Japanese Chicken Meatball Recipe (Tsukune) - My Japanese Recipes (2024)

July 3, 2020

Japanese Chicken Meatball Recipe (Tsukune) - My Japanese Recipes (1)

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Tsukune is a Japanese chicken meatball. Restaurants often skewer them, cook them on a grill and flavor them with a kind of teriyaki sauce. In this recipe, I show how to cook tsukune at home on a stove top with homemade tsukune sauce. I shaped them like a small hamburger steak and cooked them in a frying pan. This method is much easier to make quickly at home. Please try this Japanese Chicken Meatball Recipe and let me know what you think!

In this recipe, I created three types of tsukune: plain, edamame, and corn. I highly recommend trying them because they are absolutely delicious! Please try all three and let me know which one is your favorite!

Ground chicken is the main ingredient for Tsukune. I made the Tsukune sauce with traditional Japanese seasonings including garlic, cooking alcohol, miring, ginger, soy sauce, sugar, and sesame oil.

Japanese Chicken Meatball Recipe (Tsukune) - My Japanese Recipes (2)

Tips for Making Japanese Chicken Meatball Recipe (tsukune)

  • There are other methods for cooking tsukune on the grill with a skewer, but it takes much longer and is more effort than cooking tsukune based on this recipe.
  • While I added edamame and corn to the tsukune, you can also add other types of vegetables. These include water chesternuts, lotus root, and other vegetables.
  • Tsukune is a type of dish often served at izakayas (Japanese informal bar) and yakitori locations. Bar owners serve tsukune as an otsumami (appetizer) with beer. Kinpira is similar in that it is also served as otsumami. While Japanese chicken meatballs are not often cooked at home, this version is delicious and easy to cook at home.
  • In this version, I created a type of patty, but you can use this same recipe to make different shapes. You can skewer and grill these different shapes (long cylinders on a stick) if desired.
  • In Japan, we often dip the tsukune in mixed raw egg. If you have the opportunity to safely eat tsukune with raw egg, I recommend it.

Japanese Chicken Meatball Recipe (Tsukune) - My Japanese Recipes (3)

Japanese Tsukune (Chicken Meatballs) Recipe

Tsukune is a Japanese chicken meatball often cooked on a skewer and grilled. In this recipe, I show how to cook tsukune at home on a stove top. I highly recommend trying tsukune because they are absolutely delicious! I created three types of tsukune, plain, one with edamame, and one with corn. Please try all three and let me know which one is your favorite!

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Course Appetizer, Main Course, Side Dish

Cuisine Japanese

Ingredients

Meatball Ingredients

  • 1 onion
  • 2 tbsp cornstarch
  • 200 grams ground chicken (~1/2 pound)
  • 0.25 tsp salt
  • 40 grams edamame (1/4 cup)
  • 30 grams corn (~1/8 cup)

Tsukune (Japanese Chicken Meatball) Sauce

  • 1 tsp grated garlic (I used garlic and ginger from squeeze tube)
  • 1 tsp grated ginger
  • 1 tbsp cooking alcohol
  • 1 tbsp mirin
  • 2 tbsp soy sauce
  • 1 tsp sugar
  • 1 tsp sesame oil

Bringing it together

  • 1 tbsp vegetable oil

Instructions

Making the meatball (tsukune)

  • Peel and dice an onion

  • Add 2 tbsp of corn starch and the diced onion into a small mixing bowl

  • Add the chicken into a larger mixing bowl with 0.25 tsp of salt and mix together

  • Add the diced onions and corn starch into the larger mixing bowl with the ground chicken

    Japanese Chicken Meatball Recipe (Tsukune) - My Japanese Recipes (4)

  • Mix well and divide into three separate piles within the mixing bowl

  • Make meatball patties from one of the piles

    Japanese Chicken Meatball Recipe (Tsukune) - My Japanese Recipes (5)

  • Add the edamame to one of the two remaining piles and form into meatball patties

    Japanese Chicken Meatball Recipe (Tsukune) - My Japanese Recipes (6)

  • Finally, add the corn to the final pile and form into meatball patties

    Japanese Chicken Meatball Recipe (Tsukune) - My Japanese Recipes (7)

