Tsukimi Udon (Japanese Moon Viewing Noodle Soup)

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5.0

9 reviews
Excellent

Tsukimi Udon (Japanese Moon Viewing Noodle Soup)

Tsukimi udon is a traditional Japanese noodle soup of chewy udon noodles and a flavourful dashi broth. Tsikumi means moon viewing and refers to the raw egg yolk that looks like a shining full moon.

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Ingredients

Servings
  • 2 servings udon noodles*

Dashi noodle broth*

  • 2⅓ cups dashi broth*
  • 2 tablespoons soy sauce
  • 2 tablespoons mirin*
  • 1 teaspoon sugar (optional)
  • salt (optional)

Toppings

  • 2 egg yolks
  • 1 scallion (green onion) , thinly sliced
  • pinch shichimi togarashi (Japanese 7 spice), or toasted sesame seeds
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Instructions

  1. In a medium saucepan, bring plenty of water to a boil – at least 6 cups. Add the udon noodles and cook according to package instructions – my parboiled noodles only need 2 to 3 minutes. Separate the noodles by stirring with chopsticks.
  2. Rinse the hot noodles with cold water and drain in a colander.
  3. Return the saucepan to the heat and bring the dashi broth, soy sauce and mirin to a simmer (see notes if you have mentsuyu sauce). Taste first, then add the teaspoon of sugar (if needed). Add a pinch of salt for seasoning or a splash of boiling water if the broth is too strong for your taste.
  4. Divide the udon noodles between two deep bowls and pour the hot dashi broth over the udon noodles.
  5. Scatter over the sliced green onions. Then, nestle an egg yolk into each bowl. Sprinkle with shichimi togarashi or sesame seeds. And serve hot.

Notes

  • I use packaged parboiled udon noodles sold in 7-oz portions (200 grams). You can also use fresh or frozen udon noodles. If you can only find dried udon noodles, you can use them, but they won't be as plump and chewy as fresh, frozen or parboiled noodles.
  • You can make dashi broth from scratch using bonito flakes and kombu seaweed. But you can also use store-bought dashi or instant dashi powder (follow package instructions).
  • Mentsuyu is a Japanese soup base, and my homemade mentsuyu sauce recipe is concentrated and flavourful. It keeps for 4 weeks in the fridge, so it's worth making a large batch. To use mentsuyu for a quick broth: Dilute ½ cup of homemade mentsuyu with 2 cups of water and a tablespoon of mirin – a 1:4 ratio of mentsuyu to water. Taste and adjust with more water, mentsuyu, or a pinch of salt. Or follow the package instructions for store-bought mentsuyu. See the kake udon recipe for full instructions on how to use mentsuyu to make noodle broth.
  • I use hon mirin for this recipe (sweet Japanese rice wine). If your mirin has ingredients like sugar or corn syrup, it’s not “real brewed mirin” and is likely much sweeter. Go ahead and use it, but omit the sugar – otherwise, your sauce will be crazy sweet. See the ingredients and substitutes for more information.
  • Tsukimi udon is traditionally served with raw egg yolk, but you can opt for a soft-boiled egg if that's not your vibe. Or try more topping variations.

Nutrition Information

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Calories 424kcal (21%) Carbohydrates 65g (22%) Protein 23g (46%) Fat 9g (14%) Saturated Fat 2g (10%) Polyunsaturated Fat 1g Monounsaturated Fat 2g Cholesterol 194mg (65%) Sodium 3034mg (126%) Potassium 319mg (9%) Fiber 5g (20%) Sugar 12g (24%) Vitamin A 331IU (7%) Vitamin C 1mg (1%) Calcium 117mg (12%) Iron 2mg (11%)

Nutrition Facts

Serving: 2Serving

Amount Per Serving

Calories 424 kcal

% Daily Value*

Calories 424kcal 21%
Carbohydrates 65g 22%
Protein 23g 46%
Fat 9g 14%
Saturated Fat 2g 10%
Polyunsaturated Fat 1g 6%
Monounsaturated Fat 2g 10%
Cholesterol 194mg 65%
Sodium 3034mg 126%
Potassium 319mg 7%
Fiber 5g 20%
Sugar 12g 24%
Vitamin A 331IU 7%
Vitamin C 1mg 1%
Calcium 117mg 12%
Iron 2mg 11%

* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet.

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