In October 2006, my sister arranged for an overnight trip to Kyoto via the Nozomi Shinkansen, which is the fastest bullet train in Japan. The rest of my family took a earlier train back to avoid getting home after dark, while I stayed behind in Kyoto to do more sightseeing.
I was alone for dinner, and while waiting for my train back to Tokyo, stumbled upon a small shop within the Kyoto train station near the JR trains that served Mentaiko Udon. It was simply wonderful - tasty, creamy and just what a hungry girl needed. See picture below extracted from my archives.
One day after work last week, I decided I simply had to make it using a really simple recipe that my sister gave me. I managed to find spicy mentaiko (辛子明太子, karashi mentaiko) at Isetan supermarket.
It was not a cheap dinner - 2 pieces of mentaiko set me back $14.80, and since I had to buy Japanese mayonaise ($5), mirin ($3.50), udon and seaweed as well, I decided to forego the negi (leek) and tobiko (flying fish roe).
For udon in Singapore, I've found that the frozen variety is the best quality. You can get a pack of 3 for around $8. Don't go for the cheaper refrigerated stuff, because it's really limp and textureless when cooked. You can also substitute with pasta - I've found spaghetti works quite well.
The spicy mentaiko was simply beautiful.
First, you have to slit the sacs and scrape out the roe bits.
I melted butter in a saucepan, and after adding the roe, I added a tablespoon of mirin and 2 squirts of mayonnaise.
I threw in the cooked udon (I defrosted it, and then cooked it in boiling water for 3-4 mins) into the mixture and tossed it until it even coated all the udon. The seaweed strips were used as a garnish, but also added texture and flavour to the dish.
Japanese chilli flakes help to spice up the dish.
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