Site icon Mochi Mommy

Easy Yakiudon Recipe (Stir Fried Udon)

Yakiudon is a dry, stir fried udon dish from Japan. It’s super easy to make at home, and you can customize the veggies and yakiudon sauce however you want. If you’re looking for udon inspo, keep reading! Disclaimer: This post may contain affiliate links.

My kids love udon. I guess it’s not surprising. I’m pretty sure everyone loves udon. But as a kid, I was an udon purist. I only wanted my chewy udon in my very plain, no frills soup of water and mentsuyu. Have I mentioned that I was a picky eater?

But eventually as a teenager I tried yakiudon, and my life was changed. You get all the chewy, bouncy goodness of udon noodles plus a flavor bomb of sauce. And usually there’s a bunch of vegetables involved too, so your GI tract feels pretty happy about it as well.

If you’re pretty familiar with stir fries and dry noodles, you probably don’t even need a yakiudon recipe. Just throw everything together in your favorite sauce. But if you’re looking for some new noodle inspo or need a step by step, you can follow my recipe.

What is Yakiudon?

Yakiudon is a stir fried udon. Udon is an extremely popular noodle in Japan made out of wheat flour. At udon restaurants, you typically find udon served as a hot noodle soup in a dashi and soy sauce broth. However, it’s not uncommon to eat udon as a cold noodle dish in the summer as well, either in a cold broth or served dry with a cold dipping sauce.

And, of course, you can find udon stir fried in this dish, yakiudon. Yakiudon also includes lots of veggies and usually some thin sliced meat along with a soy sauce based sauce (but more on this later).

What Udon Should I Buy to Cook at Home?

In Japanese markets in America, you can usually find both dry and frozen udon. For the chewiest, thickest udon noodles, you’ll want to buy a type called Sanuki udon, which is sold frozen. Obviously, you can use other types of udon as well, but who doesn’t love the thick and chewy ones?

Frozen Sanuki udon is already cooked, so you are actually just reheating it in the boiling water. Don’t overcook! It takes just a couple minutes. That’s partially what makes cooking udon at home so fast and easy.

What Meat and Vegetables go in Yakiudon?

Sliced pork is probably the most common meat in yakiudon, but you can really use whatever you want. You can find thinly sliced meats at most Asian markets. If you’re vegetarian or vegan, just sub tofu. For pescatarians, seafood also works!

As for vegetables, again you can use whatever you want. However, I feel like it’s a very common Japanese thing to at least always have some shredded cabbage and sliced onions. I never make my yakiudon without those vegetables. Other common vegetables in Japanese stir fries include shiitake mushroom and carrots. But you can definitely clean out whatever you have in the fridge. Bok choy? Gai lan? If you can stir fry it, you can put it in.

Yakiudon Sauce Recipe

My yakiudon sauce in this recipe is really more SE Asian inspired. It uses sweet soy sauce and hoisin or oyster sauce. However, any recipe with those ingredients is not traditionally Japanese. Actually, many yakiudon recipes on the internet look more like Chinese or SE Asian stir fry recipes that use udon noodles and don’t look anything like yakiudon in Japan.

But it’s not a bad thing! I myself prefer this style of sauce. Just please know that I am fully admitting that this is not a Japanese style sauce.

If you want to keep your cooking more similar to a strictly Japanese restaurant, you will want to use a dashi and soy sauce based sauce. You can use storebought mentsuyu, the same as what you would use to make udon in noodle soup! Or you can make it from scratch by mixing some dashi with soy sauce, mirin, and sake, similar to my sukiyaki broth.

But if you want to experiment a little, I highly suggest trying out my secret sauce! It’s a combination of oyster sauce, sweet soy sauce, Japanese or other lighter soy sauce, sesame oil, and sambal oelek. Basically, it’s almost a mi goreng sauce. Despite my East Asian heritage, I cannot deny that my taste buds love SE Asian flavors.

