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Osaka — Tomekichi Endo invented at Aizuya restaurant 1935; now definitive Osaka street food Techniques

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Osaka — Tomekichi Endo invented at Aizuya restaurant 1935; now definitive Osaka street food
Takoyaki Mastery Batter and Turning Technique
Osaka — Tomekichi Endo invented at Aizuya restaurant 1935; now definitive Osaka street food
Takoyaki (octopus balls) is Osaka's defining street food and greatest contribution to Japanese cuisine — small spherical balls of dashi-enriched batter containing pieces of boiled octopus, tenkasu (tempura scraps), pickled ginger, and green onion, cooked in a specialised cast iron mould with hemispherical cavities, then finished with Worcestershire-based sauce, mayonnaise, aonori (green seaweed), and katsuobushi. The technical mastery of takoyaki production is the turning technique: batter poured into the oiled, heated moulds; when the edges begin to set, the balls are turned 90 degrees using thin metal picks, then turned again as the other side sets, finally rotated to a complete sphere as all surfaces crisp. The technique requires developed skill — the timing of each turn, the angle of the pick, and the amount of rotation creates or destroys the perfect sphere. Osaka street stall veterans can produce and turn dozens of balls simultaneously with practiced efficiency. Batter characteristics: higher dashi content than standard batter, producing a liquid interior even when exterior is crisp — the contrast between crisp exterior and molten, almost flowing interior is the quality hallmark. Professional batter formula: dashi stock, egg, flour, soy sauce, and a small amount of oil, mixed to consistency slightly thinner than standard pancake batter. Temperature control: the mould must be properly preheated (oil smoking point) before batter addition; insufficient heat produces sticking and uneven cooking.
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