A Beginner’s Guide to Japanese Hot Pot in Honolulu

Shabu Shabu newbies, simmer down. The pros at Ichiriki Japanese Nabe next to Ala Moana have your guide to the ultimate D.I.Y. dining experience.

Shabu Shabu

All variations of hot pot (Mongolian, Chinese or Japanese) are traditionally eaten in the winter with people crowding to cook in communal pots. Ichiriki focuses on shabu shabu (boiling thinly sliced meat, noodles and vegetables in water or flavorful soup) and sukiyaki (cooking in shoyu-based broth in a shallow covered pot), with many of the ingredients coming directly from O‘ahu farms.

Fish balls

First timers are often wary of fish and beef tendon balls. We get it. Try the small fish balls first. They absorb the broth and seasonings nicely.

Jumbo shrimp

Shrimp

Beef is the most popular protein for hot potters, but shrimp is a close second. Shell and head on or off—we say it doesn’t matter. But we do prefer the jumbo version for the best texture and flavor.

Sauces

Sauces

If you choose your broth wisely, you won’t need to dip every bite into a sauce. But we think Ichiriki’s sesame dipping sauce is a perfect addition to every third bite.

Udon

Udon

The thick, chewy strands are the only noodle to opt for. End of discussion.

Prime rib eye

Meat

Rib eye (top, middle) with two cuts of pork and beef short ribs.

It’s easy to let a few items slip forgotten to the bottom of the pot, so we recommend Ichiriki’s prime rib eye. The fattier cut won’t get tough in the boiling broth. Still, try not to cook it for longer than four minutes.

Vegetables and tofu

Vegetables

Mushrooms, choy sum, bok choy, green onions, kuzukiri (clear noodles made from kudzu root powder), aburage and tofu round out the experience.

Kurubota pork

Like the beef, the paper-thin pork loin and belly stay tender. Go for fatty slices and cook for four to five minutes.

Tools

Tools

You need two sets of chopsticks; one for cooking and another for eating. A soup spoon scoops up all the broth and a strainer will help you nab every last slippery noodle.

Tsukune

Nabe

Love gyoza? This piece of bamboo contains just the filling. Scoop the magnificent mixture into the pot in bite-size pieces and let them cook for six minutes.

Broth

You can get just one, but why wouldn’t you go for two? Both the basic Ichiriki, the restaurant’s take on a classic shoyu-based broth, and premium miso broth will pair nicely with the Thai tom yum soup, the in-house favorite.

Eating

ichirikinabe.com

Published by Katie Kenny

Professionally, Katie Kenny is a digital content producer, social media manager and lifestyle writer from Hong Kong. Outside the office, she has a love of adventure travel, medium rare steak and suspenseful TV shows, consumes way too much Italian wine and is shamelessly obsessed with her ridiculous rescue dog named Lily. Katie made the big move to O‘ahu in March of 2018 and started working at HONOLULU Magazine as the digital editorial specialist that July. During her four years with the company, she managed digital editorial content, SEO and all of HONOLULU’s, HONOLULU Family’s and Frolic Hawai‘i’s website functionality and day-to-day management, recorded data, tracked progress, studied trends, worked on overall strategy, and also rounded up the best events for both the print issues and online.

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