Yakitori

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Yakitori being cooked
Yakitori being cooked

Yakitori (焼き鳥, やきとり), lit. grilled bird, is a Japanese type of skewered chicken.

It is made from several bite-sized pieces of chicken meat, or chicken offal, skewered on a bamboo skewer and barbecued, usually over charcoal.

Diners ordering yakitori usually have a choice of having it served with simply salt (and sometimes lemon juice) or with tare sauce, which is basically made up of mirin, sweet sake, soy sauce and sugar. The sauce is applied on the skewered meat and is grilled until delicately cooked and is served with the tare sauce as a dip.

Yakitori is a very popular dish in Japan. Many working people grab a yakitori and a beer from yakitori stalls on the way home from work. Yakitori is also a common, cheap accompaniment to beer in izakayas.

Strictly speaking, the term "yakitori" refers to those consisting only of various chicken parts and vegetables. Similarly skewered grilled food made with other ingredients such as beef, pork, fish or seafood is usually available at yakitori establishments and are known as kushiyaki (串焼、くしやき), lit. skewer grill, in Japan. However, outside of Japan, and even in some areas of Japan (in particular Kyushu, Higashimatsuyama city and parts of Hokkaidō) these would also be referred to as yakitori.

from Akiyoshi Yakitori restaurant
from Akiyoshi Yakitori restaurant

Contents

  • shou niku (正肉) (lit. "proper meat"), chicken thigh pieces - "standard yakitori", usually with skin
  • sasami (ささみ), skinless chicken breast pieces
  • negima (ねぎ間), alternating pieces of chicken thigh and scallion
  • nankotsu (軟骨), chicken cartilage
  • hatsu (ハツ), chicken heart
  • rebā (レバー), liver
  • sunagimo (砂肝), chicken gizzard
  • tsukune (つくね), chicken meatballs
  • torikawa (とりかわ) chicken skin, grilled until crispy
  • tebasaki (手羽先), chicken wing
  • ikada (筏) (lit. raft), Japanese scallion, with two skewers to prevent rotation

  • atsuage tofu (厚揚げとうふ, deep-fried tofu)
  • enoki maki (エノキ巻き, enoki mushrooms wrapped in slices of pork)
  • pīman (ピーマン, green pepper)
  • asuparabēkon (アスパラベーコン, asparagus wrapped in bacon)
  • butabara (豚ばら, pork belly)

Brochette (French), Espetada (Portuguese), Satay (Indonesian), Shashlik (Russian), Shish kebab (Turkish), Souvlaki, Mici (Romanian) or Kalamaki (Greek)

Among Japanese aviation engineers and pilots, birds sucked into a jet engine are referred to as yakitori.

A "Yakitori" tile also features in Japanese mahjong. It is a flat tessera with a picture of a skewered sparrow on it. Each player starts the game with a Yakitori tile on the table to his right. On completing a hand the player may remove his "Yakitori" tile. Any player who fails to complete a hand and who therefore still has his "Yakitori" tile on the table at the end of the game has to pay a fine - he has been skewered like a sparrow on a grill!

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