Takoyaki Osaka Street Food Octopus Ball
Japan (Osaka, Aizuya restaurant 1935, created by Endo Tomekichi)
Takoyaki (たこ焼き) are spherical savoury dumplings of batter, octopus, and condiments cooked in a special cast-iron or copper pan with hemispherical moulds. Osaka claims them as its defining street food — the dish was created in 1935 by Endo Tomekichi of Aizuya restaurant in Osaka, who adapted the round-mould cooking concept from akashiyaki (egg dumplings from Akashi). The batter is very thin — more egg and dashi than flour — producing a thin crisp exterior enclosing a liquid, almost custardy interior around the tako (octopus) piece. The technical challenge is rotating the forming balls at precisely the right moment with a skewer to create a perfect sphere — too early and the batter tears; too late and the bottom burns. Toppings are applied immediately off the heat: okonomi sauce (Worcester-based sweet-savoury), Japanese mayonnaise, aonori flakes, and katsuobushi bonito shavings that wave theatrically in the rising heat. Osaka residents debate the ideal interior consistency — most prefer the centre molten to the point of near-liquid, achieved by eating immediately. The cast-iron pan (takoyaki-ki) is a standard household appliance in Osaka homes.