This is a basic Japanese hot pot recipe you can make at home and enjoy with your family!

Yosenabe

I think it’s safe to say winter has finally arrived at our doorsteps. Though the weather is still above the freezing point most days in NYC, the grey skies and 4pm sunsets feel like there should be snow on the ground.
It’s the type of weather that makes you want to stay home or have drinks with friends somewhere cozy and warm. In Japan, people flock to izakaya establishments and yosenabe (hot pot) restaurants to hide from the cold.
Yosenabe or nabe, which literally means ‘hot pot’ is a dish served in a clay pot and placed at the center of a table over a portable stove. Filled with a dashi broth, it comes with all kinds of meats, seafood, tofu, noodles and vegetables to cook and eat with a ponzu dipping sauce. Yosenabe is a dish I fell in love with during my time living in Japan.
I moved to Tokyo when I was 19 years old on a working holiday visa with the idea of teaching English for the duration of a summer. My plan was to go back home by the end of August, finish college and enter university. But like most plans out there,
this one took a completely different turn. Instead, I ended up staying in Tokyo for three years where I started a career in modeling, had my first serious relationship and partied like it was 1999.
nabe broth pot
Modeling wasn’t that busy for the first two years, so I supplemented my income by waitressing early in the evening and bar tending somewhere else until 5am. I was as much of a night owl as I was an early bird. I worked day and night and loved every minute of it.
I also got to experience Tokyo’s nightlife and restaurant scene, and eating yosenabe on a cold winter’s night became one of my favorite things to do.
There’s nothing quite as fun and comforting as dipping chopsticks into a pot of simmering broth, while fishing for my favorite foods to savor. In a city filled with so much energy, neon lights and business suits, tucking into a warm, cozy and dimly lit space with good company always felt like a treat.
Sitting at a table with a lager at my finger tips, listening to what my friends were up to and watching a pretty waitress light up a burner while giving the broth a quick stir, are memories I cherish dearly.
beef sliced
Eating yosenabe is a communal experience and the intoxicating smells coming from mixing so many wonderful ingredients together make the food taste even better. The final step when a slice of beef or a few strings of noodles are dunk into a bowl of ponzu dipping sauce is cooling and refreshing, and takes me to paradise each time without fail.
What I also love about yosenabe is how easy it is to make at home. It’s one of those good dinner recipes that require little work.
A lot of people are intimidated by Japanese cooking because they automatically think of sushi and maki rolls. Raw, fishy and intricate is what many people still associate Japanese food with, but my mother always did a good job at showing the other side of Japanese cooking to her friends back in Canada. She made simple one pot recipes like yosenabe, used a hot plate for yakiniku or skewered yakitori. And let me tell you something; everyone loved it! To this day, my friends still talk about her food and how good a cook she is.
Now I’ve taken on her talent and it’s my turn to tell you to give Japanese cooking a try because it’s delicious, healthy and your family will go crazy over it! Time to create your own hot pot memories!
For something spicier, try this kimchi soup.
yosenabe - Japanese hot pot

Did you like this Basic Japanese Hot Pot Recipe? Are there changes you made that you would like to share? Share your tips and recommendations in the comments section below!

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japanese hot pot

Basic Japanese Hot Pot (Yosenabe)

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  • Author: Caroline Phelps
  • Prep Time: 15 minutes
  • Cook Time: 15 minutes
  • Total Time: 30 minutes
  • Yield: 4 people 1x
  • Category: Soups
  • Method: Boiling
  • Cuisine: Japanese
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Description

A basic Japanese hot pot recipe you can make at home and enjoy with your family!


Ingredients

Scale
  • 1 bunch enoki mushrooms
  • 8 shiitake mushrooms
  • 1 leek, white part only, chopped
  • 1 carrot, sliced
  • 1 cup baby spinach (optional)
  • 2 oz rice noodles or sweet potato noodles
  • 14 oz block silken or medium firm tofu
  • 1/2 pound thinly sliced beef (optional)
  • 8 large shrimps (optional)
  • 8 clams (optional)

Soup:

  • 4 cups dashi broth
  • 3 tablespoons soy sauce
  • 1 1/2 tablespoon mirin
  • 3 tablespoons sake
  • 1 teaspoon salt

Instructions

With an electric skillet

  1. Place all the ingredients for the broth in the electric skillet and bring to a boil.
  2. Lower the heat to low and add the tofu, meat and/or seafood.
  3. Cook for 3 minutes and add the vegetables and noodles. Simmer until all the ingredients are cooked.
  4. Give each person a bowl so they can serve themselves, along with individual bowls of ponzu and sesame sauce for dipping.

In a regular pot over a burner 

  1. Place all the ingredients for the broth in a large pot, stir and bring to a boil.
  2. Add the tofu, meat and/or seafood and cook for 1 minute.
  3. Add the vegetables and noodles and simmer until all the ingredients are cooked through.
  4. Divide the soup into even portions and serve with a side of ponzu sauce or sesame sauce to use for dipping.

Notes

You can have fun with the dipping sauces, use anything you enjoy eating! The same goes with the ingredients for the yosenabe, you can add your own mix of veggies, even flavor the soup however you want. For example, I like to add kimchi to mine sometimes to spice up the pot and turn it into a Korean meal!

Nutrition

  • Serving Size:
  • Calories: 492
  • Sugar: 8.9 g
  • Sodium: 1735.9 mg
  • Fat: 7.5 g
  • Saturated Fat: 5
  • Carbohydrates: 33.4 g
  • Fiber: 3.3 g
  • Protein: 35.5 g
  • Cholesterol: 125.1 mg
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Caroline Caron Phelps

Meet The Author: Caroline Phelps

Caroline Caron-Phelps is a recipe creator, food blogger, and photographer. She showcases delicious, authentic Asian recipes, especially Japanese, Korean, and Chinese, with beautiful photography, easy-to-follow instructions, videos, and practical recipe variations. Caroline has been featured on Bon Appetit, Shape Magazine, Self, Today Show, and more.

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