Spiced aubergines and chicken lettuce cups: Millie Tsukagoshi Lagares’ recipes for Japanese-style midweek meals

1 day ago 10

Anyone who’s spent time in Japan will know the hold that Kewpie roasted sesame dressing has on local palates. Creamy, slightly tangy, savoury, full of roasted flavours and a little sweet, it’s the ideal dressing for absolutely anything. It comes in squeezy bottles and is now widely available in larger supermarkets, but I’ve created my own version here in case you can’t find it. These lettuce cups make a fresh and crunchy snack that serves as a vessel for tender chicken and whatever herbs you have in the fridge. But first, a Japanified rendition of the Chinese dish mapo tofu, only more savoury and salty, and with a slightly thicker sauce. It’s a strong contender for weekly dinner rotations, depending on what you have in your fridge, of course.

Mabo nasu (spiced aubergines; pictured top)

I love the combination of pork mince and aubergine, but this also works well with tofu. You can even make it vegetarian or vegan by omitting the meat and using tofu or vegan mince and substituting vegetable stock powder. It’s a little spicy, very savoury and super-saucy, so is perfect for topping steamed rice and eating with a spoon. Negi is a type of Japanese spring onion – if you can find them, use them instead of the spring onion. Doubanjiang, also called fermented chilli bean paste or spicy bean paste, is a fiery, savoury paste made from fermented broad beans. You can find it in Asian food stores and in many supermarkets.

Prep 15 min
Cook 35 min
Serves 4

1 tbsp neutral oil, such as rapeseed or sunflower, plus extra as needed
100g pork mince
4 small aubergines
, or 100g firm tofu, cut into cubes
1 garlic clove, peeled and finely grated
2cm fresh root ginger, peeled and finely grated
½ spring onion, or ½ negi, finely sliced
1 tsp cornflour
1 tsp toasted sesame oil
Steamed rice
, to serve

For the sauce
1 tbsp brown miso
1½ tbsp doubanjiang
1 tsp soy sauce
1 tsp sugar
1 tsp powdered chicken stock
, or vegetable stock

For the sauce, put the miso, doubanjiang, soy sauce, sugar and stock powder in a bowl, add 200ml water, mix well and set aside.

Put the oil in a frying pan on a medium heat and, once it’s hot, add the pork mince and cook, stirring to break it up, for about five minutes, until the fat has rendered out and the meat is browned and crisp. Using a slotted spoon, transfer the pork to a plate, leaving the oil behind in the pan. Add the aubergine to the pan (and a touch more oil, if need be) and cook gently, turning often, for six to eight minutes, until browned all over and meltingly tender.

Return the pork to the pan, add the garlic and ginger, then cook, stirring gently so as not to break up the aubergines, for two to three minutes, until fragrant. Stir in the sauce mixture, leave to simmer for two to three minutes, then add the spring onion and cook for five minutes more, until the sauce has reduced.

Mix the cornflour with two tablespoons of water and tip into the pan, mixing gently. Simmer for two to three minutes, until the sauce thickens, then stir in the sesame oil.

Serve immediately alongside a pile of steamed rice.

Tori no gomae (chicken cups with sesame dressing)

tori no gomae (chicken cups with sesame dressing)
Millie Tsukagoshi Lagares’ tori no gomae, or chicken cups with sesame dressing. Photograph: Emma Guscott Photography/The Guardian. Food styling: Ellie Mulligan. Props styling: Louie Waller. Food styling assistant: Alice Earll.

For the chicken, I’ve used a microwave for speed – you’ll be surprised at just how much moisture the meat retains when it’s cooked this way, and that it cooks in mere minutes. For those without a microwave, poach it instead, or use leftover roast or rotisserie chicken.

Prep 10 min
Cook 20 min
Serves 2 as a snack

100g chicken breast
Pinch of salt
1 tbsp sake
½ cucumber
, julienned
1 tbsp gari (pickled ginger), or peeled and very finely sliced fresh root ginger
1 butterhead lettuce

For the dressing
2 tbsp mayonnaise
1½ tbsp toasted sesame seeds
, plus extra to serve
1 tsp neutral oil
, such as rapeseed or sunflower
1 tsp apple cider vinegar
1 tsp soy sauce
1 tsp sugar
1 tbsp water

To serve (all optional)
1 handful fresh coriander leaves, or other herbs, roughly chopped
2 spring onions, finely sliced

Slice the chicken lengthways into two long strips and put these on a microwave-safe plate. Season with the salt and sake, then cover with clingfilm and microwave at 160W for two and a half to three minutes, or until cooked through. Remove from the microwave and, once the chicken is cool enough to handle, shred it with a fork.

Combine all the dressing ingredients in a bowl and whisk. (This will make more dressing than you need here, but it keeps well in the fridge for a few days, so enjoy the rest with just about any salad.)

Mix the shredded chicken with three to four tablespoons of the dressing, the cucumber and ginger. Separate the lettuce into leaves to make cups and fill them with the chicken mixture. Serve topped with coriander, spring onions and extra toasted sesame seeds, if you like.

  • These recipes are edited extracts from Umai: Recipes From a Japanese Home Kitchen, by Millie Tsukagoshi Lagares, published by Quadrille at £27. To order a copy for £24.30, go to guardianbookshop.com

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