Making the Tsukune (Chicken Meatball) Sauce

  • Add the grated garlic, grated ginger, cooking alcohol, mirin, soy sauce, sugar and sesame oil into a small mixing bowl and mix well

Cooking the Chicken Meatballs

  • Add 1/4 tbsp of vegetable oil into a frying pan

  • Add all the chicken meatballs into the frying pan and fry on medium heat until the bottom is browned

  • Flip the meatballs and fry on the other side until browned

  • Add the tsukune sauce into the frying pan and flip the meatballs to season both sides

    Japanese Chicken Meatball Recipe (Tsukune) - My Japanese Recipes (8)

  • Reduce the sauce until the water content is low

  • Plate, serve, and enjoy!

Video

Keyword Chicken, Corn, Edamame

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Author: Michael

Filed Under: Appetizer, Chicken, Dinner, Lunch, Main Dish, Side Dish, Snack

Tags: Edamame, Meatballs, Tsukune

Japanese Chicken Meatball Recipe (Tsukune) - My Japanese Recipes (2024)

FAQs

What does tsukune mean in Japanese? ›

Tsukune (つくね、捏、捏ね) is a Japanese chicken meatball most often cooked yakitori style (but also can be fried, baked, or boiled) and sometimes covered in a sweet soy or yakitori tare, which is often mistaken for teriyaki sauce.

What is tsukune made of? ›

For the Meatballs: Using hands, mix together chicken, bread crumbs, scallions, egg, ginger, garlic, sesame oil, salt, and white pepper until thoroughly combined. Form mixture into 1-inch meatballs and thread onto skewers.

What race is Tsukune? ›

As a Shinso vampire, Tsukune can rely on his own latent powers to fight. Immense Speed: As a ghoul, Tsukune's speed has been repeatedly shown to be beyond the standards of high level monsters, including speed specialized ones, much less normal humans.

Where did Tsukune originate from? ›

Ethnic/Cultural Info. Tsukune is derived from the name of a Japanese chicken meatball commonly served in yakitori-style restaurants.

What is Agedashi made of? ›

Agedashi dōfu (揚げ出し豆腐, "lightly deep-fried tofu") is a Japanese hot tofu dish. Soft or medium-firm silken tofu (kinugoshi) is cut into cubes, before being lightly dusted with potato starch or cornstarch and then deep fried until golden brown.

What is the name of the Japanese spirit made from fermented rice? ›

Sake is an alcoholic drink made from fermented rice. Often referred to as nihonshu (日本酒) in Japanese (to differentiate it from "sake" which in Japanese can also refer to alcohol in general), the drink enjoys widespread popularity and is served at all types of restaurants and drinking establishments.

What is Funazushi made of? ›

Funa-zushi is often made from nigorobuna (crucian carp) caught in Lake Biwa. The whole crucian carp is marinated, and the lactic acid produced during fermentation softens the bones, making it possible to eat all the way down to the bones.

How do you eat Japanese Bao? ›

Pick it up: Hold the bun with one hand and gently squeeze it to create an opening. Add condiments: Some people like to add condiments like hot sauce or soy sauce, depending on their preference. Take a bite: Take a bite of the bun, ensuring you get a combination of the fluffy steamed bun and the flavorful pork filling.

What is chouchin yakitori? ›

Chouchin is a very rare yakitori; it is a skewer of meat accompanied by small ball-like egg creations that resemble immature egg yolks.

How do you say tsukune? ›

Tsukune (pronounced, according to the two recordings I listened to, as “ssuhCoo-nay”.

What does Megami mean in Japanese? ›

女神 - "Megami"means "female Goddess". 女 (pronounced Onna on its own), means woman, while 神 (pronounced Kami on its own) means God or Deity.

What is Masa Ka in Japanese? ›

What does 'masaka' mean in Japanese and in what context is it used? - Quora. Basically "masaka" shows unbelievable feeling. "Masaka" is an expression that it'll be possible but unexpected it happened right now for the listener, "North Korea finally attacked the U.S." "Masaka!" (No way!)

What does Masa Ni mean in Japanese? ›

Kana: まさに Romaji: masa ni. Meaning: exactly; just; precisely; really; truly.

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