Tag: yuzu peel

  • A New Year’s Salad: Kohaku Namasu Recipe

    A New Year’s Salad: Kohaku Namasu Recipe

    I have been thinking a lot about end of the year culinary rituals and traditions while writing this blog posting. I keep pondering why when I first experienced Osechi as a young bride (literally only married for 2 weeks) in Tokyo all those years ago, it so captivated me to this day? In a way, it was a culinary bridge to getting to know my new Japanese family through the endless hours of preparing Osechi with my new mother-in-law and sisters-in-law.  I love Osechi as a our special year-end ritual and annual tradition.  I love to celebrate it as a seasonal festive Japanese event.

    A New Year’s Salad: Kohaku Namasu Recipe

    My osechi of today is stream-lined and simplified, but no less significant to my daughter and me, and still filled with osechi classics that we love.  I bring out the special over-sized ozoni soup bowls, and jubako that I have, and we will pick out new and special chopsticks to use during our celebration. I have been saving some from our last trip to Japan for just this occasion.

    I have decided we will do our end of the year shopping on December 29th. What will we find or not? That, of course, is the big question. I know food shipments from Japan have been delayed a lot due to COVID. So, although we will have a big shopping list for December 31st-January 3rd meals, we will make adjustments if needed, and go early and follow best COVID practices. I am pondering which nabemono to enjoy as well over the holidays as it is fun to cook at the table. So many choices!

    On December 31st, I will prepare Tokyo-style Toshikoshi Soba. She adores this Hokkaido-style Ozoni with salmon, so I think we will enjoy this one on January 1st. Of course, fresh mochi will be enjoyed in many different guises, as well as lots of green tea, including our beloved matcha, and every year I add in something different or new for her to try. I love salads, and this is one of my favorites for the New Year.

    For more than a decade, many Japanese have bought Osechi in department stores.  Time has passed and things have changed a lot. Recently Osechi from Japanese restaurants and Sushi shops have also become popular.  Even Chinese restaurants and French restaurants prepare Osechi to be ordered in advance.  Theirs are not like a traditional Japanese Osechi, but people find them tasty and different. Most likely the younger generation who live independently and who do not visit their parents during Oshogatsu will not bother to eat Osechi. Which is a pity in my opinion.  Making Osechi isn’t particularly difficult, just takes some planning and time.

    Namasu: Vinegared Foods

    Namasu is the old term for any type of vinegared food, or Japanese salad. Some are made only with vegetables and others include fish. Kohaku (meaning red and white–typically associated colors of happiness and celebration in Japan) Namasu is a traditional standard for New Year’s (Osechi) celebrations; it combines daikon and carrots. There are really red carrots that sell around the Oshogatsu season.  It is really red, not orange like ordinary carrots. These red ones are strong, so you do not need to put in a lot.

    The red and white color combination is deeply rooted in Japanese culture.  When we see red and white, we recognize it automatically as something auspicious.  Weddings, inauguration ceremonies, the first day of education in schools, or the beginning of a joint venture, town festivals etc., are just some of the many events that red and white are used in celebration. Envelopes with red and white strings to celebrate somebody, too, is often used.

    Kohaku Namasu salad is so easy to make and of course, can be enjoyed year-round if desired.

    Kohaku Namasu Salad

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

    Ingredients
      

    • 1-1/2 cups daikon radish, peeled and cut into matchsticks
    • 1/3 cup carrot, peeled and cut into matchsticks
    • 1 tsp salt

    To make the dressing:

    • 3 tbsp rice vinegar, or to taste
    • 1 tsp white sugar, or to taste
    • salt to taste
    • Dashes of soy sauce and mirin (sweet sake), optional

    Optional Garnishes:

    Instructions
     

    • Combine daikon radish and carrot and knead lightly with salt. Let drain in a colander for 15 minutes. Rinse in water and squeeze out excess water.
    • Combine with dressing and taste for seasoning. If you prefer a sweeter version, cut down on the vinegar and increase the sugar. When ready to serve, drain off most of the dressing. It can be garnished with slivers of fragrant yuzu and or lemon peel, toasted white sesame seeds and served in hollowed out yuzu or lemon halves. This salad actually tastes better after ripening in the refrigerator (in a closed container) for a day or two.
       

    Notes

    The carrot can be replaced with peeled fresh persimmon strips and or dried apricot strips as a variation.
    You can also use yuzu juice (or lemon juice) with vinegar, which gives it a slightly different and refreshing flavor as another variation.
    In Japan, there is Hoshigaki dried persimmon, so you can use dried persimmon strips, too.  However dried persimmon is sweet, so cut down on the sugar when using.
     
    Tried this recipe?Let us know how it was!

     

    Happy New Year! あけましておめでとうございます。

     

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

  • Yuzu-Meyer Lemon Poundcake

    Yuzu-Meyer Lemon Poundcake

    drizzle yuzu lemon pound cake

    I love all things citrus, and for the past year or so, I have been very captivated (okay obsessed) by yuzu (Japanese citron), which has such a delectable and aromatic citrus bouquet. Both the peel (fresh or dried) and juice can be used. It is used as a condiment in savory dishes such as nabemonos, or zoni soups at New Year’s. Grated yuzu peel can be added to miso to make sauces, and as you can see in this posting, can also be used in baking.

