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Japanese Recipes: Miso Soup with Somen (thin noodles)DashiDashi is the generic term for Japanese soup base, and it is most commonly made with kombu seaweed and dried, shaved bonito (fish flakes). Dashi is a key ingredient in soups, simmered dishes, and almost any sauce. It can also be made from kombu or other seaweeds alone, shiitake mushrooms, anchovies or other small dried fish. When making dashi with bonito it is important not to boil the bonito flakes in the water for too long or it will take on a more fishy taste.
SomenSomen is a very thin noodle made from wheat flour, water, and salt. Wheat growing in Japan actually dates back to the Heian Era, but was never practiced on a wide scale and the flour was only used for noodles until the introduction of bread, tempura batter, and other uses by the Portuguese. Somen is made by carefully stretching the dough between two sticks to get the extremely thin shape. It was very labor intensive and therefore an upperclass food, as opposed to udon (thick noodles) which could be rolled and cut by anyone. You should be able to find somen and udon or similar Chinese noodles at any asian grocery store. It is important not to overcook Japanese noodles. Udon will require longer to cook than somen. Follow directions on the package if they differ from the below instructions.
MisoMiso is made by fermenting soybeans with koji yeast and salt. The mixture is very salty with a pleasant taste which is hard to describe but does not taste "fermented" per se (unlike natto, also made from fermented soybeans). Shiro (white) miso has a lighter, sweeter flavor, and aka (red) miso has a richer, warmer flavor. For this reason some Japanese prefer to put shiro miso in their soup for the summer and aka miso for the winter. I chose to use aka miso because it had just gotten cold after an unusually hot summer and I felt the richness of the aka miso would feel comforting.
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All content copyright the author, Jennifer Munson munsonjn@apci.com The author makes no guarantees for instructions and recipes on this site; neither does she accept responsibility for their outcomes. Verbatim copies may be made for educational purposes only provided they contain original copyright marking. |
This page created April 4, 2001 Last updated February 17, 2003 |