Chabuta
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There is nothing better on a chilly Winter’s day than a bowl of simmered Daikon radish.
Daikon is sweeter in the Winter and has a wonderful flavor when slow cooked in homemade dashi.
The tops of the radish can be a bit spicy and are perfect for grating to be served as a condiment to fried foods like Tempura.
However , the daikon flavor becomes mellow and sweet when long simmered in a tasty broth.
This is not an elegant dish, but a homey, seasonal one. Serve it with some simple salt grilled or broiled fish and hot steamed rice.
You’ll have a meal that will warm you up on the coldest day.
Tabemasho!
Calling “okayu” a risotto is a misnomer...but I think it’s more fitting and appetizing than “rice gruel”. Okayu is sometimes thought of as “food for the inferm” as it’s extremly easy to digest and very nutritious for those who need to convelesce.
But okayu is so much more . I eat a hojicha and rice okayu first thing every New Years morning. Then a few days latter, nanakusa-gayu is eaten to celebrate the festival of seven herbs on January 7.
It’s a versatile comfort food that can easily be elevated to the main foucs of the meal.
This version is similar to the classic Korean “Jeonbakjuk”. This particular recipe came out of a snow storm. Some friends had stopped by to visit and wound up getting snowed in. They asked me to make them tea, so we decided to have an informal chakai with something to eat during the thick of the storm.
I happened to have one treat in the freezer, and that was some abalone. Serve this awabi okayu with chopped sallion, toasted white sesame seeds, shoyu, toasted or seasoned nori and a nice bottle of DASSAI Junmai Ginjo 50 to sip alongside.
When I think of autumn, I think of matsutake mushrooms, tasty hot pots and oysters
Fall oysters are at a point where they’ve put on some meat and flavor after their “busy” season. I use them in a number of dishes from my favorite Saikyo Miso, Corn and Oyster Soup to delcicous fried oysters But this dish of Oysters cooked with rice is wonderfully simple and so tasty when served with other seasonal items.
The Koreans have a similar dish, but I like the extra Japanese step of making a dashi to give the broth even more flavor that remarkably works with the oysters to enhance their flavor.
I also like to add some sweet corn from time to time as I think the taste of corn and oysters goes so well together. The fun part is adding your favorite condiment to make this recipe your own.
A quick but always welcome snack, yaki onigiri are perfect for those nights when you want to graze on an assortment of tasty tidbits to go along with a nice bottle of sake, shochu or a pot of your favorite tea. Yaki onigiri can be simply brushed with sake and shoyu or they can be topped with more elaborate toppings like gingery, negi-miso. They can be made with fresh cooked rice or frozen rice that has been microwaved till hot.
Either way, grilled under the broiler or in a pan, the crisp, roasted rice flavor is a must with any
Izakaya meal, once the sake starts flowing.
Celebrating Oshogatsu is a wonderful, meaningful way to spend the New Year Holiday.
For tea people, it means getting ready for the first tea of the year.
At home we start with a thorough cleaning. Once the house is in order, we set about making the osechi foods that will go into the Jubako (laquered, tiered food boxes).
In our family, New Years Day starts with Okayusan for breakfast.
This is a rice porridge made with long brewed Hoji Cha and served with Narazuke (melon pickles from Nara).
This is similar to the porridge made at Daitokuji Temple in Nara.
Next is Obukucha.
This is thin Matcha tea (Usucha) with a small pickled plum added to the bowl after the tea is whipped.
Next, we toast the New Year with O-toso, sake and mirin that has been flavored with a special blend of herbs.
When it’s finally time to eat, we open up the Jubako filled with the Osechi food specialties;Rolled Omelet, seasoned herring roe, simmered carrots cut like plum blossoms, all foods that have special symbolism or significance for the New Year.
This is all accompanied by Ozoni, a soup with Mochi rice cake. We make the Kansai version that uses sweet, white Saikyo miso, Kyoto root vegetables with fried beancurd puffs and topped with Katsuo shavings.
For many Japanese, a true taste of autumn can be found in the Matsutake Mushroom. Matsutake mushrooms grow near red pine trees in Japan, but can be found here in the US and Canada in coniferous forests in the north west. They are a pricey Item, but if you ‘re lucky, a few fine specimens will give you all the flavor you need and this recipe is perfect for that.
We here at Cha Buta An make matsutake gohan as part of an overall dinner celebrating this delectable mushroom and the arrival of autumn : matsutake gohan served alongside a clear soup with matsutake and a julienne of green yuzu skin , broiled tile fish and shrimp grilled with uni, matsutake flavored tofu rolled in sweetened egg omelet, and seasonal vegetables and pickles to accompany. Enjoy this meal with a nice bottle of sake or a pot of freshly brewed Hoji Cha.
This simple preparation for dried shiitake mushrooms is , agave orquick, delicious and a Japanese classic. These earthy mushrooms combine with soy suace, mirin, sake and sweetners to create a wonderful accompaniement to rice, meats or sake.
I make this recipe and always include the simmered mushrooms in my Osechi jubako for New Years, but they are simple to prepare and perfect for keeping in the fridge when you want a tasty topping for your rice.
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