Get my complete 5-day Osechi Ryori cooking timeline here including my best tips! It’s your ultimate guide to planning a delicious, stress-free Japanese New Year feast. I also provide a bonus prepping guide for how to plan and shop in the weeks leading up to New Year’s Day.

A 5-Day Osechi Cooking Timeline I Easy Japanese Recipes at JustOneCookbook.com

The Japanese start the new year celebration with Osechi Ryori (おせち料理), a special meal offered to the Year God and enjoyed on New Year’s Day. These customary dishes from Japanese cuisine symbolize good fortune and longevity and are beautifully packed in a lacquered jubako box. This traditional feast is a wonderful way to usher in the new year.

However, it takes a lot of time and effort to prepare these elaborate dishes. In fact, Japanese home cooks spend the last several days of the year in the kitchen preparing for Japanese New Year (JNY). 

While it’s popular to buy at department stores and convenience stores these days, a store-bought meal doesn’t carry the same meaning and spirit. When prepared from scratch, Osechi Ryori has a special, one-of-a-kind feel suitable for Japan’s most important holiday. It’s a beautiful tradition worth sharing and passing on to the next generation, too.

To make your own experience smoother, I’m sharing my 5-Day Osechi cooking timeline and tips here. You don’t have to follow it to a T, but having a plan makes me feel so much less overwhelmed about such a big undertaking. I hope this will encourage you to make Osechi Ryori of your own. Now, let’s get started!

The 3-tier Osechi Ryori (Japanese New Year's Food) filled with colorful dishes.

Start Osechi Prep 4 Weeks Before

There’s a lot that you can do to prepare in the weeks leading up to New Year’s Day. Follow my bonus prepping guide for how to plan and what to buy starting 4 weeks before JNY. This will help to lower your stress during the busiest time of the year.

Just One Cookbook Osechi Cookbook Ad

December 1st (4 Weeks Before JNY): The Rough Idea

  • Draft a list of the menu: Mark which dishes you will make from scratch or buy from the store. Review and update your recipes from the previous year if necessary.

My Osechi Menu

  1. Ikura (Salmon Roe) いくら
  2. Decorative Fish Cakes (Kamaboko) 市松かまぼこ
  3. Sweet Rolled Omelette (Datemaki) 伊達巻
  4. Salmon Kombu Roll (Kobumaki) 鮭の昆布巻き
  5. Candied Chestnut and Sweet Potatoes (Kuri Kinton) 栗きんとん
  6. Candied Sardines (Tazukuri) 田作り
  7. Daikon & Carrot Salad (Namasu) 紅白なます
  8. Sweet Black Soybeans (Kuromame) 黒豆
  9. Herring Roe (Kazunoko) 数の子
  10. Simmered Shrimp (Ebi no Umani) えびのうま煮
  11. Yellowtail Teriyaki (Buri no Teriyaki) ぶりの照り焼き
  12. Butter Soy Sauce Scallops (Hotate no Butter Shoyu Yaki) 帆立のバター醤油焼き
  13. Pickled Chrysanthemum Turnip (Kikka Kabu) 菊花かぶ
  14. Pickled Lotus Root (Su Renkon) 酢れんこん
  15. Pounded Burdock Root with Sesame Sauce (Tataki Gobo) たたきごぼう
  16. Simmered Chicken and Vegetables (Chikuzenni) 筑前煮 or Instant Pot Nishime 煮しめ

December 11th (3 Weeks Before): Inventory Check

Osechi Boxes | Easy Japanese Recipes at JustOneCookbook.com

  • Check kitchen equipment: Osechi boxes, serving dishes, cutlery, pots and pans, and anything you might need for cooking and serving.
  • Clean up the pantry and check ingredients
  • Purchase Osechi box dividers: Read my How to Pack Osechi Ryori post to learn why bamboo leaves and mini containers are helpful.

