Sunday, December 21st
5:00 – 6:30 PM
Zoom link to be shared with registrants upon registering
$10 with JASGP Discount Code: Philly
Join us for this family-friendly online Japanese home cooking class series おうちごはん OUCHIGOHAN and cook along or just watch from your own kitchen!
Let’s celebrate the season, Japanese style!
In Japan, Christmas is not a religious holiday, but it is still a beloved time for family gatherings – complete with eating KFC (Kentucky Fried Chicken) and enjoying Christmas cake: a light-as-air sponge cake decorated with whipped cream and strawberries.
Guest chef Chieko Sakiyama (Boston-based) will demonstrate how to make and decorate a classic Japanese Christmas cake, including adorable strawberry Santas. Debra-sensei will lead us in making JFC—Japanese Fried Chicken (karaage).
We invite you to decorate along with us! Because the sponge cake itself requires more time than the class allows, the recipe will be provided, and you will be able to observe how it is made. For the class we recommend preparing a simple yellow cake or cupcakes ahead of time or purchasing an angel food or sponge cake to decorate together during the session.
A full list of ingredients, recipes, and instructions for both the cake and karaage will be sent the week of the class.


Meet Our Instructors:

Chieko Sakiyama has loved baking since childhood and began baking for friends and family at an early age. She has worked in the Boston area with Japanese bakeries and markets, making pastries, breads, and of course traditional Japanese Christmas cakes! You can find her beautiful creations on Instagram at @3104_boston.

Debra Samuels leads the program content and curriculum development of TABLE FOR TWO USA’s Japanese inspired food education program, “Wa- Shokuiku: Learn. Cook. Eat Japanese!”.
She was a food writer and contributor to the Food Section of The Boston Globe and has authored two cookbooks: “My Japanese Table,” and “The Korean Table.” She curated the exhibit, “Obento and Built Space: Japanese Boxed Lunch and Architecture,” at the Boston Architectural College (2015) and co-curated “Objects of Use and Beauty: Design and Craft in Japanese Culinary Tools,” at the Fuller Craft Museum (2018). Debra also worked as a program coordinator and an exhibition developer at the Japanese department of the Boston Children’s Museum (1992-2000).
Debra has lived in Japan, all together, for 12 years and specializes in Japanese cuisine. She travels around the country and abroad teaching hands on workshops on obento, the Japanese lunchbox. During Covid 19 she is teaching live online cooking programs to youth and adults.




Your donation helps to support Japanese arts, business, and cultural programs in Philadelphia including the Subaru Cherry Blossom Festival, lectures and workshops, preservation of Shofuso, and much more.