Tag: carrots

  • Chicken and Vegetable Zosui (Rice Porridge)

    Chicken and Vegetable Zosui (Rice Porridge)

    chicken zosui

    The History of Rice in Japan

    Wet-rice culture came to Japan during the dawn of the Yayoi period (300 B.C. – 300 A.D.), either directly from China or via the Korean Peninsula. It was a time characterized by people known as the Yayoi, new tools and farming techniques (such as growing rice in paddies), and a deep reverence for rice itself, typified by seasonal ceremonies and festivities that are observed to the present day.

    Contrary to popular belief, however, white rice didn’t become Japan’s primary grain until after World War II.

    Until then, grains like millet or barley were the dietary mainstays of most Japanese. Rice farmers didn’t get to enjoy the fruits of their labor very often, either. During the Edo Period (1603-1867), rice was primarily used to pay taxes to samurai landholders; a samurai’s wealth, in fact, was measured by the number of koku (a koku equaled to little over five bushels) of rice he collected. The only people who ate white rice in those days were samurai, the upper classes, and rich merchants, and they were prodigious consumers of the stuff. In 1859, for instance, members of the upper social strata ate an annual average of 228 kilograms of rice. In comparison, in 2017,  the average rice consumption rate was around 82.1 kilograms per person.

    Rice’s Importance in Japan

    Another reflection of the continuing importance of rice in Japanese culture is that the word gohan means not only “cooked rice” but “meal” as well. When somebody says “Gohan desu!” it can be translated as “Soup’s on!” During a typical day in a Japanese household, rice is served in many guises-plain rice accompanying a steaming bowl of miso soup and pickles for breakfast; a box lunch filled mainly with rice and topped with a fat umeboshi (pickled plum); onigiri (rice balls) for a snack; and for dinner, often rice, served in any number of variations.

    Zosui

    Zosui (rice porridge) also known as ojiya is one such excellent way to utilize left-over rice and make it into a meal.  Although my recipe uses chicken and vegetables, you could also do a simplified version just using flavored dashi stock of some sort, eggs, and minced green onions or trefoil as a garnish. It is also particularly tasty using left-over reserved soup stock from a nabemono (hot pot) meal such as Oden.



    Get FREE Japanese Recipes by Email! Sign Up Now!

    Japanese salad dressing recipes
    .

    Chicken and Vegetable Zosui (Rice Porridge)

    chicken zosui

    Chicken and Vegetable Zosui (Rice Porridge)

    Lucy Seligman
    No ratings yet
    Course Main Course
    Cuisine Japanese
    Servings 4

    Ingredients
      

    • 5-1/2 cups dashi fish stock
    • 3 tbsp sake, or to taste
    • 3 tbsp soy sauce, or to taste
    • 1 tsp salt, or to taste
    • 5-1/4 ozs skinned and boned chicken breast (150g), cut into small cubes
    • 1 ¾ ozs carrots (50g), peeled and cut into thin half-moons
    • 2 small turnips, peeled and cut in two, then cut into thin half-moons
    • 4-1/2 cups slightly undercooked short-grain Japanese rice (can also use pre-cooked leftover rice or even frozen rice)
    • 2 large eggs, slightly beaten

    Garnish

    • Use either minced green onions (to taste) or mitsuba (trefoil), trimmed and finely chopped with stems, to taste.

    Instructions
     

    • In a deep pot (ideally an earthenware one you can bring to the table for easy serving), add the stock, sake, soy sauce, and salt. Bring to a boil, mix well, then add the chicken and vegetables and cook over medium heat until halfway done.
    • Add the rice and cook, stirring occasionally, until the chicken and vegetables are completely cooked. Add the beaten eggs, stir once and turn the heat off. Cover the pot for a minute or two-the egg will still be undercooked and runny at this point-then sprinkle the top with either the green onions or trefoil, mixing it into the porridge if desired.
    • Serve immediately in soup bowls. A plate of tsukemono (pickles) would provide the perfect accompaniment to this dish.
    Tried this recipe?Let us know how it was!

    Do you love Zosui?

    Snap a pic and hashtag it #thanksforthemeal — I would love to see a photo of your Zosui on Instagram and or Facebook, or leave a note in the comments section (see below) and let me know!

    chicken zosui recipe
  • Japanese Dry Curry – Pilaf Style

    Japanese Dry Curry – Pilaf Style

    japanese dry curry pilaf recipe

    We all know about saucy liquidy stew-like Japanese traditional curries—so many variations to choose from and try and make….but what about Japanese Dry Curry-Pilaf Style?

    Have you ever made it? Quick, easy and tasty, and a wonderful way to use up all those bits and pieces lingering in your refrigerator.

    I don’t know about you, but I have been on the lookout for delicious and fast dishes that don’t take me hours in the kitchen, which is hot at the moment and seems to have become my first home in recent months of sheltering in place here in the Bay area.