December 18th (2 Weeks Before): Finalize Menu + Shopping Trip #1

Osechi Menu Planning | Easy Japanese Recipes at JustOneCookbook.com
  • Finalize the Osechi menu: Use sticky notes to label what dish goes into which compartment of the Osechi boxes. Planning the layout ensures that you have enough dishes and simplifies food arrangement on the big day.
  • Print out the Osechi recipes: Carefully read the recipes and double-check the ingredients and equipment you will need.
  • Purchase condiments and dry ingredients (Shopping Trip #1): Don’t wait till the last minute. They may be sold out toward the end of the month!

December 27th (5 Days Before): Clean The House + Shopping Trip #2

Satsumaimo (Japanese sweet potatoes) | Easy Japanese Recipes at JustOneCookbook.comSatsumaimo (Japanese sweet potatoes) | Easy Japanese Recipes at JustOneCookbook.com
  • Clean the house: Clean the entry, living room, and bathrooms.
  • Plan out the meals till December 31st: I make easy dinner menus such as hot pots (Sukiyaki, Shabu Shabu, Oden, etc.) and udon noodles for lunch.
  • Stock up on regular groceries: Buy eggs, milk, bread, salad, fruit, etc. for the rest of the week.
  • Buy alcoholic and non-alcoholic drinks: Restock your beverages after the holiday party!
  • Buy root vegetables for Osechi (Shopping Trip #2): These items last longer, so purchase them early.

5-Day Osechi Cooking Timeline

Here is your 5-day Osechi cooking countdown of what to do starting 4 days before the Japanese New Year (JNY) and on the big day!

December 28th (4 Days Before JNY): Start Cooking! Cooking Day 1

White flower-shaped ceramic containing candied sardines (tazukuri)
  • Make Candied Sardines (Tazukuri): Among Osechi dishes, candied sardines last for a long time, so start cooking this dish.
  • Make Herring Roe (Kazunoko): De-salting, peeling, and marinating.
  • Continue cleaning the house: Clean the dining room and kitchen.

December 29th (3 Days Before): Final Shopping Trip #3 + Cooking Day 2

Nejiri Ume | Easy Japanese Recipes at JustOneCookbook.com
  • Buy Osechi ingredients (Final Shopping Trip #3): Do not buy these ingredients prior to 12/29.
    • Black tiger shrimp for simmered shrimp
    • Yellowtail (hamachi/buri 鰤) for yellowtail teriyaki
    • Salted salmon for salmon kombu rolls (if you can’t purchase pre-salted salmon from your local Japanese grocery store, make Salted Salmon the previous week)
    • Ikura (salmon roe)
    • Chicken for ozoni and simmered chicken and vegetables
    • Kamaboko fish cakes
    • Hanpen fish cake for sweet rolled omelette
    • Snow peas for simmered chicken and vegetables
    • Mitsuba for ozoni
    • Yuzu for daikon and carrot salad (kohaku-namasu) and ozoni
  • Work on decorative cuts: Decorative cutting for carrots and lotus root is not necessary; however, if you have extra time, prepare them ahead and store in the fridge.
  • Make vinegared dishes: Vinegared dishes last for a long time, so cook these dishes next!
  • Re-hydrate
    • Dried shiitake mushrooms (soak before going to sleep)
    • Black soybeans (need to soak up to 8 hours; soak at midnight and start cooking at 8 am on December 30th)

December 30th (2 Days Before): Cooking Day 3

A white and red Japanese bowl containing Kuromame, sweet black soybeans, topped with gold leaf for the Japanese new year's celebration.

December 31th (1 Day Before): Cooking Day 4

A blue Japanese bowl containing Nishime, simmered vegetables and chicken.

Before going to sleep…

  • Set the table: Get everything set up (plates, chopsticks, glasses, sake cups, etc) so you can focus on last-minute preparation the next day.
  • Chill your drinks: Make sure there’s enough ice in the freezer.

