The pictures in here are seriously good and the recipes so easy to follow (very similar to things my mum would cook at home – a very heartwarming cookbook). It’s too bad for the others that they didn’t get purchased but I thought was a longtime coming. After flipping through it, I was glad to see a recipe for something quite similar and incorporating an ankake sauce. This sauce is made by thickening seasoned dashi stock with a potato starch and water mix. It is very tasty and goes so wonderfully well with rice; therefore making donburi one of the best comfort foods for me. When the day is as grey as heck from morning til evening, surely a bowl of rice will bring a little sunshine into my cupboard-sized bedroom?

I haven’t followed Harumi’s recipe exactly. In fact, I’ve used some different ingredients but I’ve basically followed her ankake sauce recipe quite closely. I think this dish is spanking good and you can try it with loads of other types of ingredients. Smoked pancetta cubes was a bit of an odd one out. But I do love pairing it with prawns and seafood in general – as you can see from my past King Prawn Pancetta Fried Rice post. Very comforting, very easy to make. I have a feeling my mama would be proud.
A little word about potato starch – you can find this in Asian supermarkets. I got a packet which cost a little over a quid from my Japanese grocer – a really large packet actually so it’s good to invest in it and just keep it in the pantry for future use. Also, potato starch is a lot stronger than cornstarch as a thickening agent so you don’t need large quantities to get the required texture. It mixes a lot easier than cornstarch I find, so you don’t get those bitty pockets of starch like if you used cornstarch or worse, plain flour.

This recipe yields 2 servings.
Prawn, Shiitake & Tofu Ankake Donburi
Ingredients
- 1 cup shelled prawns
4 fresh shiitake mushrooms
2 Japanese negi (or large spring onions), sliced into 1.5″ lengths
1 small red onion, halved then wedged and sliced
2 tbs smoked pancetta cubes
1 packet firm silken tofu, cubed
1 tbs soy sauce
1 tbs cooking sake
1 tbs mirin
1/2 sugar
150ml dashi stock (I’ve used a sardine one rather than a kelp stock)
1 tbs potato starch
1 tbs cold water
1/2 tbs chopped fresh garlic
light olive oil, for cooking
ground black pepper, for seasoning
black sesame seeds, for garnish
reserve the greens of negi/spring onions, finely chopped for garnish
2 servings hot steamed rice
Prepare vegetables. Clean mushrooms, trim the stalks and either finely slice them or leave them whole and star the top with a knife. This ensures that it gets cooked through (similar concept to brussel sprouts) and also looks pretty. My mum prepares it with the star for oden hotpots but I generally like to cook my shiitake mushrooms this way.
For the ankake sauce: In a small bowl, add the soy sauce, mirin, sake, sugar to prepared dashi stock. You may use any type you’ve got on hand but I prefer using a sardine or bonito one as it gives a bigger flavour than kelp stock I find. Mix together thoroughly and set aside. In another bowl, mix together the potato starch with a tbs of cold water. You’ll need to give it a quick mix again before using as this will settle whilst you let it stand.
In a large frying pan or wok, heat some oil. When hot, add the garlic, pancetta cube and red onions. Sauté. Then add the negi/spring onions, mushrooms and prawns.
Add the ankake sauce mixture. When it comes to a boil, add the potato starch mix to thicken the sauce, stirring so that it becomes thicker evenly without bits of jellified starch.
Separate hot cooked rice into two donburi bowls, serve the ankake over it. Garnish with chopped negi/spring onions and sesame seeds. Finally, take a deep breath, savour the gorgeous smell and tuck in!









