Wednesday, December 26, 2012

Japanese food for the American palate



Storefront sushi showcases, teriyaki-tempura brigade, and rare herbal tuna topped with crusted pepper—these are just some of the reasons why Americans love Japanese cuisine. But aside from having an artistic appeal and the sprightly mix of greens, Japanese food also refers a healthy diet and rich taste from sake, plum wine, and Japanese beer on the side.

America’s Japanese bars and restaurants make savvy picks for the lovers of this cuisine, offering a variety of the traditional, mainline, and authentic Japanese food, such as the following:

Miso soup

Diners could find miso soup in almost all Japanese restaurants in the country. In Japan, this traditional soup is served after a meal, but Americans love to have theirs before a meal.


Image credit: 123rf.com


Oden

Oden is a traditional homey stew made of a variety of chunked fish cakes, tofu, and vegetables. This serves as comfort food of tasty brown-and-orange soup for hungry American office workers.


Image credit: justonecookbook.com


Gyoza

Gyoza is a dish of feather-light pan-fried beef dumplings. Eating shumai, deep-fried to crisp golden puffs of goodness, after will complement this dish.


Image credit: thesproutedfig.ca


Yakitori

For chicken lovers, yakitori is a satisfying dish to savor. They skewered chicken covered in teriyaki sauce. There’s also a variety of this dish—broiled eel, for example, perfect for the adventurous who craves for something exotic.


Image credit: yourjapanesemenu.blogspot.com


Japanese cuisine has been flourishing in this part of the world because of the taste and artistic value it brings. And with the help of kitchen equipment providers and innovators like N.A. Sales Company, Inc., Buy4asianlife, and JC Uni-tec, Japan and its food is brought closer to America.

Let your taste buds experience Japanese food. Make Japanese dishes at home using state-of-the-art kitchen equipment found here.

Tuesday, December 25, 2012

The Japanese-Style Meal: Planning and Preparation

Discover the secrets of Japanese style meal planning and preparation in this Kikoman.com article.

 

In the 1970s, the daily diet revolved around the so-called Japanese-style meal—nutritionally balanced foods that arguably define Japanese cuisine. In our current Feature series, we take an in-depth look at these meals, including their planning and preparation.



The Ideal Ichiju San-sai

The Japanese-style meal involves some planning. The traditional menu is described as ichiju san-sai, or "one-soup, three dishes," and features soup, one main dish and two side dishes. Not counted but always served with these are rice and konomono, pickled vegetables.

Meal planning takes its cues from nature, and incorporates fresh seasonal ingredients. One begins with the staple, typically plain rice, or rice with seasonal ingredients added, such as bamboo shoots in Spring or chestnuts in Autumn.

Following this is the main dish, which usually contains a substantial amount of protein such as meat, fish or tofu. Examples are grilled or sautéed fish; yaki-niku (grilled meat); tonkatsu (pork cutlet); or agedashi-dofu (deep-fried tofu with soy sauce-based sauce garnished with ginger and green onion). Each of these would be accompanied by vegetables or some kind of potato.

Next are the two side dishes, for which one chooses vegetables not included in the main dish, prepared using a different method. Additionally, care is taken not to duplicate the ingredients or preparation methods of either of the side dishes themselves. The ingredients and flavoring of the soup, finally, should complement all three dishes.

A typical ichiju san-sai menu might include salt-grilled fish as the main dish, and miso soup with tofu and wakame (kelp). One of the two side dishes might be chikuzen-ni, whose ingredients of chicken, carrots, burdock, lotus root, sato-imo (taro), and konnyaku (yam cake) are sautéed together and then simmered. The remaining side dish could be goma-ae, blanched spinach with sesame dressing. The meal is accompanied by rice and konomono such as salt-pickled Chinese cabbage.

The main dish might be changed to one of meat and vegetables, while the second side dish—in this case goma-ae—could be replaced with a salad or with sunomono (a vinegar-marinated dish) made, for example, with cucumbers and wakame.

By choosing seasonal vegetables for as many of the dishes as possible, and by varying preparation methods—grilling, boiling, simmering, mixing with dressing (aemono), marinating with vinegar, and so on—the basic menu accommodates great variety.



Nutritional Balance

How well-balanced are such menus? If we use a current food composition table to calculate the nutritional value of the above menu, we find that rice (one-and-a-half bowls totaling about 80 grams), salt-grilled salmon (one slice at 70 grams), and individual servings of chikuzen-ni, goma-ae and miso soup, provide a total of some 620 kilocalories, which is roughly equivalent to one-third the recommended standard daily calorie intake for an adult woman.

The amount of protein is slightly high at 32 grams, and the fat intake is an almost appropriate amount of just over 25 percent of total calories. Moreover, this meal offers 35 percent of the recommended standard daily intake of calcium, which is relatively difficult to obtain; about the same percentage of vitamin C; and the appropriate amount of minerals. It also provides the recommended daily intake of vitamin A (retinol), most of this sourced from the carotene of vegetables such as carrots and spinach. Forty percent of the fats come from plant-derived foods, mostly sesame, and these are all very healthy.

The amount of rice consumed may be adjusted as appropriate for gender, age and level of physical activity. An appropriately balanced diet is therefore relatively easy to achieve by eating meals comprising rice with soup and three accompanying dishes.



