Daikon Radish is hard to find in my region and rather expensive online so i subbed grated white turnip/swede and carrots, it was good but have bought some Daikon Radish seeds to try and grow my own as it is common in japanese recipes i am intersted in making. Thanks for the recipe, Take care, God bless one and all.
I spent alot of time living in Hamburg Germany growing up, my favorite food was Frikadellen which where made in a similar way to yours where except the no carrots and the onions where grated. Each family, diner, resturant had there own versions with different ratio's of herbs and spices, all used onions to a greater or lesser degree, some used carrots and celery. Below is the recipe my family uses, feel free to use it and adapt it your your own liking, i grew up with this so others maybe great but they are not home. You can use panko or any bread crumbs you like as i rather doubt you will be able to get german farmers bread outside of germany or unless you bake your own. 500 g ground beef & pork , 80% meat 20% fat recommended for moist Frikadellen, more fat the moister and more fragile the burger. 1 medium yellow onion grated 2 slices German Farmer’s bread, Bauernbrot *1 (about 2 oz or 50 g) 60 ml warm water, milk or stock Panko will work very well. 1 large egg 1 clove garlic , minced 15 g chopped fresh parsley 1 1/2 teaspoons salt 3/4 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper 1 teaspoon prepared yellow mustard 1 teaspoon dried marjoram 1 teaspoon sweet Hungarian paprika 1/2 teaspoon ground ginger 1/4 teaspoon ground mace 1/4 teaspoon ground coriander 1/8 teaspoon ground cardamom *1] German Bauernbrot or German-style Farmer's Bread. Is a combination of rye, whole wheat and high-gluten bread flour, and a combination of some typical German bread spices: caraway and fennel seeds, a bit of ground anise and coriander. Thank you for your recipe video, take care, God bless one and all.
I’ve cooked gyudon 3 times now from another recipe and it’s delicious, next time I will use your recipe for a change, the ingredients are all the same except for the sugar, other uses white sugar (and proportions aren’t the same). I always sub the dashi broth with mushroom broth (for the umami) as I can’t find dashi near me and amazon prices are too high, I also cut up flank steak thinly, melt in your mouth tender !!! I have never seen a recipe be so simple yet so delicious!