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I will ship some goddamn kombu, because kelp is king and you shouldn't have to make bonito dashi without it. It's hosed and I hate it.
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# ? Jun 26, 2018 06:34 |
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# ? Apr 26, 2024 04:30 |
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If you've got a Whole Foods in your area, they sell it in the Asian foods zone. Usually Eden brand. It's not a fantastic deal, but it's there.
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# ? Jun 26, 2018 13:19 |
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I just get both off Amazon cuz the big bags are cheaper than my local Japanese grocery.
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# ? Jun 26, 2018 13:49 |
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Yeah, I'm planning on just ordering it off amazon or something. The closest store that is more likely to have it is 60 miles away so it will cost less to just order it than to spend a couple hours and a couple gallons of gas.
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# ? Jun 26, 2018 17:37 |
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A little while back, I made some tonkotsu ramen from scratch, but I haven't actually gotten around to compiling all my pictures of the making together until now. (Excuse the picture quality, my phone is a potato.) I made the ramen from a couple of recipes. The first was Kenji's broth recipe, which necessitates a whole lot of chopped up trotters (and a chicken carcass to mellow out the pigginess). Personal note, they were softer than I thought they would be. A lot of blood and gunk came out after an overnight soak, but even after dumping the water I could tell just by looking that there was plenty more left. So I blanched them and dumped them in the sink. After a nice scrubbing and chopsticking, the bones were as clean as an unused whistle. It quickly became clear when I tried to add my leeks that my biggest pot was too small for this endeavour, so ran out in my pajamas to purchase the single shittiest cooking vessel I've ever owned. It'll do. Everybody into the pool, fatback, water, vegetables charred and uncharred. A few hours of boiling later, the fatback was the consistency of jello and bleeding liquid lard. It got banished to the refrigerator, while the rest of the broth remained to boil all night and morning. This is the only thing I've ever made that I've just turned the heat down to low overnight instead of just being done with at least one component. With even the toughest ingredients losing cohesion, it was finally time to start reducing. Of course, it's fairly difficult to tell how much three quarts is without measuring, especially when half the pot is full of bone shards and leek paste. Once I was reasonably satisfied, I strained it a few times, chopped up and reintroduced the earlier banished lard block, and emulsified the broth with my stick blender. Nice and creamy, perfect to chill into a weird porcine mousse. Broth, however, is not the only component of ramen. Next we need a tare; in my case, I'm using the tare from Ramen_Lord's recipe. Niboshi, AKA dried baby anchovies. Gutting them took a while, though it wasn't too hard. They smell shockingly similar to fish food. Kombu, rehydrated, after way too much of an ordeal. I need to find a store that sells a better brand, because the only brand of kombu at the asian supermarket I got this from doubles as low grit sandpaper. When one has to filter their kombu water multiple times to get all the sand out, something has gone wrong. Added the kombu water to some katsuobushi, tried to keep it at 176 degrees, which is a bitch and a half when one does not have a sous vide machine. The dashi, strained. Soy sauce, sake, and mirin, mixed and heated, glimmering like an oil slick in the mid day sun. When everything came together, shoyu tare was born. Chashu, cooked according to Kenji's recipe, chilled, and sliced thin. egg The gang's all here. As much as I'd like to use fresh, fresh ramen noodles that I know for sure are decent are hard to come by in this city, even at the asian grocery stores. Now for the assembly. Tare. Broth and noodles. Toppings. The assembled bowl, in different lighting. This is amazing. The purest of porky goodness, throughout the whole bowl. Like someone took a slow smoked pork butt or fall off the bone ribs and liquefied it. The egg, though, I could take or leave. Maybe I didn't marinate it long enough? The pieces freeze well too; the broth absolutely will not fall out of emulsion, even after a month of freezing and a reheat from a block of ziploc'd pig-ice. Fates End fucked around with this message at 03:25 on Jul 28, 2018 |
# ? Jul 28, 2018 03:13 |
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i know you said you didn't like the egg as much as the rest, but the consistency of the yolk looks real nice
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# ? Jul 28, 2018 03:33 |
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GhostofJohnMuir posted:i know you said you didn't like the egg as much as the rest, but the consistency of the yolk looks real nice Yeah, I did those in my instant pot. Turns out pressure cooking eggs makes it really easy to control how set it is.
