Oyakodon (Chicken and Egg Rice Bowl)
Updated Oct. 11, 2023

- Total Time
- 40 minutes
- Prep Time
- 15 minutes
- Cook Time
- 25 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 2cups Japanese short-grain rice
- 1pound boneless, skinless chicken thighs, sliced into bite-size pieces
- 1tablespoon sake
- 1cup dashi
- 2tablespoons mirin
- 2tablespoons soy sauce, or more to taste
- 1tablespoon granulated sugar, or more to taste
- 1small onion, thinly sliced
- 4large eggs
- 2scallions, sliced, or 3 sprigs mitsuba
- Togarashi (optional), for serving
Preparation
- Step 1
Cook rice according to package directions.
- Step 2
Meanwhile, stir chicken and sake in a bowl. In a measuring cup or bowl, stir dashi, mirin, soy sauce and sugar until sugar dissolves. Add more soy sauce or sugar to taste.
- Step 3
In a deep medium frying pan (or an oyakodon pan, if you have one), add dashi mixture and then onion. Bring to a simmer over medium-high, then add chicken in a single layer, making sure the dashi mixture covers the chicken and onion.
- Step 4
Bring the heat down to medium-low. Cook for 2 minutes, then flip each piece of chicken with a pair of cooking chopsticks or tongs. Continue cooking until chicken is just cooked through and onion has softened, about 3 minutes more.
- Step 5
In a measuring cup or small bowl, lightly beat eggs. Bring the heat up to medium, and add three-quarters of the eggs in a clockwise pattern over the chicken. Allow the mixture to simmer, swirling the pan to ensure the eggs cover it throughout. When the eggs are slightly set, around 1 minute, add the remaining eggs around the pan’s edges in a clockwise fashion. Once again, swirl the pan to ensure coverage.
- Step 6
Continue to cook the oyakodon to your preferred doneness (less than a minute or so is great), then add scallions (or mitsuba) to the pan.
- Step 7
Divide the rice among individual bowls, then slide enough of the oyakodon over the rice to cover. Serve immediately and sprinkle with togarashi if preferred.
Private Notes
Comments
My brother is left handed. He wants to know if he can add the eggs counterclockwise. Or will this just ruin the whole dish?
Shortcut: You can buy dashi packets. You make them into a reasonable version of dashi just like you would steep a tea bag. When I see this dish on a menu, I'm always excited to order it. When Paul Simon saw it on a menu, it became a song. Guess some people just have that talent.
Also, I've found the best way to add eggs if you're left handed is to stand on your head while adding ;-)
Came out very soupy even though I followed recipe exactly. Expected more flavour - tasted pleasant but a bit bland. Sprinkled plenty of togorashi and a dash of soya sauce on my bowl to perk it up.
I only made these changes out of necessity. I didn’t have any dashi or sake so I used chicken broth with a splash of fish sauce and white wine. I’ve made this many times before and didn’t notice a difference although I realize others might. I Hope this is helpful to those who can’t find or don’t have those ingredients.
Every now and then, you try a recipe for something you love to eat in a restaurant, but would never have thought to make yourself, and it tastes JUST RIGHT! I had dashi packets in the cupboard from some okonomiyaki experiments, happily, and was completely amazed by this recipe. Four thumbs way up in our house!