📌 Build-Your-Own Japanese Bowls — Tsukurioki Meal Prep
Posted 17 April 2026 by: Admin
The smell of toasted sesame starting to heat up in a pan — that’s the Sunday signal. You prep everything at once, pack it into containers, and the rest of the week takes care of itself in three minutes flat each night. Tsukurioki is the method Japanese people have practiced for generations, and once you adopt it, Western meal prep feels frankly limited.
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Ingredients :
- Chicken thighs — Thighs, not breasts. Breast meat dries out when reheated and becomes cottony by the third day. The thigh is forgiving: it stays moist even cold, and its surface caramelizes well in the pan with the soy-ginger marinade.
- Extra firm tofu — If you’ve never really liked tofu, it’s probably because you didn’t get the right kind. You need extra firm, seriously drained for at least 20 minutes under a weight. Then a thin layer of cornstarch before pan-frying in a drizzle of oil: the crust becomes golden like a shortbread cookie, while the inside stays supple.
- Ramen egg — This is the element that takes the bowl from practical to truly great. Cooked for exactly 6 minutes 30 in boiling water, then plunged into ice water. A night in a soy-water marinade gives it that mahogany tint and sweet-salty taste that disappears too quickly from the fridge.
- Sesame paste (for goma dare) — Not hummus tahini — look for Japanese or Korean white sesame paste, which is milder and less bitter. It forms the base of the sesame sauce with toasted sesame oil, soy sauce, and rice vinegar. Two spoonfuls in a jar, mixed with a fork, and you’re set.
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