Chikuzen-ni's geographic origin in Fukuoka (Chikuzen Province) is traditionally attributed to the region's specific vegetable combination — the Kyushu mountains provided burdock, lotus, taro, and konnyaku; the preparation became national when it was included in the standardised osechi ryori repertoire during the Meiji period; its presence in osechi boxes guarantees its annual preparation in virtually every Japanese household during New Year period
Chikuzen-ni (筑前煮 — named for the historical Chikuzen Province, now Fukuoka Prefecture) is a quintessentially Japanese simmered dish of root vegetables, konnyaku, and chicken — one of the most beloved home preparations in Japan, particularly associated with New Year celebrations (osechi ryori) where it appears as a regular component. The dish is also known as nishime (simmered things) in contexts outside Fukuoka. The defining technique: all ingredients are cut in irregular shapes (rangiri — rolling diagonal cuts), stir-fried briefly in sesame oil until the surfaces seal (the same technique as kenchinjiru), then simmered in dashi-mirin-soy with a drop lid (otoshibuta) until the vegetables absorb the seasoning. The specific ingredient combination in chikuzen-ni: chicken thigh pieces (bone-in or boneless), lotus root (renkon), carrot, gobo (burdock root), satoimo (taro), konnyaku (konjac), dried shiitake (rehydrated, the soaking liquid used as additional dashi), and snow peas as a final garnish. The dish improves dramatically overnight — the flavour penetration from resting in the cooled broth creates a more complex, rounded taste than immediately served preparations.
Chikuzen-ni's flavour architecture demonstrates the Japanese principle of compound accumulation: the initial sesame oil stir-fry builds Maillard complexity; the dashi provides compound umami; the shiitake soaking liquid adds GMP nucleotides that synergise with the dashi's glutamate; the soy and mirin provide salt and sweetness; the overnight rest allows amino acids and volatile aromatic compounds from all ingredients to equilibrate throughout the preparation; the result is a dish where no single component dominates and the whole is greater than the sum of its parts
The initial stir-fry in sesame oil develops surface browning on all ingredients before dashi is added — this Maillard development is the flavour foundation; rangiri (rolling cut) creates irregular pieces with more surface area than straight cuts; the dried shiitake soaking liquid is always incorporated — it doubles the umami concentration; rest overnight before serving; the broth should be concentrated after simmering (not too watery), as flavour continues penetrating during rest.
Make-ahead protocol: prepare one day before eating; refrigerate in the cooking liquid; reheat gently (do not boil vigorously — this breaks down vegetables); add snow peas in the final reheating only (they lose their green colour if cooked ahead); the chicken bone-in pieces give better stock to the simmering liquid; the professional version uses dashi-jiru (dashi-based simmering liquid) but home versions often use a commercially available dashi powder plus water for convenience without significant quality difference.
Skipping the stir-fry stage (produces pale, less flavourful result); cutting ingredients uniformly (straight cuts produce less surface area and visual monotony); discarding shiitake soaking liquid (eliminates the dish's secondary umami source); serving immediately without resting (premature — the flavour penetration is incomplete).
Tsuji, Shizuo — Japanese Cooking: A Simple Art; Hachisu, Nancy Singleton — Japanese Farm Food