web mame gohan
Transcription
web mame gohan
www.WASHOKUcooking.com LESSON ONE Rice Cooked with Edamame (recipe on page 142) 豆ご飯 Mame Gohan fresh green peas This rice dish is prepared in the taki-komi style. TAKI-KOMI refers to the use of a flavored liquid (instead of water) to cook the rice; the liquid is produced by cooking one or more ingredients in seasoned stock. The liquid is strained and measured to use when cooking the rice. Typically the foods cooked to produce the flavored liquid are then tossed in to the cooked rice dish. The result is somewhat like a pilaf, or paella. If you will be cooking your rice in a thermostatically controlled appliance it is ESSENTIAL that the flavored liquid be allowed to cool to room temperature before adding it to the rice cooker. The original Mame Gohan receipe on page 142 calls for edamame, fresh green soybeans. They are a summertime staple in Japan (most are consumed as beer snacks!). Increasingly they are available worldwide, flash frozen. The word mame means “pea” or “bean” and various mame (see suggestions below) can be used to make this dish. The version pictured here makes use of green peas, freshly shelled from their pods. I have adjusted timing, and seasonings accordingly. [left] fava beans (sora mame, in Japanese) [center] edamame fresh green soybeans [right] fresh green peas © Copyright 2010. All rights reserved by Elizabeth Andoh. 1 www.WASHOKUcooking.com LESSON ONE Wash and drain raw rice as indicated in the original recipe. Allow the rice to drain for at least 20 minutes (and up to several hours) until it is opaque -- that tells you the grains of rice have already absorbed moisture. Moist rice will absorb more of the flavorings from the liquid, and become tender without stickiness. [left] dashi (yellow-capped container), [2nd from left] usukuchi shoyu [3rd from left] mirin, [right] regular soy sauce MAKING the PEAS and FLAVORED COOKING LIQUID: For every cup of raw rice, I suggest you use about 1/4 cup shelled fresh peas (probably weighing about 6 ounces in their pods). Place 1 cup dashi or other stock in a small saucepan and place the shelled peas in the cold liquid. Season with 1 teaspoon mirin (syrupy rice wine), 1/2 teaspoon usukuchi shoyu (light-colored soy sauce) and 1/4 teaspoon regular soy sauce. Slowly, over low heat, bring the seasoned liquid to a boil. If you have an otoshi-buta (“dropped lid,” pictured below) use it to keep the peas covered in the scant liquid (this will avoid excessive wrinkling). Or, improvise with a circle of cooking parchment cut slightly smaller than the saucepan so that the paper sits directly on the peas. © Copyright 2010. All rights reserved by Elizabeth Andoh. 2 www.WASHOKUcooking.com LESSON ONE Adjust heat as needed to maintain a steady, but not vigorous boil. Cook for 1 minute with the lid in place. Remove, and allow the peas to cool in the seasoned liquid. Strain, reserving peas and liquid, separately. If need be, add plain water to the seasoned liquid to cook the rice. Follow instuctions on page 142 to cook and serve the rice. peas simmering in seasoned stock with otoshi-buta lid rice covered with seasoned liquid BEFORE cooking © Copyright 2010. All rights reserved by Elizabeth Andoh. 3