
Japanese Comfort Cooking
An Opinionated Guide to Modern, Homey, Classic Japanese Recipes
$50.70
- Hardcover
256 pages
- Release Date
8 June 2026
Summary
Discover the secrets of Japanese comfort food with 100 cozy recipes for easy, flavorful dishes.
Join the bestselling authors for a fun, passionate dive into modern Japanese comfort cooking, with over 100 achievable recipes. These authentic Japanese recipes are fast enough for easy weeknight meals, elegant enough for special weekend dinners. And the best part? They’re dishes anyone can knock out.
Think soul-satisfying miso soup, toothsome soba noodles, broiled fish three ways, …
Book Details
| ISBN-13: | 9780593837016 |
|---|---|
| ISBN-10: | 0593837010 |
| Author: | Tadashi Ono, Harris Salat |
| Publisher: | Random House USA Inc |
| Imprint: | Random House Inc |
| Format: | Hardcover |
| Number of Pages: | 256 |
| Release Date: | 8 June 2026 |
| Weight: | 567g |
| Dimensions: | 229mm x 189mm |
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About The Author
Tadashi Ono
TADASHI ONO and HARRIS SALAT have been collaborating on Japanese cookbooks for almost two decades. They’re the authors of Japanese Hot Pots, The Japanese Grill, and the best-selling Japanese Soul Cooking.
Tadashi Ono is a celebrated chef who has won acclaim for both his Japanese and French cooking in The New York Times and other major publications. Born and raised in Tokyo, he began training as a chef at the age of sixteen. Moving to Los Angeles, then New York, Tadashi cooked at some of America’s top French restaurants before feeling the tug of his Japanese cooking roots. He’s opened several successful Japanese restaurants in New York that introduced vibrant, modern Japanese cooking to a wide audience, including, currently, Teruko, in the famed Chelsea Hotel.
A James Beard Award-nominated writer, Harris Salat’s stories about food and culture have appeared in The New York Times, Saveur, and Gourmet. Besides writing about Japanese cuisine, Harris has also completed kitchen stages at RyuGin, a three-star Michelin restaurant in Tokyo; Hyotei, a hallowed four-hundred-fifty-year-old establishment in Kyoto, where he was the first Westerner ever allowed into their kitchen; and Tadashi’s restaurant Matsuri.
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