It's a long story: Yotam Ottolenghi's noodle recipes | Food (2024)

Yotam Ottolenghi recipes

From udon and ramen to kishimen and soba, there's a noodle dish to suit every occasion

Yotam Ottolenghi

Fri 4 Jul 2014 21.00 BST

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Pot noodles are my guilty pleasure. There, I've said it, and I'm not ashamed of it, though I do on occasion berate myself for reaching for Asian instant noodles instead of spending time onsomething more wholesome.

Then again, the time commitment required to make noodles from scratch varies, from a quick stir-fry using supermarket ingredients to a fancy ramen that involves several stages and an overnight rest. (Mind you, I have spared you the need to make the noodles yourself, which some ramen fanatics would consider sacrilege.)

The noodle you use depends on what you want from a dish: wide and flat opaque rice noodles are naturally gluten-free, as are those translucent, long, thin glass or cellophane noodles, which are made from vegetable starches such as mung bean or sweet potato. Thin, light, brown buckwheat soba noodles are perfect for cold dishes – cubes of mango mixed with cooked butterbeans or fried squares of aubergine, herbs and toasted nuts work for me – whereas the light yellow and stiffer wheat flour ramen noodles are better served warm in a soup.

White wheat flour udon noodles, ribbon-like kishimen noodles, vermicelli-like hiyamugi wheat noodles… there are variations for all occasions, time requirements and dietary intolerances. And before youget noodling, stock up at an Asian food store, if you can – rice vinegar, palm sugar, mirin, soy sauce, toasted sesame oil, black andwhite sesame seeds, Thai red shallots and kaffir lime leaves are alluseful pantry staples – though most large supermarkets also have agood (if more expensive) range.

Japchae with mushrooms

Japchae is a Korean dish of sweet potato noodles mixed with vegetables. Omit the oyster sauce to make it vegetarian – it works just as well without – and use tamari soy sauce if you want it to be gluten-free as well. Serves four, generously.

40g dried black fungus (pak-pui) ordried wood ear mushrooms
100ml soy sauce
2 tbsp muscovado sugar
1 tbsp oyster sauce (optional)
200g sweet potato starch noodles (Korean vermicelli)
1 tbsp sesame oil
250g large spinach leaves, washed
2 tbsp groundnut oil
1 small onion, peeled and finely sliced
5cm piece ginger, peeled and julienned
2 large red chillies, deseeded and julienned
1 large carrot, peeled and julienned
150g shiitake mushrooms, cut into 1cm slices
2 tbsp sesame seeds, toasted

Put the dried mushrooms in a bowl, cover with boiling water and set aside for 30 minutes. Drain, discard the woody stem, then cut into 0.5cm-thick strips and set aside. In another bowl, whisk the soy, sugar and oyster sauce, if using, and set aside.

Fill a medium pan with water and bring to a boil. Add the noodles, cook for eight minutes (or according to the packet instructions) and drain. Transfer to a medium bowl, pour on the sesame oil and mix. Refill the pan with water, bring to a boil, cook the spinach for a minute and drain.

Heat the groundnut oil in a wok or sauté pan over a medium-high heat, then fry the onion for five minutes, stirring a few times, until it starts to take on some colour. Add the ginger, chilli, carrot and shiitake, fry for two minutes, then add the rehydrated mushrooms, noodles, spinach and soy-sugar mix. Stir-fry for two to three minutes, remove from the heat, stir in the sesame seeds and serve.

Stir-fried noodles with cabbage, sesame and peanuts

Use a mandoline or food processor tospeed along the slicing and shredding, and make this a very quick meal. The mix of black and white sesame seeds looks great on the plate, but use just white if that's all you have. Serves four, generously.

200g dried thick rice noodles
½ small white cabbage, tough inner stalk removed, leaves finely shredded
2 tbsp sunflower oil
2 large garlic cloves, thinly sliced
10cm piece ginger, peeled and julienned
2 medium green chillies, deseeded and finely sliced
3 tbsp white sesame seeds
1 tbsp black sesame seeds
1½ tbsp sesame oil
1½ tbsp rice-wine vinegar
2 tbsp soy sauce
40g coriander, roughly chopped
1½ tbsp lime juice, plus 1 tsp finely grated lime zest
60g roasted and salted peanuts, lightly crushed

Bring a medium pan of water to a boil, cook the noodles for seven minutes (or according to the packet instructions), drain and set aside. Refill the pan with water, bring to a boil, cook the cabbage for two minutes, drain, refresh in cold water and set aside to dry.

