Gyudon is a rice bowl dish. Simmered beef is served on top of steamed rice. It is one of the most popular Japanese fast foods. You can see numerous gyudon stores as you walk around a city in Japan. It is also easy to make at home. Ingredients for a large bowl: 350g steaming rice 150g thinly sliced beef 1/2 sliced onion 150ml water 1 1/2 tbsps Japanese sake (or white wine) 2 tbsps soy sauce 1/2 grated ginger A dash of sugar A dash of salt A dash of Hondashi (or other instant dashi) *1 1 Raw egg (optional) *2 Directions: 1. Boil the water in a pot. 2. When the pot starts boiling, add the Hondashi and stir it. 3. Add the onion to it and boil it until soft. 4. When the onion is soft, add the Japanese sake, the sugar, the salt, the soy sauce and the beef. 5. Cover the pot and cook it on medium heat for 10 minutes. 6. Add the ginger and wait for 1 minute. 7. See how it tastes and adjust the taste with sugar and soy sauce. 8. Place the cooked ingredients on the rice in a bowl. 9. Put the beaten egg on it. *1 Hondashi is one of packaged instant dashi. Other instant dashi like Dashinomoto are also fine. Dashi is a kind of a Japanese cooking stock. It is not very difficult to make dashi by yourself, but I use the instant one this time. This is a simple recipe. I think many people from other countries overlook dashi when they make Japanese cuisine. Looks like some people make some Japanese cuisine without using dashi, even when it is necessary for the recipe. Then they say "This doesn't taste good!" Come on! Dashi is the keystone of Japanese cuisine. You can't omit it. Go to an Asian market or Amazon and get some. Or make it by yourself. If you can't get any dashi, other stocks could be used for instead. Weiba or bouillon cubes... But I have never tried them for gyudon. I am not sure if they work well. *2 If you live in Japan, I recommend you to put a raw egg on it. It really tastes great. I don't recommend you to do it if you don't live in Japan. Eggs being distributed in Japan are designed to be eaten raw, but in other countries, they are not. You would have a stomach ache. I know that some people think Japanese are immunized with raw eggs. But it is wrong. Even Japanese would have a stomach ache when they eat a raw egg outside of Japan. - Shot in 1080p full HD with an iPhone 4S Music: Crazy Cooking (from DOVA SYNDROME dova-s.jp/bgm/play095.html) easy discussion (from DOVA SYNDROME dova-s.jp/bgm/play035.html) Sideman Strut Long (from GarageBand)