January 20th, 2010 at 3:59 pm
wow! That looks delicious. I don’t have firm silken tofu nor fresh shiitake mushroom here.
But I’ll try to replace it with something else n see if I can find the rest in the asian store here. So yummy your stew.
January 20th, 2010 at 5:07 pm
I absolutely want this for dinner. You obviously are the person to consult about where to source Japanese stuff in London. I never know where to get dashi from. xx
January 20th, 2010 at 5:13 pm
Aha…my 3 favourites in a pot…tofu, mushroom & prawns! Looks very delicious. I would be so happy to have this with rice
January 20th, 2010 at 7:03 pm
I’ve just got back from work, am starving (even after snacking on a ham sandwich), and I would do anything to have this right now.
Looks great – I love shittakes in everyeverything, so this is definitely something I would do.
I completely understand the bowl excitement! I’m on the search for a nice claypot for both cooking and… err photos.
January 20th, 2010 at 11:32 pm
This is my kind of meal! hehe I like the addition of pancetta – sounds like secret ingredient ;p
January 21st, 2010 at 9:05 am
The Cooking Ninja: you can definitely replace it with other ingredients and that’s what’s brilliant about donburi. Like any stirfry, you can play with whatever you’ve got at hand
Sarah, Maison Cupcake: oh if you ever need to find Asian ingredients, I could help with recommending a few places. Even online retail stores as well, as those often come in handy when I can’t be bothered to make the trip myself!
MaryMoh: Actually now that you’ve mentioned it, these 3 ingredients do often come served together in a pot don’t they? Suppose it’s one of those everyone’s-favourite-combo types!
Su-yin: Haha, Ms. Snacking, we are so on the same frequency!!! Yea…Pam was talking about getting a nice claypot too. I would love to have one around too. Unfortunately it would be very unpractical in my ridiculous kitchen. I do have a large one at home though and that always makes me smile. It’s got cute little hand-painted patterns on it.
Noobcook: secret ingredient? ooooh. I like the sound of that!
xx
January 21st, 2010 at 9:37 am
That looks very appetizing – yum! Donburi is definitely comfort food for me. I might have to pay a visit to Whole foods later for ingredients – they always have such a great variety
January 21st, 2010 at 9:45 am
Mowielicious: oh Whole Foods is just this wonderful haven isn’t it but i gotta say it’s so ridiculously expensive sometimes. They do fresh hijiki salad at the fresh counter but so pricey! Nonetheless, I do love going to work as it means I can stop by Whole Foods and ogle/drool til the security guard decides to chuck me out for obstructing food shopper traffic. LOL
xx
January 21st, 2010 at 2:43 pm
LOL – your kitchen sounds like my rented kitchen. In which I lived for NINE YEARS!! aaarrrgh. People used to come for lunch, having seen my blog, look inside and ask “you sure you make ALL the food on your blog in THIS?!”. I should add, though, that i had the advantage of an oven, albeit a smaller-than-standard one…
This looks heavenly – pure comfort indeed! I so seldom get my sticky mitts on fresh shiitake and I do so love them.
January 21st, 2010 at 2:59 pm
Hey there! What an inspired donburi. I’m so accustomed to the normal oyako don or katsu don. This is definitely a version i’d love to try.
January 21st, 2010 at 8:25 pm
We food bloggers are passionate about bowls and props aren’t we? I feel your excitement about all the things you can do with 2 pieces of ceramic!!!!!! And this looks spankingly good and healthy too
January 21st, 2010 at 10:47 pm
I totally agree with Kitchen Butterfly…. haha I need more bowls too…first I have to find time to keep blogging.
I absolutely love shitake… that is a mushroom I could eat, eat and eat.. I would use shitake in dishes that call for other shrooms…. I love your creation… also… who says their are donburi rules anyway? hehe
January 22nd, 2010 at 11:12 am
Gosh Its been a long time since ive been here! uve been busy havent you? that dish looks so good and I love claypots!
)Ill have to come back to check out ur other creations …:)
January 22nd, 2010 at 2:13 pm
Oh this looks great!
January 22nd, 2010 at 2:14 pm
This sounds like a great flavor combo. Thanks for the post.
January 22nd, 2010 at 3:59 pm
Dear SugarBar,
I need to get back to these kinds of soups, mine have been more on the puree side, would miso ruin this?
Every thing you make is simply gorgeous, and without all the bells and whistles.
January 23rd, 2010 at 6:21 am
This is such a great dish. Gorgeous pictures
January 24th, 2010 at 12:55 pm
Wow! You’ve just turned me off everything I was about to go cook with this fantastic sounding and looking dish! Right up my alley. will have to try soon.
January 24th, 2010 at 1:21 pm
This looks fabulous! Would it be wrong to make this for breakfast
January 24th, 2010 at 5:42 pm
A healthy yet flavourful donburi packed with all the wonderful ingredients I like! Must be super-yummy!
January 26th, 2010 at 6:52 pm
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February 12th, 2010 at 4:43 pm
I totally get the same way about finding a great dish. I show it to everybody and cook a meal just to go with the dish! Love donburi and this looks like a great recipe