I have a question about making dashi. I make dashi with some regularity, and I put the kombu & bonito in the freezer to make niban dashi, and this makes me happy to be getting good use from these ingredients.
I've also seen recipes where kombu is a main vegetable ingredient. Now, in western cooking, recipes often ask you to make some good stock with, say, carrots & celery & onions, and then they suggest that you throw away these vegetables and put new veggies in your soup. Well, I've learned to always savor those boiled-to-death veggies as a cook's treat, or just as lunch on the soup/stock-making day. I love them with a little salt & maybe a bit of butter or olive oil. Not fancy, but comforting everyday food.
So, I wonder if Japanese cooks use the kombu from making niban dashi for anything like this, a sort of cook's treat or plain home food?
| Title | Author | Answers | Last Post |
|---|---|---|---|
| IMPORTANT: If you have a blog on JustBento... | maki | 1 | 6 weeks 3 days ago |
| Kakigori - Japanese shaved ice | Loretta | 6 | 6 weeks 6 days ago |
| Help me through the cauliflower glut | Loretta | 24 | 7 weeks 6 days ago |
| What should I bring back from Japan? | Awfulknitter | 5 | 8 weeks 1 day ago |
| Wal-Mart has Lock And Lock | SewingDiva | 5 | 8 weeks 3 days ago |
Subscribe to Just Bento - a healthy meal in a box: great bento recipes, tips, and more
Or...subscribe by email:
You can make konbu no tsukudani from konbu you've used for dashi. Just cook them in a mixture of dashi, soy sauce, mirin and a little sugar, with additional katsuobushi; simmer down until the liquid is just about gone. Salty but a delicious filler for bentos, very nice chopped up as onigiri filling.
The Big Onigiri.
- Wherever you go, there you are. -
Perfect! Thank you very much. I hoped this was the case, so next time I'll try this.
Actually, I totally forgot that I already have a recipe for the cooked salty konbu: shio konbu recipe. Check it out!
Ooh, that looks good. I am going to start saving my dashi konbu and make the used konbu version. Thank you for remembering!
I tried Maki's shio kombu recipe and it's very tasty, but I remember that it took a long simmering time to turn the kombu soft and transparent. I really like this when they serve it in restaurant. It takes me a long time to save up a batch of kombu :(
Post new comment