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# ? Jul 28, 2018 04:30 |
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recommend a good brand of dashi powder? Something on Amazon and not too expensive.
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# ? Jul 28, 2018 22:59 |
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Arglebargle III posted:recommend a good brand of dashi powder? Something on Amazon and not too expensive. i use hondashi, but that's just family brand loyalty. i've never compared it to anything else, but the dashi i make with it always tastes fine
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# ? Jul 29, 2018 00:28 |
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Hondashi is also the only storebought one I’ve ever tried. Seems fine I guess
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# ? Jul 29, 2018 04:27 |
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Uhh. hondashi is Japanese for dashi powder. You probably mean ajinomoto brand. They're the guys who invented msg.
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# ? Jul 29, 2018 05:32 |
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Yeah, ajinomoto is reliable and you can get a big resealable bag of their dashi granules for cheap. Trivia: They sell their MSG stateside as Accent, I think.
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# ? Jul 29, 2018 18:01 |
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POOL IS CLOSED posted:Yeah, ajinomoto is reliable and you can get a big resealable bag of their dashi granules for cheap. Trivia: They sell their MSG stateside as Accent, I think. Is that who sells it? I use Accent MSG for some cooking stuff. I'll have to look into getting some of their dashi.
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# ? Jul 29, 2018 21:39 |
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The best quick-make dashi comes from the packs that consist basically of bonito (plus some other fish) and some kelp in, without any MSG. You boil the packs for about 2-3 minutes and you have really good dashi. The issue with the MSG packs is that the flavor of the dashi is biting (has a mouthfeel like MSG, and is salty and dehydrating), but they are fine for general purpose or if you dont have any availability. I'm a crazy person who cooks Japanese food a lot, so I actually make my stock from scratch on the weekends and freeze or refrigerate them though. I also have a bunch of high quality leftover bonito from my last trip to Japan so the quality of the produced stock ends up tasting like a ryotei. Lazyfood, takes like 4 minutes to make.
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# ? Aug 23, 2018 19:28 |
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Not for me. I have hosed those up every time I tried, and sweetened eggs taste very strange.
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# ? Aug 29, 2018 14:49 |
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ntan1 posted:The best quick-make dashi comes from the packs that consist basically of bonito (plus some other fish) and some kelp in, without any MSG.
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# ? Aug 29, 2018 17:27 |
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Pollyanna posted:Not for me. I have hosed those up every time I tried, and sweetened eggs taste very strange. There's the dashimaki style which is savory instead. Might be more to your taste!
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# ? Aug 29, 2018 17:40 |
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Babylon Astronaut posted:Uhh. hondashi is Japanese for dashi powder. You probably mean ajinomoto brand. They're the guys who invented msg.
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# ? Aug 31, 2018 00:26 |
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After years of meaning to get one I got a tamagoyaki pan on amazon, its awesome and they always turn out great now. It was 20 bucks its this one https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00N4N2EP4
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# ? Aug 31, 2018 00:36 |
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mystes posted:I'm pretty sure Hondashi is ajinomoto's trademark for its brand of dashi powder. yeah it’s confusing because it sounds like it’ll be a generic term like honmirin, but hondashi is indeed a specific brand
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# ? Aug 31, 2018 22:40 |
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There used to be a tonkatsu place by me, that I'd eat at all the time, and I loved it. I had to stop eating there for a couple months because money was getting tight, and recently I found out that they closed down, which I'm pretty unhappy about Is tonkatsu something I could easily make at home?
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# ? Sep 8, 2018 22:25 |
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Fried cutlets are super easy. Here's a tonkatsu recipe for a thick cut, which includes the cabbage of deceit: https://norecipes.com/tonkatsu/ Here's a katsudon recipe which includes how to do the more common thin style (pretty similar to wienerschnitzel): https://cookingwithdog.com/recipe/katsudon/ Have fun!