Cooking Methods

The cooking of Japanese-style meals requires a fair amount of clean water. Rice is rinsed to wash away remaining bran prior to steaming; spinach for the side dish is blanched in boiling water, then plunged into cold water to preserve its fresh green color. In preparing raw fish for sashimi, plenty of water to wash the fish is indispensable.

Water is also needed to simmer or steam foods, such as niku-jaga (simmered meat and potatoes) or chawan-mushi (steamed egg custard); even when serving chilled tofu (hiya-yakko), the tofu is chilled in cold water and the accompanying green onion and ginger garnishes require water in their preparation.

Because Japanese-style meals are eaten with chopsticks, skill with kitchen knives is considered of great importance. Japanese kitchen knives are traditionally single-beveled, thought to help retain flavor in slicing fish for sashimi, for example. Although professionals use single-beveled knives, many households today use double-beveled, Western kitchen knives.

Many dishes call for ingredients to be cut into very thin, uniform strips or bite-sized pieces, and so a good cutting board is as indispensable as the proper cutting technique: cucumbers and daikon radish, for example, are often sliced very thin, and the white stems of long onions are precisely cut into long, fine, delicate strips called shiraga-negi, used as garnish.

Until recently, the Japanese-style meal was also the norm for breakfast in most homes: children would wake to the rhythmical sound of their mother's knife chopping vegetables, accompanied by the fragrance of miso soup.

Although ingredients differed from one family to another and each had its own favorite tastes, the basic styles of eating were repeated every day, and standard cooking techniques were mastered and used in all households. The recollection of such meals brings back warm memories for many.  

Source:http://www.kikkoman.com/foodforum/thejapanesetable/30.shtml

Sunday, December 16, 2012

Cooking Methods



This article from Yale Center for International and Area Studies give some useful facts about Japanese cooking and table setting.
 
Japanese food is all cooked on the stove-top; an oven is never used. There are five traditional cooking methods: boiling, grilling, deep-frying, steaming, and serving raw. "Serving raw" is considered a cooking method because although the food is not cooked, preparation (in terms of peeling, slicing, etc.) is still required.

The ideal Japanese meal has at least one dish cooked in each manner. Color is also a factor; there are five colors: green, yellow, red, white and black. "Black" means the dark purple of an eggplant or some kinds of cabbage. The ideal meal involves a balance of these colors, cooking methods, and a balance of the six tastes: bitter, sour, sweet, hot, salty, and mild.

In addition to the importance of setting a proper place, which is equally important in the West, the arrangement of the food on the plate itself is also important: dishes are filled to two-thirds their capacity. One reason for this is to not obscure the pattern on the surface of the dish.

 Table Settings

In setting a Japanese table, the location of dishes and utensils is as important as it is in Western cuisine. The diagram below shows a general schematic for a table setting.




This arrangement may differ slightly: for example, when noodles are served, the noodles themselves go where the soup usually goes, and the dipping sauce goes where the rice usually goes. This is because the noodles are often eaten after dipping in the sauce-that is when they are left.

The principle difference between the Japanese arrangement and the western arrangement is that in the American arrangement, the meat is always placed directly in front of the eater; in Japan, the meat is placed off to the right. Another difference is that chopsticks are placed directly in front of the eater, instead of off to the side like silverware in the western tradition.

The examples below show some sample table settings that vary from season to season. Usually, the pattern of the dishes is changed according to the season-for example, maple leaf-pattern for the fall, plum blossom-pattern for spring-as well as the type of food served.







Source: http://www.yale.edu/macmillan/pier/resources/lessons/cooking_table.htm

Sunday, December 9, 2012

Celebrating Christmas with these must-try Japanese rice dishes



JC Uni-tec puts together Japanese art and culture into its specialized kitchen tools and equipment, including rice washers and cookers.
 

Image credit: detroit.cbslocal.com


Christmas is as colorful as the Japanese culture, and what more unique and better way to celebrate the holidays this year than by serving Japanese rice meals on the table? That gleaming lidded lacquer bowl, when opened, gives off the sweet fresh fragrance of rice and signals the beginning of a sumptuous meal. For those who want to experience Christmas the Japanese way, here are some savory rice meals to try:

Sushi

This refers to any dish containing sushi rice and cooked white rice seasoned with rice vinegar. It comes in various forms: nigiri, gunkan, norimaki, and many more.


Image credit: thebigzeroes.wordpress.com


Donburi

It’s a bowl of plain-cooked rice topped with any kind of food. Donburi is common in the menus of specialty restaurants and has varieties such as the following:

Gyudon
Katsudon or tonkatsu
Tendon or tempura
Oyakodon
Tekkadon or maguro
Kaisendon


Image credit: flickriver.com


Chazuke (Ochazuke)

This a simple comfort food containing hot water, tea, and fish stock poured over fresh or left-over rice. Ochazuke is commonly garnished with umeboshi, grilled salmon, or pickles on top. This is a perfect Christmas after-drink dish.


Image credit: kitchen-em.blogspot.com


A Japanese rice dish is considered a complete meal in itself with all its garnishes and toppings. With endless possibilities in creating rice dishes, this year’s Christmas will be memorable.


Know more about Japanese cuisine from this website.