Heat the sunflower oil in a large wok or sauté pan over a medium-high heat. Add the garlic, ginger and chilli, stir-fry for two to three minutes, until the garlic starts to colour, then add the sesame seeds and cook for a minute, until they begin to toast. Add the cabbage, sesame oil, vinegar and soy, cook for two minutes more, then stir through the coriander, lime juice, zest, peanuts and cooked noodles – if they've started to stick together, rinse them with boiling water first. Heat through for a minute and serve.

Shoyu ramen

You need to start this a day ahead, so the flavour of the stock develops, and so you can lift off the fat after a night in the fridge. "Tare" is a general term in Japanese cooking for all sorts of soy sauces used for grilling, dipping or basting. Serves eight.

900g boneless pork shoulder, rolled and tied (if you prefer it less fatty, just remove some fat from the joint)
Salt
2 tbsp vegetable oil
1kg chicken bones and carcasses
50g smoky bacon rashers, cut widthways into 3cm thick slices
50g ginger, roughly sliced
3 garlic cloves, roughly sliced
14cm x 14cm piece kombu (optional)
4 trimmed spring onions, 2 cut into 4cm pieces, 2 finely sliced
4 eggs
200g Tenderstem broccoli, quartered lengthways and cut on anangle into 5cm pieces

600g fresh (ie wet) Asian wheat noodles, such as ramen or udon (Amoy's Straight To Wok thick or medium udon are good)
4 tsp sesame oil
1 tbsp shichimi togarashi (or a good pinch of chilli flakes) per portion

For the marinade
200ml soy sauce
150ml water
100ml sake
50ml mirin

For the tare
75ml soy sauce
1½ tbsp sake
1 tbsp mirin

Rub half a teaspoon of salt all over the pork. Heat the vegetable oil in a very large saucepan on a high heat. Sear the pork for eight minutes, turning regularly, then add the chicken bones, bacon, ginger, garlic, kombu (if using) and the 4cm pieces of spring onion. Pour in three litres of water, bring to a boil, then lower the heat to medium-low and simmer uncovered for three to four hours, skimming off any fat or scum every now and then, until the pork is tender; add water, if needed, to keep the bones submerged. Set aside to cool, then refrigerate overnight.

The next day, skim off all the surface fat and return the stock to the heat, so it becomes liquid again. Remove the pork, discard the string and cut into 0.5cm-thick slices. Put the meat in a large bowl and set aside. Strain the stock through a fine sieve, keeping the liquid but discarding everything else – you should have 1.8 litres of stock (add water to make it up any difference) – and set aside.

Fill a medium pan with water and bring to a boil. Add the eggs, cook for six minutes, until soft-boiled, then drain, refresh in cold water and peel. Add to the bowl with the pork.

Mix all the marinade ingredients, pour over the pork and eggs, and set aside for at least an hour.

Bring a saucepan of water to a boil, cook the broccoli for two minutes, until just cooked, then drain, refresh, drain again and set aside.

Pour the stock into a large pan on a medium-high heat, add the tare and bring to a simmer. Lift the pork out of its marinade and add to the pan with the broccoli and noodles. Simmer for a couple of minutes, until the noodles are cooked, then divide between eight bowls. Lift the eggs out of the marinade (this can now bediscarded) and cut each in half lengthways. Top each portion with ahalf-egg, sprinkle over the finely sliced spring onion and drizzle with sesame oil. Sprinkle the shichimi togarash on top and serve at once.

• Yotam Ottolenghi is chef/patron of Ottolenghi and Nopi in London.

Follow Yotam on Twitter.

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It's a long story: Yotam Ottolenghi's noodle recipes | Food (2024)

FAQs

What is Ottolenghi style food? ›

From this, Ottolenghi has developed a style of food which is rooted in Middle Eastern and Mediterranean traditions, but which also draws in diverse influences and ingredients from around the world.

How many recipes are in Ottolenghi Simple? ›

Ottolenghi presents 130 streamlined recipes packed with his signature Middle Eastern–inspired flavors, all simple in at least (and often more than) one way: made in 30 minutes or less, with 10 or fewer ingredients, in a single pot, using pantry staples, or prepared or prepared ahead of time for brilliantly, deliciously ...

Who is Otto Lingo chef? ›

Yotam Assaf Ottolenghi (born 14 December 1968) is an Israeli-born British chef, restaurateur, and food writer.