    Hot Weather is Curry Weather

    I also find anything with curry stimulates the appetite, always a good thing in hot weather. There is a hint of sweetness in the use of raisins, but those can be optional, but it is a nice balance to the savory flavors of this dish.

    dry curry japanese recipe

    This is a very forgiving dish and it is fun to create your own and new combination of ingredients. Use my recipe first as your guide, then go wild, and let me know what you came up with! It is also the perfect dish for a bento lunch and or served at room temperature.



    Get FREE Japanese Recipes by Email! Sign Up Now!

    Japanese salad dressing recipes
    .
    japanese dry curry pilaf

    Japanese Dry Curry – Pilaf Style

    Lucy Seligman
    No ratings yet
    Course lunch dish, Side Dish
    Cuisine Japanese
    Servings 4

    Ingredients
      

    • 3 to 4 cups cooked Japanese rice
    • 7 to 8 ounces meat: such as ground beef, thick bacon, ham, chicken or seafood, such as small shrimp or scallops, chopped
    • 3-1/2 ounces carrots, finely chopped
    • 3-1/2 ounces green peppers, finely chopped
    • 3-1/2 ounces onion, finely chopped
    • 3 ounces green beans, thinly sliced
    • Salad oil as needed
    • 2 tbsps curry powder (Japanese-style), or to taste and desired hotness
    • 2 to 3 tbsps raisins (soaked in warm water to soften), drained, optional
    • Salt and pepper to taste

    Garnish:

    • 3 ounces cooked green peas*

    Instructions
     

    • Chop all vegetables and meat (if necessary) into roughly the same size. Sauté vegetables in a little oil, until soft. Add desired protein. Continue cooking until done, adding curry powder and raisins.
    • Add the cooked rice, chopping it up (use the back of your wooden spoon), and combining with the rest of the ingredients. Cook until the rice is heated through.
    • Just before serving, add in the green peas and season to taste with salt and pepper. Serve hot.

    Notes

    Other garnishes you could use: Minced parsley or some boiled Broccoli florets, or you could do a garnish of Japanese pickles, such as crunchy Rakkyo (pickled Japanese scallions), the traditional garnish for Japanese curry.  You can also garnish the plate with avocado and red onion slices in a light vinaigrette to make a more complete meal.
    Tried this recipe?Let us know how it was!

    Leave a note in the comments section and let me know if you made this recipe and how it turned out!

  • Misonikomi Noodles from Nagoya

    Misonikomi Noodles from Nagoya

    Until I lived in Nagoya, I thought I only preferred less salty, lighter-colored misos, on the sweeter side. But the first time I had Misonikomi, another Nagoyan specialty, and tasted the deeply red and pungent hatcho (red) miso, my miso taste preferences widened and expanded. I loved making my kishimen noodle recipe from earlier this month, but this one might be even better!

    While testing this recipe, I was thrilled to find hatcho miso in the Bay area to use. If you are looking for a deeply satisfying, savory, umami-filled hearty noodle dish, Misonikomi is for you! Make sure you not only have chopsticks, but a soup spoon as you will want to spoon and slurp up every drop of the addictively tantalizing, comforting and delicious soup broth.

    If you like this, check out Kishimen Noodles from Nagoya too.


    Get FREE Japanese Recipes by Email! Sign Up Now!

    Japanese salad dressing recipes
    .
    Misonikomi noodle recipe

    Misonikomi Noodles from Nagoya

    Lucy Seligman
    No ratings yet

    Ingredients
      

    • 14 oz. handmade or dried thick udon noodles
    • 5 oz. chicken breast boned, skinned, and cut into small bite-sized pieces
    • 4 slices kamaboko, steamed fishcake optional
    • 3 ½ oz. Japanese leeks roughly chopped
    • 3 ½ oz. carrots cut into rounds
    • 5 cups strong dashi
    • 2-3 tablespoons hatcho miso soybean paste, or a mixture of 70% red miso and 30% brown miso
    • 4 eggs
    • 3 ½ oz. fresh spinach stemmed, washed, and parboiled, with excess water squeezed out

    To garnish:

    • Shichimitogarashi “seven tastes” pepper

    Instructions
     

    • Boil the chicken, kamaboko, leeks, and carrots in the dashi stock until half-way cooked. Remove.
    • Next, add the udon to the stock and boil until it reaches a chewy consistency. Then add the hatcho miso and continue to cook. As soon as the stock returns to the boil, remove the udon and place in four deep soup bowls.
    • Break the eggs into the stock (perhaps in two batches), and poach until half-way done. While the eggs are cooking, distribute the chicken, kamaboko, spinach, and other vegetables over the udon.
    • Place one egg in the center of each serving, and ladle soup over it – the heat of the soup will finish cooking the chicken, vegetables, and egg. Serve shichimi pepper separately.
    Tried this recipe?Let us know how it was!