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  2. List of Japanese ingredients - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Japanese_ingredients

    Niboshi or iriko is dried sardine, important for fish stock and other uses. mackerel (saba) kohada or kohada (Konosirus punctatus) herring (nishin) aji (Japanese horse mackerel and similar fish) - typical fish for hiraki, or fish that is gutted, butterflied, and half-dried in shade.

  3. Sake kasu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sake_kasu

    Sake kasu can be found in different cosmetics and skincare products such as facial masks, bath powder, and face cream. There is an old folktale about an elderly man who worked in a brewery with youthful-looking hands compare to his old wrinkled face; in light of this, different cosmetics companies use sake kasu as an ingredient and a selling ...

  4. Kombu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kombu

    Kombu is sold dried (dashi konbu) or pickled in vinegar (su konbu) or as a dried shred (oboro konbu, tororo konbu or shiraga konbu). It may also be eaten fresh in sashimi . Kombu is used extensively in Japanese cuisines as one of the three main ingredients needed to make dashi , a soup stock.

  5. Katsuobushi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Katsuobushi

    In addition to making dashi, other popular uses of katsuobushi include: Okaka, finely chopped katsuobushi dressed with soy sauce. As a stuffing for rice balls . As a topping for rice. Popular for bentō, often covered with strips of laver. Dried okaka is used as an ingredient of furikake rice topping (called "okaka furikake").

  6. Dashi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dashi

    Some common brands of packaged instant dashi. Dashi (出 汁, だし) is a family of stocks used in Japanese cuisine. Dashi forms the base for miso soup, clear broth soup, noodle broth soup, and many simmering liquids to accentuate the savory flavor known as umami. [1] Dashi is also mixed into the flour base of some grilled foods like ...

  7. Miso - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miso

    It is used for sauces and spreads; pickling vegetables, fish, or meats; and mixing with dashi soup stock to serve as miso soup, a Japanese culinary staple food. Miso is high in protein and rich in vitamins and minerals, and it played an important nutritional role in feudal Japan. Miso is widely used in both traditional and modern cooking in ...

  8. Japanese cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_cuisine

    Japanese noodles often substitute for a rice-based meal. Soba (thin, grayish-brown noodles containing buckwheat flour) and udon (thick wheat noodles) are the main traditional noodles, while ramen is a modern import and now very popular. There are also other, less common noodles, such as somen (thin, white noodles containing wheat flour).

  9. Donburi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Donburi

    A typical sauce might consist of dashi (stock broth) flavored with soy sauce and mirin (rice wine). Proportions vary, but there is normally three to four times as much dashi as soy sauce and mirin. For oyakodon, Tsuji (1980) recommends dashi flavored with light soy