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    is a type of Japanese pan-fried batter cake with various ingredients.

    Okonomi means "what you like" or "what you want," and yaki means "grilled" or "cooked" (cf. yakitori and yakisoba); thus, the name of this dish means "cook what you like, the way you like." The batter is made up of flour, grated yam, water or dashi, eggs and shredded cabbage, and usually contains other ingredients such as Welsh onion, meat (generally pork or bacon), octopus, squid, shrimp, vegetables, kimchi, mochi or cheese. Okonomiyaki is often compared to an omelette, pizza, or pancake, and as such is sometimes referred to as "Japanese pizza" or as "Japanese pancake." Many okonomiyaki restaurants are set up as grill-it-yourself establishments, where the server produces a bowl of raw ingredients that the customer mixes and grills at tables fitted with special hot plates.

    In Japan, okonomiyaki is usually associated with the Kansai or Hiroshima areas. Toppings and batters tend to vary according to region, for example:

      In Osaka (the largest city in Kansai), where the dish is said to have originated, okonomiyaki is prepared much like a pancake. The batter and other ingredients are fried on both sides on either a hot plate (teppan) or a pan using metal spatulas that are later used to slice the dish when it has finished cooking. Cooked okonomiyaki is topped with ingredients that include okonomiyaki sauce (similar to Worcestershire sauce but thicker and sweeter), nori, fish flakes, mayonnaise and ginger. When this style of okonomiyaki is served with sliced cabbage and a layer of fried noodles (either ramen or udon worked into the mix, it is called modanyaki (モダン焼き: "modern yaki"). A thinner offshoot of okonomiyaki made with a great deal of Welsh onion is called .
      In Hiroshima, the ingredients are layered rather than mixed together. The layers are typically batter, cabbage, bacon, optional items (squid, octopus, cheese, etc.), , topped with a fried egg and a generous dollop of okonomiyaki sauce. The order of the layers may vary slightly depending on the chef's style and preference, and ingredients will vary depending on the preference of the customer. People from Hiroshima tend to claim that this is the correct way to make okonomiyaki.
      In Okinawa, okonomiyaki is called hirayachi (ヒラヤーチー) and is thinner than in other areas. People cook it at home, so there is no hirayachi restaurants in Okinawa.


        Okonomiyaki
            Okonomiyaki in Japanese culture#Popular culture|Japanese popular culture
            See also

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    Okonomiyaki in Japanese culture#Popular culture|Japanese popular culture
    Rumiko Takahashi's manga Ranma ½ features a young, entrepreneurial okonomiyaki chef named Ukyo Kuonji. Ukyo wears okonomiyaki spatulas strapped to her clothing at all times, and uses the utensils for arts both culinary and martial.

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    This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License [copyleft]. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Okonomiyaki". link