Category Archives: Japanese

Asazuke

浅漬け

Asazuke is a Japanese word which means “shallow pickling.”  My first memory of this dish was when I was a child, seeing this clay crock in the basement with a rock on top. Inside, Mom was making what she called her “cabbage pickle” which she has eaten at least once a day, for over eighty five years.

asazuke in a bowl

In Japan, a small dish of pickles and some rice are so commonly served with almost all meals, that a quick pickling method comes in quite handy. What Mom made by the crock, I usually make a few quarts at a time and it lasts me a week or two. It also makes a great healthy stand-alone snack mid-afternoon.

My recipe varies from the traditional recipe because I often eat it at my desk at work and so I keep it a bit milder in order to avoid offending my American colleagues with the aromas of daikon and dashi. Variations are noted below.

You will need:

A very large bowl for mixing, at least 12 quarts capacity

6 clean, sanitized quart size canning jars with lids

Glass jar followers (to hold the pickle beneath the brine)

A tamper or other 1-2″ round rod shaped tool

 

The Quantity:

This recipe has a lot of variables, depending on the size of the vegetables used. I usually get 4 quart jars, but sometimes more or less. Be prepared to make more brine, use more jars, or use the leftovers for something else.

The Vegetables:

100G キャベツ (1 large head napa cabbage) cut into 3″x1/2″ strips

6-8 scallions cut diagonally, 2 inch strips

2 medium carrots, cut into matchsticks

8 oz daikon radish cut into matchsticks ( I don’t use)

1 large cucumber (10 oz) cut into matchsticks

2-3 oz grated ginger root

6-8 oz red fresno peppers, cut into 1″ – 2″ matchsticks

1 tbspn crushed red pepper flakes

Put the vegetables together in a large bowl with room for tossing.

The Brine:

Juice of 2 Yuzu lemons (or 4 limes)

2 tbspns shoyu or soy sauce

2 tbspns mirin (sweetened rice wine)

4 tbspns sake

optionally, 1/2 cup dashi stock (but I don’t..)

Set the brine aside.

The Pickling:

Sprinkle the veggies with 1 tbspn coarse salt. Mix and massage the veggies vigorously until they are well mixed and begin to bruise and lose water, usually about 5 minutes.

Pack the veggies into the quart jars, cramming them tightly with the tamper until you cannot fit any more in the jar. Leave about 1/2 inch head space at the top of each jar. Depending on the size of your napa, you might need more than 4 jars.

Pour a few tablespoons of the brine into each jar, tamp it down some more to release bubbles. 

Pour a little more brine into each jar, until the veggies are nearly covered. You may need to make more brine to make this happen. Tamp down some more until you see no bubbles rising through the veggies. This provides an anaerobic environment for this mild fermentation.

Place the followers on top of each jar and lightly screw on the caps. This should hold the veggies completely beneath the liquid. If not, add more brine until the followers hold the veggies under the brine. If you run out of followers, I have used small plastic ziploc bags with water to do the same thing. Important: Allow the tops to be lightly screwed on, in order for brine to escape if need be, otherwise, the jars could break.

Place the jars in the refrigerator, on a plate, or bowl to catch any happy brine that overflows and tries to make friends with your other food.

You can begin eating pickle this right away or wait for stronger flavor. I have stored it in the refrigerator for several months. The longer you keep it, the spicier and more fermented it will get. If you don’t eat it by 3 months though, I would toss it and start over. 

Also: Sometimes I save the brine that gets left in the jar after I dish out the pickle, filter it through some cheesecloth and reuse it in my next batch. This considerably speeds up fermentation, so be careful. 

 

 

Tantanmen

Tantanmen is what noodles were meant for. Garlic, hot pepper oil, pork, onions… Come on!

Tantanmen

This is one of those dishes that has been around so long, there’s a bunch of variations of it. What follows is the recipe I like the most. It serves two:

Ingredients:

2 cups chicken broth
2 servings ramen noodles (we used rice noodles to be gluten free..)
2 tsp sesame oil
2 tsp rice vinegar
3 tbsp shoyu
4 tbsp tahini
2 tsp hot chili oil
2 cloves of sliced garlic

1/2 lb ground pork
4 tsp sake
2 tbsp shoyu
2 tbsp tobanjan (sweet bean sauce)
3 scallions, sliced diagonally
2 cups spinach or kale

The Pork – Pre-heat a wok with teaspoon of sesame oil. Mix the sake together with the ground pork and saute until cooked through.  Add the tobanjan and shoyu to the pork, set it aside.

The Sauce – Saute garlic in the wok with a little sesame oil for about 2 minutes. Put the garlic, sesame oil, tahini, rice vinegar, soy sauce, cooking sake and hot chili oil together in a bowl and set aside.

The Broth – Cook the spinach or kale in the chicken broth until tender, then put to one side.

The Noodles – In a separate pan, cook your noodles al dente (3-4 minutes for ramen usually.)

Plating –  Start with the spinach and broth, adding it to a wide low bowl so you can display it well. Be careful not to put too much broth or else you won’t be able to move the bowls.  Next, place the ramen atop the spinach, leaving a bit of a flat spot in the middle. Next spoon some of the pork in the middle. Next, add the scallions.

Finally, drizzle with the hot chili sauce.  OISHII!

Tantan Noodles

 

 

Ochazuke

Ochazuke

Ochazuke is a Japanese dish – “Ochazuke” translated to English would be something like “submerged in tea.”

Ingredients:

1 1/2 cups cooked white rice

1 cup hot Japanese green tea, brewed (Sencha works well)

Assorted Tsukemono (Japanese pickled things)

Sprinkle of Aonori (crumbled seaweed)

 

So simple! Place the rice in a bowl, pour the tea over it and top with your favorite pickles, aonori and perhaps some fish or eggs. Your call!