Cookbooks · Recipes · Culture
No fuss, no mystery — just soulful everyday food built from a handful of honest pantry staples. We spotlight three cookbooks worth owning and the dishes that made us fall for them.
Techniques handed down through home kitchens — donburi, simmered vegetables, hand rolls at the table.
Soy sauce, mirin and sake do the heavy lifting. Most dishes come together with a short, findable pantry.
These are the recipes people actually cook on a Tuesday — nourishing, honest and quietly satisfying.
A short tour of the Japanese classics you'll meet across these books — and where to taste the real thing in Canada, from a quick teriyaki bowl at Edo Japan to a sit-down izakaya feast.
A bowl of springy noodles in seasoned broth, finished with chashu pork, egg and green onion. An easy soy-sauce version is one of the friendliest places to begin.
Craving a bowl out? Santouka and Kinton Ramen in Toronto pull a serious broth, and Ramen Danbo keeps Vancouver warm through the winter.
A pork cutlet in shatteringly crisp panko, sliced and served with shredded cabbage and a tangy-sweet sauce. Comfort food at its most convincing.
You can order a proper katsu set at Kinka Izakaya in Toronto or at one of the Guu Izakaya rooms in Vancouver.
Seasonal vegetables and seafood in a whisper-light batter, fried just until the coating turns lacy and pale gold. Timing and oil temperature are everything.
For an everyday version, Edo Japan grills fresh tempura to order at counters across Canada; for a refined take, Miku's kitchens in Toronto and Vancouver plate it alongside their signature aburi sushi.
Pan-fried dumplings with a crisp, browned base and a juicy pork-and-cabbage filling. Add a lacy "wing" of crackled starch and you have a party on a plate.
Zakkushi and the izakaya counters along Robson Street in Vancouver do a lively plate; in Montreal, look to Kinka Izakaya.
"Parent-and-child" rice bowl — chicken and egg gently simmered in a sweet-savory dashi and slid over hot rice. Weeknight cooking at its most soothing.
Cozy donburi and teishoku sets turn up at Zakkushi and neighborhood spots across Vancouver and Toronto's Japanese quarter.
A savory cabbage pancake griddled to order and finished with sauce, mayo, bonito flakes and seaweed. The name means "grilled how you like it."
Try the teppan and izakaya-style plates at Guu Izakaya in Toronto, or hunt down Vancouver's okonomiyaki specialists downtown.
Grilled chicken glazed with a glossy soy-mirin-sugar sauce that caramelizes on the heat. Served over steamed rice, it's the gateway dish that turns first-timers into regulars.
Edo Japan built its name on teppan-grilled teriyaki bowls — you'll find them in food courts and on high streets right across Canada, made fresh in front of you.
Wheat noodles stir-fried with cabbage, carrot and pork or chicken, tossed in a tangy-sweet sauce and showered with pickled ginger and seaweed. Fast, filling, endlessly craveable.
Edo Japan's grill cooks yakisoba to order on a hot teppan, and Guu Izakaya plates a lively version among its small dishes.
Every recipe on these shelves was chosen because it works in a real home kitchen. Open a card, read the story, and start with the one that makes you hungriest.