“I love the versatility of yakisoba. When I was growing up, my mom prepared yakisoba using pork, carrots, cabbage, onions, and bean sprouts. Since I live in Portland where we have access to a wide variety of vegetables on a year-round basis, I use whatever seasonal vegetables I have on hand for my yakisoba. I always aim for at least 5 colors in all of my meals and yakisoba makes it easy to achieve my goal.”
Read moreStacey's Farmy Okonomiyaki
Okonomiyaki means “pancakes as you like them” and this is how Stacey Givens, chef extraordinaire of the Side Yard Farm & Kitchen likes hers. This is a true taste of Pacific Northwest farm as summer blurs into fall. And the ground cherry sauce is ridiculous!
Read moreJane's Yakisoba Pan
Yakisoba-pan was born in the 1950s, at the equivalent of a Japanese diner where bread had become a common yakisoba side dish to sop up the rich, glistening sauce. It takes the chewy savory noodles and tucks them into a milk bun known as koppe-pan that looks deceptively like a hotdog bun. Jane Hashimawari of Ippaipdx shared her recipes for one of the greatest after-school snacks of all time!
Read moreLola's Yakisoba with Brussels
Traditionally, yakisoba would be served with cabbage, but Brussels are a great replacement, offering their own distinct flavor and vivid color. Because you're shredding the Brussels sprouts, there's no need to core them. My secret is to simply use the Cuisinart shredder. I pop the Brussels in one by one and save myself all the work of cutting. This recipe is a riff on one our dear friend Jane Hashimawari of Ippai PDX shared with us. I almost always top with a bit of Kewpie mayonnaise because it takes it to 100.
Read moreNaomi's Richmond Yakisoba
Naomi Molstrom, our go-to favorite noodle lover and adviser (who claims her body is 90% comprised of noodles!), shared one of her recipes for yakisoba at home. This takes minutes and is hand’s down delicious! She makes this for lunch for herself and her two sons on the regular.
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