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# ? Sep 8, 2018 23:08 |
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Katsu is easy to make as long as you are ok with stinking up your kitchen with boiling oil. Both recipes are really close to the same above, but a couple of things: Three plates, one for flour, another for egg, and the third for panko. Use you right hand for coating in flower, place into egg pan without touching the egg. Use your left hand to coat the meat with egg, then transfer to the panko pan also with your left hand, so as to avoid getting your hands too gross. Definitely use a meat pounder and pound your meat so it's soft. For large think slab of pork, double fry. Basically, fry for 2-3 minutes, put the piece aside for 3-4 while it cooks using the oil, then fry again. Ajinomoto is the inventor of MSG, and it's known as ajinomoto. They make hondashi, which obviously has ajinomoto in it. Real dashi and packed bonito + seaweed instead of powder are at a different level, but take various amounts of extra time (10-15 minutes for the former, 3 minutes for the latter) to make over hondashi.
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# ? Sep 10, 2018 08:06 |
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Onigiri troubleshooting: I tried my hand at making some tuna mayo onigiri after getting back from Japan recently and enjoying the ones at the convenience stores. I made some Nishiki brand rice in a rice cooker and just made a basic tuna salad with canned tuna in water and kewpie mayo. When I rolled them up, the rice had cooled to room temp and sat probably another hour. I ate one and refrigerated the rest. The filling came out good but a little dry, and the rice stuck together pretty well to make the triangle shape, but the texture of the rice is all wrong. It’s super dry and the individual grains come apart when you chew it. Are the convenience store ones not refrigerated for more than a few hours? Was the problem letting the rice cool? Where did I go wrong?
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# ? Sep 11, 2018 00:04 |
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Mons Hubris posted:Onigiri troubleshooting: The rice you used probably isn't starchy enough. Japanese rice is short grained and very starchy, so you'll want that or something similar. If you can't find Japanese rice, look for something suitable for risotto, Arborio or w/e, and give that a go. *edit* Sorry, I checked this Nishiki stuff and it appears to be a medium grain rice. You want a short grain. Stringent fucked around with this message at 00:36 on Sep 11, 2018 |
# ? Sep 11, 2018 00:34 |
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Nishiki *should* work, although it's not the best rice for it since it's calrose. Try Tamaki gold for a california koshihikari instead, which will help. Try a couple of things: - If the rice grains are hard, it means that you didn't use enough water. You don't want to add too much water esp. for onigiri, but too little isnt good. To make rice with the best sticky consistency, after the rice goes off and before you use the paddle to mix the rice, take a large cloth and put it over the rice bowl for about 2 minutes. - Make onigiri when the rice is warm or hot. It sticks way better. *edit* loving beaten by Stringent
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# ? Sep 11, 2018 00:40 |
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I use medium grain almost all the time. The trick is definitely forming while still quite warm or even hot with that rice. You've got to be firm while shaping it too. You're not trying to turn that stuff into dough, but don't be too ginger with it.
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# ? Sep 12, 2018 06:40 |
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what do yall like dropping yuzu kosho in
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# ? Sep 12, 2018 14:23 |
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I try it in almost everything. It's particularly good for fish with the whole citrus thing going on.
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# ? Sep 12, 2018 15:15 |
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Squeezy Farm posted:what do yall like dropping yuzu kosho in Chicken noodle soup! Salad dressing! In a marinade! With noodles! That poo poo makes everything better
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# ? Sep 12, 2018 16:07 |
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The whole foods has maitake mushrooms and they're pretty expensive. I've never had them but I think they used to use them in iron chef, whats a good dish to make out of them?
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# ? Sep 17, 2018 04:07 |
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They're really good, one of my favorite mushrooms. Sear them hard until they're golden brown and crisping and finish them by basting with butter and thyme.
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# ? Sep 17, 2018 06:49 |
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hakimashou posted:The whole foods has maitake mushrooms and they're pretty expensive. I got you, fam
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# ? Sep 17, 2018 23:20 |
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Casu Marzu posted:I got you, fam Ty that looks tasty. I got some mushrooms yesterday but I don't have any lapsang soochong, I've got pu er though so I think i might try it with that.