Does Ottolenghi eat meat? ›

If anything, Mr. Ottolenghi — tall and dapper, with salt-and-pepper hair, half-rim glasses and a penchant for pink-striped button-downs and black sneakers — should be a vegetarian pinup. But here's the rub: he eats meat. Apparently this is enough to discredit him in the eyes of the most devout abstainers.

Why is Ottolenghi famous? ›

Yotam Ottolenghi is a famous Israeli born British chef who is well known for his group of delis, as well as cookbooks and TV appearances.

What is the best Ottolenghi? ›

Ottolenghi Classics
  • Roasted pumpkin wedges with chestnut, cinnamon & fresh bay leaves. ...
  • Roasted potatoes with caramel & Agen prunes. ...
  • Char-grilled sprouting broccoli with sweet tahini. ...
  • Cinnamon pavlova, praline cream and fresh figs (SWEET pg 291) ...
  • Green herb salad. ...
  • Roasted sweet potato with pecan and maple.

Is Ottolenghi a trained chef? ›

Ottolenghi trained at Le Cordon Bleu

Although his great success might suggest otherwise, Yotam Ottolenghi did not plan on being a chef. Instead, his childhood, adolescence, and early adulthood were dedicated to academia.

Are Ottolenghi recipes complicated? ›

Some of the recipes are fairly straightforward but he does have a reputation for including some hard to get ingredients and some recipes can be very involved.

What celebrity chef can sing? ›

Andy LoRusso -- "The Singing Chef" -- is a best-selling author and cooking icon, thanks to the success and ongoing popularity of his timeless book, Sing and Cook Italian, and his unique cooking-cabaret shows.

Why did Otto leave Top chef? ›

^Note 1 : The chef(s) did not receive immunity for winning the Quickfire Challenge. ^Note 2 : Otto voluntarily withdrew before Lakshmi eliminated anyone, deciding that his misconduct over the unpaid lychees contributed the most to his team's loss.

What does walk mean in the kitchen? ›

Walking is primarily used to alert the Head Chef or Expo that you have completed a dish and are on the way to the pass with it. Walking 2 Carbonara Chef! Means I have the 2 Carbonara completed and I'm walking them up to you. It allows the head chef to quickly determine what is still needed for the table.

What are the healthiest instant noodles? ›

The Best Instant Noodles for Healthy Instant Soup
  • Vite Ramen. The main selling point of Vite Ramen is that these instant noodles have all the nutrition necessary for a human. ...
  • One Culture Foods. ...
  • Immi. ...
  • Noma Lim. ...
  • Mike's Mighty Good. ...
  • Nissin All-In Instant Noodles. ...
  • House Foods. ...
  • Oh So Tasty.

What to add to noodles for flavor? ›

  1. Butter and Milk (France) To give your noodle recipe a French twist, all you'll need are two ingredients: butter and 🥛 milk. ...
  2. Kimchi (Korea) ...
  3. Fried Bacon and Egg (USA) ...
  4. Peanut Butter and Sriracha Sauce (Thailand) ...
  5. Sliced Cheese (Italy) ...
  6. Sesame Oil and Soy Sauce (Japan) ...
  7. Garlic and Soy Sauce (China) ...
  8. Canned meat.
Sep 24, 2023

Can you put raw egg in instant noodles? ›

If you want to add a poached egg to Ramen, start by boiling your Ramen in 2 cups of water for 90 seconds. Then, stir in your seasonings and crack a raw egg into the pot of water. Place a lid on the pot, turn off the heat, and let it sit for 2 minutes to cook the egg and finish the noodles.

What are Ottolenghi recipes? ›

  1. Pork souvlaki with cucumber salad and tzatziki. ...
  2. BBQ lamb tacos with pineapple pickle and chutney. ...
  3. Charred green beans with anchovy dressing and seed dukkah. ...
  4. Strawberry tiramisu cake. ...
  5. Broccolini with chorizo, manchego and caraway seed creme fraiche. ...
  6. Potato and asparagus salad with black garlic and dukkah.

What is the Ottolenghi effect? ›

His commitment to the championing of vegetables, as well as ingredients once seen as 'exotic', has led to what some call 'The Ottolenghi effect'. This is shorthand for the creation of a meal which is full of color, flavor, bounty, and surprise.

Is Ottolenghi flavour vegetarian? ›

Ottolenghi Flavour is a book that reinforces Yotam's image as one of the best chefs and cookbook authors in the world. Flavour is not only the best vegetarian cookbook that we ever reviewed but also one of the best cookbooks that we ever brought you.

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