You can substitute hoisin for oyster sauce and dark soy sauce plus brown sugar for the sweet soy sauce. This is a good way to keep your yakiudon vegan or vegetarian. And feel free to omit the sambal oelek or sub sriracha or other Asian hot sauce.

Basically, you can do whatever you want. Just try some sauce combinations and see what tastes good to you.

Special Tools for Stir Frying

The last thing I really want to emphasize for this recipe is that I highly suggest you use a wok. It takes about one pack of udon to feed one person. So if you are feeding a family of four, you’ll need about four packs of udon. The only cooking vessel I have large enough to accommodate four packs of udon is my wok. Otherwise, you’ll have to cook multiple smaller batches. Plus, woks can get hot enough to really flash fry those veggies. Gotta get that wok hei! (Confession: I am really bad at getting wok hei because I am scared of fire.)

I have a gas stove, but flat bottomed, carbon steel woks should work on induction stovetops. Woks do take some special care, like a cast iron skillet, but it’s worth having if you cook Asian food frequently. I deep fry and steam in my wok as well. I’ll leave it up to you if you want to research the best quality woks, but Joyce Chen has a pretty good one for beginners who don’t want to shell out a ton of money.

More Asian Noodle Recipes

Looking for more Asian noodle recipes? Check these out:

yakiudon
Print

Easy Yakiudon Recipe

Yakiudon is a dry, stir fried noodle dish using Japanese udon noodles. It's easy to customize this dish however you want.
Course Main Course
Cuisine Japanese
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 20 minutes
Servings 4 people

Equipment

  • Wok See notes

Ingredients

  • 4 packs frozen sanukiya udon
  • 1 lb thinly sliced pork
  • 1 clove garlic minced or pressed
  • 1/2 tsp freshly grated ginger
  • 1/2 onion sliced
  • 1/4 head napa cabbage shredded
  • 3 shiitake mushrooms sliced
  • 1 cup shredded carrots
  • oil for stir frying

For Yakiudon Sauce

  • 1/4 cup oyster sauce can sub hoisin sauce
  • 2 tbsp Japanese soy sauce
  • 2 tbsp sweet soy sauce can sub dark soy sauce with brown sugar
  • 1 tbsp sesame oil
  • 1/2 tsp sambal oelek optional, or other hot sauce

Instructions

  • Mix ingredients for the yakiudon sauce (hoisin, soy sauce, sweet soy sauce, sesame oil, sambal oelek) and set aside.
  • Bring a large pot of water to boil and cook the frozen udon according to package instructions, usually around 2 minutes. Drain and set aside. Note: If you haven't chopped your veggies yet, you can do this while waiting for the water to boil.
  • In a large wok, heat a small amount of oil and add sliced pork. Stir fry until pork is cooked through, and remove it from the wok.
  • Add a little more oil to the wok along with garlic and ginger. After a few seconds, when the garlic and ginger have begun cooking and are very fragrant, add onions.
  • Stir fry onions a couple minutes, and as they start to become translucent, add the cabbage and mushrooms.
  • Continue to stir fry another few minutes, and when the cabbage and mushrooms have begun to soften as they cook, add the shredded carrots and return the sliced pork to the wok. Add the cooked udon noodles as well and pour the prepared yakiudon sauce over everything.
  • Mix everything well. Taste and adjust seasonings (e.g. add more soy sauce or hot sauce) according to tastes. Turn off the heat and serve immediately. Leftovers can be kept in an airtight container in the fridge for a couple days.

Notes

  • My wok is the only vessel big enough to stir fry four packs of udon at once, and even then, it’s pushing it. If you don’t have a wok, you will either have to cook in batches or decrease the serving size of the recipe.
  • If you don’t have sweet soy sauce, you can mix an equal amount of brown sugar and dark soy sauce to substitute.
  • You can really use whatever vegetables you have on hand or need to clear out of your fridge.
Exit mobile version