Dashimaki Tamago vs Tamagoyaki — Two Egg Traditions
Kansai (dashimaki) and Kanto/Edo (tamagoyaki) — parallel regional egg traditions
Japan has two distinct rolled omelette traditions that are frequently confused but represent genuinely different preparations. Dashimaki tamago (Kansai/Kyoto style): egg beaten with a significant proportion of dashi (stock), seasoned with light soy and mirin, resulting in a soft, custardy, almost trembling texture when cut — the dashi makes it barely set. Tamagoyaki (Kanto/Tokyo style): egg beaten with only sugar, soy, and mirin — no dashi — resulting in a firmer, denser, more soy-sweet roll. Both are cooked in the same rectangular tamagoyaki pan (tamago pan) using the same layer-by-layer rolling technique: pour thin layer, cook until just set, roll toward one end, add another layer, repeat. The Kansai version is technically harder (the excess liquid from dashi makes it prone to breaking); the Kanto version is firmer and more stable. In sushi restaurants, the tamagoyaki is itself considered a benchmark of the kitchen's egg technique skill.