Japan (Kanto and Kansai with distinct regional techniques; popularised nationally in Meiji era)
Sukiyaki — thinly sliced wagyu beef and vegetables simmered or pan-grilled in a sweet soy-sugar-sake warishita broth, then dipped in raw beaten egg before eating — represents one of Japan's most distinctive and ceremonially charged tableside cooking traditions, where the preparation method, the fat-caramelisation technique, and the raw egg coating collectively produce a flavour experience that cannot be replicated in any other format. The preparation has two regional schools with an ongoing cultural debate: Kanto style simmers the beef in pre-made warishita sauce from the beginning; Kansai (Osaka/Kyoto) style first pan-sears the beef directly in the dry iron pan with just sugar and soy (no pre-made sauce), creating caramelisation on the meat surface before adding sake and mirin to build the sauce progressively. Kansai style is considered more theatrical and technically demanding. The warishita ratio (approximately 4:1:1 of mirin-sake-soy with sugar) produces a sweet, glossy sauce that the wagyu fat melts into, creating an emulsified pool of extraordinary richness. The raw egg dipping is not optional affectation — the cool, rich fat of the egg yolk coats each bite, moderating the hot caramelised sweetness and adding protein richness that makes the dish complete. Shirataki noodles and tofu absorb the broth; wheat gluten (fu), negi, and chrysanthemum greens add textural and flavour variety. Napa cabbage (hakusai) is the final vegetable addition, releasing moisture that adjusts the broth to the right consistency.
Rich, caramelised sweet-soy — wagyu fat in broth, raw egg coating modulating intense sweetness
{"Kanto: pre-made warishita from start; Kansai: dry-sear beef with sugar-soy first, build sauce progressively","Warishita ratio: ~4:1:1 mirin:sake:soy + sugar — sweet, glossy, fat-emulsifying","Raw egg dipping: not optional — moderates heat, adds fat coating, completes the flavour","Wagyu fat melts into broth — the sauce self-enriches throughout the meal","Vegetable sequence matters: firm vegetables first (gobo, negi), soft last (hakusai, tofu)"}
{"Kansai technique: heat iron pan, add suet or beef fat piece first, then thinly sliced beef directly — sear 20 seconds per side","Individual egg bowls should be at room temperature — cold egg shocks the hot beef","Skim the broth surface foam during early beef additions to keep clarity","Pairing: sake (warm junmai at hitohada-kan) is the traditional sukiyaki beverage — the warmth resonates with the ritual"}
{"Using regular beef instead of wagyu — the fat melting into the broth is central to the dish","Skipping the raw egg — without it, sukiyaki is merely sweet-soy beef","Adding all ingredients simultaneously — the sequence of additions maintains broth integrity","Serving warishita too thin — the sweet-soy glaze should coat the back of a spoon"}
Japanese Cooking: A Simple Art — Shizuo Tsuji; Japan: The Cookbook — Nancy Singleton Hachisu