Clams Open Up
Ken Tominaga shares a new use for sake
When Michael Mina was looking for a chef for the soon-to-open Japanese-inspired restaurant PABU in Baltimore, he knew where his search would start and end: at one of his family’s favorite Japanese spots, Hana Japanese Restaurant. The East-West collaboration between Mina and Hana chef Ken Tominaga brings Baltimore a taste of izakaya-style dining and flavor-forward small plates such as these superfast sake-steamed clams. Tominaga boosts the clams’ natural salinity with sake and soy sauce and adds butter and garlic for instant depth.
Asari Sakamushi (Steamed Clams with Soy, Butter and Garlic)
Yield: 2 main-course or 4 appetizer-size servings
Cook Time: 8 minutes
- INGREDIENTS
2 cups dry sake
2 garlic cloves, finely chopped
30 clams (preferably Manila or short-necked), scrubbed clean under cold running water
4 tablespoons unsalted butter
2 teaspoons low-sodium soy sauce
2 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
2 scallions, thinly sliced
About The Chef
Ken Tominaga began his culinary career working in kitchens in his native Tokyo. After attending culinary school, he opened Hana Japanese Restaurant in Northern California in 1990. In the spring of 2012, he partnered with chef Michael Mina to create PABU, a modern izakaya, adjacent to the Four Seasons Hotel Baltimore.
725 Aliceanna St., Baltimore; 410-223-1460 or fourseasons.com/baltimore/dining/restaurants/pabu/



