THIS RECIPE IS NOT GLUTEN-FREE - MISO IS MADE FROM BARLEY
The following ingredients can be bought at Amazon.com if you cannot find them at your local Asian Market. I included a link to the Wikipedia explanation of the ingredients and a picture.
Miso soup is the combination of Dashi (a broth) and Miso paste. Most Japanese today even in restaurants do not make homemade dashi from scratch. You can buy instant dashi granules, combine with water to make a broth (1 tsp hon dashi combined with one cup of boiling water) and add in the miso paste (in the process detailed below) and have semi-homemade miso soup. This way you can also adjust the dashi granules and miso paste until you find the combination you like best. Instant dashi has all the salt and msg already added that make the soup so good.
Homemade Dashi
4 1/2 cups water
One 4-inch (10cm) square Konbu
1 TBS (.5 oz) Katsuobushi (bonito flakes)
Use a clean, damp cloth to wipe off white film on surface of kombu. In a sauce pan, combine water and kombu. Let soak for up to 2 hours, the place over high heat and bring to a simmer.
When stock begins to bubble slightly, after about 5 minutes, check center of kombu. If it is soft, remove kombu from saucepan and set aside. If it is hard, continue cooking for a few more minutes, then remove.
Let mixture come to a boil, then stir. Sim off any bubbles or scum on the surface.
Remove from heat and add a small amount of cold water to lower temperature before adding bonito flakes. (Boiling water makes them smell.)
Add bonito flakes to saucepan. Do not stir. Use chopsticks to press the flakes down gently to bottom of saucepan. Let rest for 3 minutes.
Lay a cheesecloth or clean napkin over a colander and strain mixture into a large bowl to remove bonito flakes. Remove the drained bonito flakes and reserve.
If, after tasting the finished dashi, you wish to strengthen its flavor, return mixture to saucepan and simmer for another 5 minutes.
Makes 4 1/2 cups number one dashi.
Traditionally you are supposed to take your used konbu and used bonito flakes and redo the entire process a second time to make number two dashi, a slightly diluted version of dashi is best for miso soup. Another tip is to use the number one dashi and a little less miso.
Miso soup
4 cups Dashi
2 TBS (2 oz) miso paste
Bring dashi to a boil in a saucepan over medium heat.
Put miso paste into a strainer. Hold or place stainer over boiling dashi.
With back of a wooden spoon that fits well in strainer, rub miso so that you sieve it through strainer into boiling stock. Discard any grainy remainders in strainer.
Stir soup as it simmers gently. Check for taste. Remove from heat and serve.
Miso should be made to taste adding more bonito flakes or instant dashi granules to the stock will create a stronger flavor. Add almost any vegetable, meat or seafood to the soup, but be sparing with strongly flavored or particularly aromatic ingredients. The following are ideal: diced shallots, diced tofu, wakame seaweed, daikon radish, corn, scallops, clams, fish, finely sliced shiitake mushrooms, enoki mushrooms, okra, pork, bamboo shoots and asparagus. (not all together - pick and choose what you like.
If ingredients need cooking, cook them separately and then add to finished soup. Ingredients such as tofu, enoki mushrooms, shallots and seaweed do not need cooking; just place them in the serving bowls, pour the hot soup over and serve.
Other interesting things I learned. Many people use Konbu that has already been used to make dashi a couple of times and stick it in the pot while making japanese sticky rice, for added flavor. If you are vegetarian, you can skip the bonito flakes and just add double konbu to make dashi broth. Dashi broth is used in thousands of Japanese recipes, the broth of Japan. If a recipe ever taste good but just not exactly right consider adding some dashi. (and msg, which makes everything better-did I tell you I bought a one pound bag of the white stuff).
I love, love, love miso soup. I have never made it but now that I did all this research I am excited to drive back to the Saigon Oriental Market and buy all these ingredients and do some trial and error. Not sure how to make it gluten-free.
2 comments:
Thanks for the recipe...I love miso soup...but it seems like a lot of work! If I can find some time, I will definitely try it!
Oh my gosh I am so lazy I don't know if I could do this, but I will bet it tastes AMAZING!
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