Hayashi rice


Hayashi rice or Hashed beef rice is a dish popular in Japan as a Western-style dish or yōshoku. It usually contains beef, onions, and button mushrooms, in a thick demi-glace sauce which often contains red wine and tomato sauce. This sauce is served atop or alongside steamed rice. The sauce is sometimes topped with a drizzle of fresh cream.
Recipe variants sometimes include soy sauce and sake.
The dish originates from the former mining town of Ikuno, Hyōgo Prefecture, Japan. There was a French engineer who worked for the mine in 1868 and improved it. Hayashi rice has a western influence with the use of demi-glace and often red wine, but is unknown in western countries. In fact, it contains ingredients popular in Japan: slices of beef, rice and demi-glace sauce. It can be compared to another popular dish, the Japanese style hamburger steak with demi-glace sauce. Another variation is the Omuhayashi, a combination of Omurice and Hayashi rice. It also resembles a Japanese curry and usually appears on menus alongside curry.
There is some debate regarding the origin of the name of this dish:
Hayashi rice is one of Japan's most popular Western-style dishes. Thanks to the widespread availability of hayashi rice mix and prepared demiglace sauce at Japanese supermarkets, this dish is common household fare. Like Japanese curry, it is usually eaten with a spoon.
Hayashi rice was an important dish in mystery writer Keigo Higashino's novel Ryūsei no Kizuna.