    I had the urge recently to bake this Yuzu-Meyer Lemon Poundcake, an old recipe of mine that I updated to fit my more citrus-based taste buds!

    My recipes may include affiliate links, so without costing you anything extra, I’ll earn a small percentage of the sales if you purchase these items through these links. Thank you for your support!



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    Yuzu-Meyer Lemon Poundcake

    Lucy Seligman
    No ratings yet
    Servings 1 loaf

    Ingredients
      

    • 2-3 tbsps grated fresh yuzu (Japanese citron) peel or meyer lemon peel
    • 1 cup + 5 tbsps white sugar
    • 5 tbsps Yuzu juice
    • 2-1/4 cups all-purpose white flour
    • 1-1/2 tsps baking powder
    • 3/4 tsp salt
    • 3/4 cup unsalted butter, softened
    • 3 large eggs
    • 3/4 cup whole milk
    • 1/4 cup sour cream
    • 1/4 cup raw walnuts, coarsely chopped

    Instructions
     

    • Preheat the oven to 350F. Combine flour, baking powder and salt in a bowl. Blend in butter until mixture resembles coarse meal. Mix in 1 cup sugar. Stir in fresh yuzu or meyer lemon peel.
      Blend beaten eggs with milk, add sour cream and combine with dry ingredients until just mixed. Combine lightly with walnuts.
      Pour into a buttered and floured loaf pan. Bake until a toothpick placed in the center comes out clean–roughly 1-1/4 hours.
      Boil yuzu juice and 5 tablespoons sugar for 5 minutes, or until thickened. Pour this mixture evenly over the hot cake, then cool thoroughly.

    Notes

    I replaced the grated yuzu peel with Meyer lemon peel as I couldn’t find fresh yuzu, and used pure Yuzu juice. Yuzu juice is readily available online and at local Japanese markets. If you are lucky enough to find both fresh yuzu and juice, by all means use them!
    Tried this recipe?Let us know how it was!

    Leave a note in the comments section if you make this dish or use yuzu in any dish!

  • Festive Fare: Traditional Treats for New Year’s

    Festive Fare: Traditional Treats for New Year’s

    MochiNEW YEAR’S IS ONE OF THE BEST TIMES IN JAPAN – at least for eating. Shogatsu, the New Year’s holiday, is celebrated from midnight on December 31 until January 3 or 4, or even longer by diehards.

    No New Year’s banquet would be complete without a bowl of zoni, soup with toasted mochi (pounded rice cakes). While most Japanese dishes differ from region to region, zoni varies virtually from house to house. This zoni, a variation of the Kyoto-style, uses sweet white miso paste, and is one of my favorites..

    Although I live in the States, I continue to celebrate Japanese New Year’s to this day with my daughter, albeit in a less traditional and fancy way. We look forward to it every year. It is a welcome ritual to closing out the year. And yes, a lot, okay, way too much mochi is consumed!


    The Wonderful World of Osechi: Japanese New Year’s Recipes

    New Year’s is one of the best times in Japan, at least for eating and relaxing. Get Lucy’s Osechi cookbook, full of recipes that are fast to make, easy, and quite delicious for your New Year celebrations (along with the history and traditions and little tidbits Lucy always includes). Get the book!

    Makes a great gift too! Did you know on the Amazon page there’s an option to give it as a gift?

    Osechi cookbook Japanese New Year

     

    My recipes may include affiliate links, so without costing you anything extra, I’ll earn a small percentage of the sales if you purchase these items through these links. Thank you for your support!

    Kyoto-Style Zoni

    Lucy Seligman
    No ratings yet
    Course Soup
    Cuisine Japanese
    Servings 4

    Ingredients
      

    • 10 ½ oz. small taro satoimo, peeled, rubbed with salt, rinsed, and kept in a bowl of water to prevent discoloration until ready to cook
    • 3 ½ oz. carrots peeled and cut into thick rounds
    • 4 fresh shiitake mushrooms optional, stems cut, with a criss-cross incision made on the cap
    • 4 ½ cups dashi fish stock*
    • 2 tablespoons white miso fermented soybean paste, or more if you like it very sweet
    • 8 mochi cakes
    • Fresh trefoil or parboiled spinach optional
    • To garnish:
    • A few slivers of yuzu Japanese citron peel
    • A handful of dried bonito flakes

    Instructions
     

    • Boil the taro, carrots, and mushrooms (if you decide to use them) in the dashi stock for roughly 10 minutes, until soft enough to be pierced with a toothpick.
    • Take a few tablespoons of the hot stock out of the pot and combine with the miso in a small bowl. When thoroughly blended, incorporate back into the soup.
    • Meanwhile toast the mochi until they begin to swell. Then add them to the soup, swirl around until warmed, and turn off the heat.
    • To serve, pour the soup into four deep bowls, making sure there are two mochi in the middle of each bowl. At the last moment, add any greens, and top with a sliver or two of yuzu peel and a sprinkling of bonito flakes. Serve immediately.

    Notes

    How to make Konbu Dashi Stock:
    Take a 6-inch piece of kelp (konbu), wipe lightly with a damp cloth and put into a pot with 6 cups water. Bring to a boil and remove kelp. Add a generous 3/4 cup of dried bonito shavings (katsuobushi) and boil for one minute. Turn off heat and after 2 minutes, strain.
    Tried this recipe?Let us know how it was!

    Leave a note in the comments section (see below) if you make this dish!


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