January 1st: Final Cooking Day 5 + Osechi Packing (2.5–3 hours)

The 3-tier Osechi Ryori (Japanese New Year's Food) filled with colorful dishes.
  • Grill: If you didn’t make yesterday, cook Yellowtail Teriyaki and Butter Soy Sauce Scallops.
  • Bring back to room temp: You can’t pack hot food in lacquered boxes. If you do not want to eat cold food, take out the dishes from the refrigerator about 30 minutes prior to packing.
  • Cut the kamaboko: Cut the decorative fish cake and the datemaki.
  • Pack in Osechi boxes: See my detailed guide on How to Pack Osechi Ryori.
  • Prepare the mochi: Toast mochi and season.
  • Finish the ozoni: Reheat and then add miso and mochi.
  • Prepare the drinks: Heat up sake and prepare other drinks.
  • Clean up the kitchen: If you have the luxury of time or a helpful guest, get the sink cleared and the dishwasher running and empty it after done running.
Japanese New Year Kadomatsu | Easy Japanese Recipes at JustOneCookbook.com

Now you have a detailed cooking timeline and the best tips for Osechi cooking! Don’t be shy to enlist help from your spouses, partners, and kids. If you have any questions at all, please leave a message in the comments below. I’m here to help you! I wish you all the best in preparing this most significant spread of the year.

More Helpful Guides for Japanese New Year

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Nami-san, thank you for this timeline, this helped me organize myself this past week! Thanks your wonderful site I have been able to learn to make some of my favorite osechi ryori dishes (my dad always just bought it) and continue this tradition with my family in a meaningful way.

Hi Midori,
Thank you very much for your kind feedback!
We are so happy to hear you enjoyed this timeline, and it helped you make Osechi! 👏🏻
Happy New Year!🎍

Thank you for this. I’ve just finished with my British Christmas food and now going to start thinking about おせち料理for お正月. My husband is Japanese and I am British so I like to do both for our children. I am also vegan so like to make my own. Your recipes are easily veganisable and I bought some vegan kamaboko, tofu fish and ebi from a store here in Japan. Its the first year for me to make osechi so your detailed plan is very helpful
We’ve already been doing our oosoji.

Hi Nicole!
We are so happy to hear you are planning to make Osechi for the New year!
Making Osechi at home is easier than people think, and we hope this beautiful culture will be passed on to the next generation as well.
Thank you very much for writing to us! 良いお年を!

This is really awesome!!!

I made a really similar kind of timeline last year for myself based on the recipes I like to make for osechi, and I am really impressed by yours and happy you put it out there to share with everyone! It’s so helpful, but making a list like this can take a long time, so you have done the work for everyone! Once you have a timeline, it saves so much time in the cooking and planning, since some dishes need to be soaked, thawed, can last more days than others, require multiple days in the process, etc. It all really helps a lot!

After the initial year of making them, and getting a good taste for so many dishes, these days I tend to just make our favorites instead of the whole set. My osechi MUST have chikuzenni, ozoni, gohan, and datemaki. Can’t imagine New Years without them now! Everything else is optional for me. I usually do namasu, kuromame, and/or kuri kinton as well. Beyond that, it differs depending on how much work I feel able to put in and ingredient availability.

Happy New Year! So glad a new one is coming. It’s ox year, my year! Wish me luck!

Hi Lion!
Yay! Thank you very much for your kind feedback!
We are so glad to hear this is very helpful.
Happy New Year, and we wishing you good luck!💞

Now, this. THIS IS AMAZING and answers many many questions! Mahalo lehulehu (thank you beyond words) for this. Will be trying to create new New Years family traditions with your help. <3 Our tummys and hearts thank you.

Hauʻoli Makahiki Hou! Happy New Year!

Super helpful countdown. My Auntie passed away two years ago, so us “kids” now have the responsibility to carry on the tradition. This year I am taking on the Nishime…so I have been working on my Dashi, to make it my own. I tried the kobumaki last year, and the result were so-so. (I wasn’t good at tying!), but at least it wasn’t overly salty….Thanks for putting all of this together….I’m trying to absorb tips from wherever I can get them!

Best,
Scott

Thank you for this list! I love it!

LOOKS YUMMY AND HEALTHY TOO! I HOPE I CAN REPLICATE IT. THANKS FOR SHARING! HAVE A GREAT DAY AHEAD, HAPPY NEW YEAR!

I wish to thank you for including me in your emails and for sharing your recipes. I have enjoyed them all. I would like to wish you a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year. I’m looking forward to many more exciting recipes in 2020.

This is AMAZING!!! I never know how to prep for something like this…I appreciate this so much!!!