Professional Researcher's Encyclopaedia

Knowledge is only a click away

Dashi - enyclopaedia article

Dashi

Summary: Dashi (出汁) refers to any of several simple soup stocks considered fundamental to Japanese cooking. The most common form of dashi is a simple broth or stock made by heating kelp (konbu) and katsuobushi (flakes of dried smoked bonito fish) in water and then straining the resultant broth. Dashi forms the base for miso soup, Japanese noodle broth, and many Japanese simmering liquids. Fresh dashi made from kelp and katsuobushi is rare today, even in Japan. Most people use granulated or ...

read the full Dashi article

Buy Dashi related products:


Buy from Amazon.co.uk Books - Music - Classical - VHS - DVD - Video-games - Software - Electronics - Toys
Buy from Amazon.com Books - Music - Classical - VHS - DVD - Videogames - Software - Electronics - Photo - Toys
Buy from Amazon.ca Books - Music - Classical - VHS - DVD - Video-games - Software - Livres en Français
Buy from Amazon.de - - - - - - -
Buy from Amazon.fr - - - - -
Advanced Product Search (new):    uk    |     us    |     ca    |     de    |     fr

Dashi

     From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Dashi (出汁) refers to any of several simple soup stocks considered fundamental to Japanese cooking. The most common form of dashi is a simple broth or stock made by heating kelp (konbu) and katsuobushi (flakes of dried smoked bonito fish) in water and then straining the resultant broth. Dashi forms the base for miso soup, Japanese noodle broth, and many Japanese simmering liquids. Fresh dashi made from kelp and katsuobushi is rare today, even in Japan. Most people use granulated or liquid instant substitutes.

Other kinds of dashi stock are made by soaking kelp, shiitake, or niboshi in water for many hours or heating them in water nearly to boiling and then straining the resultant broth. Kelp stock or konbu dashi is made by soaking kelp, or sea tangle, in water. Shiitake dashi stock is made by soaking dried shiitake mushrooms in water. Niboshi dashi stock is made by soaking small dried sardines (after pinching off their heads and entrails) in water.

Other important Japanese flavors include shoyu, mirin, rice vinegar, miso, and sake.

link to this article with the following HTML

 
This article is from Wikipedia. This article was up-to-date as of 8 May 2004 - See live article
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.

This page is part of Professional Researcher
Web site design by Dean Marshall