Lunch, May 13, 2018
Multiple experiments in one meal.
- Gobo to satsumaage no donburi / burdock root, deep-fried fishcake and enoki mushrooms over steamed rice
- Kabu to usuage no misoshiru / miso soup with Japanese turnips and thin deep-fried tofu
- Fuki no amazuzuke / Japanese butterbur in sweetened vinegar
- Yaki-papurika no shoga-zoe / roasted red bell pepper with grated ginger
Also added to this gobo donburi are sun-dried enoki mushrooms. Guanylic acid, one of the elements in umami, is found in dried mushrooms. I wanted to see the umami boosting effect of dried enoki, and these mushrooms really do work. Naturally thin enoki dry relatively quickly, are easily stored, and add deep flavor to dishes.
Gobo donburi tastes strong, and no other strong-flavored dish is wanted. Kabu turnip is gentle on the stomach, and the root's tender texture is pleasant in miso soup. Oil from usuage deep-fried tofu adds just enough richness and enhances overall flavor.
The gobo donburi and miso soup here total about 600 mg sodium. Something providing more vegetables would be good but only a little more sodium is desirable. Amazuzuke has been a useful solution in this situation. I soaked leftover prep-boiled fuki stalks in sweetened vinegar for a quick fix. Taka no tsume red chili pepper slices were also added to the marinade, as a taste that is simply sweet and sour lacks the punch to pair with other dishes. Fuki was marinated for only one hour and tasted very sharp. The taste would mellow if marinated longer. We will find out next time.
Fuki no amazuzuke and red bell pepper dishes add virtually zero sodium to the meal.
Our meals are as tasty as before, and our meal choices are expanding.
A reference from Umami Information Center:
http://www.umamiinfo.com/publications/
The page says "sample download"; all pages of a leaflet (in English or Spanish) can be downloaded.
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