🍱 Akashiyaki/Tamagoyaki (Akashi style omelet)
Akashiyaki is a local dish of Akashi City. It is made by mixing flour, wheat starch, egg, and dashi broth, baking octopus in the batter, and dipping it in dipping sauce. Akashiyaki is similar to takoyaki in appearance, but the main difference is that takoyaki is eaten with sauce, while Akashiyaki is dipped in bonito or kelp broth. It has long been known locally as "Tamagoyaki," but around 1988, a city official decided to name it "Akashiyaki" in order to promote the town of Akashi, and the name spread to many other places. From the end of the Edo period to the Taisho period, Akashi was actively engaged in the production of "Akashi-dama (artificial sango)," a decorative item, as a local industry. Akashi dama" were made from egg whites, and it is said that the yolks of the eggs left over from this production process were mixed with octopus caught in the sea before one's eyes, which is believed to be the origin of Akashiyaki. It is the soul food of Akashi, which can be eaten as a substitute for snacks by both children and adults.