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# ? Sep 20, 2018 22:12 |
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Earlier this year I collected a bunch of resources on Japanese blogs in an attempt to make something like moyan curry. Until recently I've never really had anything that didn't come in a brick, and after hitting up some places in D.C. that blew my mind it reinvigorated my efforts. I still haven't ordered some drat moyan but my attempts here are based on the information I collected. Spoiler: it's the best drat Japanese curry I've had and this will probably become a Friday night ritual until the day I die. Here are the ingredients based on the jar code:
About 1,000 grams of yellow onions fried with a teaspoon or two of baking soda until they release all their liquid and begin to turn dark about 5 minutes. Cook at high pressure for 20 minutes. In the meantime I've got some shallots from like 4 months ago turning mushy so I'm going to use sous vide to pickle them in a brine of rice vinegar and sugar. I let the onions release their pressure naturally (about 20 minutes) then cook a little longer. While waiting I broil the fruits and vegetables. Halfway through I remove the skins from the blistered tomatoes. I should've browned them further but was in a rush to get them into the pot (not pictured: garlic don't forgot your garlic!) After 30 minutes at high pressure all the ingredients are well cooked and I hit it with an immersion blender into a thick slurry. Much to my surprise it had the flavor profile of the really high end curry I had in D.C. so already I'm super excited to finish. I jar the gravy and put one in the freezer as a test and one in the fridge. Later on I prepare the curry. I fry my spice mix (based on S&B's ingredients list, I change the ratio so turmeric isn't the primary ingredient) in a healthy dollop of butter at medium heat until the butter starts to foam and clarify. It should have the faint aroma of ghee (and come to think of it I should try just using ghee). To this I add my soup base. I happen to have leftover tonkotsu broth made with chicken feet and pork feet. In the future when I don't have an 18 hour long broth available I would make a cheat version by adding a packet of gelatin to water and some "better than bouillon" chicken and pork. At this point I add umami. Yeast extract (I use vegemite because I like the flavoring), katsuobushi (I'll probably prepare niboshi in the future), and instead of adding Worcestershire (which I assume they're talking about the Bull Dog style tonkatsu sauce) I cheat and add some fish sauce for saltiness. The only meat I have at the moment is some chicken which I brown separately and add to the curry, simmering covered until the chicken is cooked. Without adding any thickening agents the curry is so thick that it coats the back of a spoon. But, and this may be controversial, instead of using a roux I simply stir in a pinch of coconut flour. Coconut flour is common in Indian curries and I find it integrates more consistently, resulting in a silkier texture. The description on Moyan's website says their vegetable base is so thick that they add only the bare minimum amount of roux for thickness and sure enough, after simmering for 20 minutes that was true. The dash of salt you'd add to your morning eggs is how much coconut powder I added to get the perfect consistency. Topped off the chicken with tonkatsu sauce, added my pickled shallots and a dollop of Indian mango chutney. Not going to win any points for presentation but drat that flavor! I wish I had the vocabulary to describe it but if anyone ever asked me "what the hell is umami" this is what I would offer them. There are a few tweaks I want to make before solidifying it in a recipe, namely a quick-and-easy soup I can whip up on the fly and a special dashi with all the umami elements. The actual cooking time was only about 3 hours with 75% of that being the pressure cooker so as long as you have the base curry available dinner will be ready when the rice is done.
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# ? Sep 23, 2018 02:14 |
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That looks really good, and I, too, dig glenfarclas 17.
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# ? Sep 23, 2018 02:17 |
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Very cool, I'm a big fan of Moyan as well. Thanks for the write up.
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# ? Sep 23, 2018 03:53 |
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In episode 4 of Today's Menu for the Emiya Family, they make a sandwich out of crispy bacon, scrambled eggs, blanched sansai, and a mustard spread. I want to make this, but I'm not sure what common USA greens are analogous to sansai. Broccoli rabe and fiddleheads, maybe? Is there a closer alternative? EDIT: It looks like they're specifically using nanohana in the sandwich, if that helps.
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# ? Sep 23, 2018 16:55 |
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Pollyanna posted:In episode 4 of Today's Menu for the Emiya Family, they make a sandwich out of crispy bacon, scrambled eggs, blanched sansai, and a mustard spread. I want to make this, but I'm not sure what common USA greens are analogous to sansai. Broccoli rabe and fiddleheads, maybe? Is there a closer alternative? I'll always find it hilarious that a series as serious and grim as the FATE series has such lighthearted and often rather goofy spinoff series Also just watched the first episode and it was really cute and informative, also makes me really want to try a Kotatsu someday, as it looks really comfy
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# ? Sep 23, 2018 18:30 |
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# ? Apr 26, 2024 04:30 |
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Anyone got a good guide on how to start making nukazuke? I found a place to buy rice bran so I need to know the whole process from the beginning.
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# ? Sep 30, 2018 05:00 |