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  2. Marinated mushrooms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marinated_mushrooms

    Marinated mushrooms are eagerly purchased by Chinese and Japanese consumers. [21] In Japanese cuisine , marinated shiitake mushrooms are added to numerous ready-made dishes as one of the ingredients or as decoration (for example, shiitake mushrooms can be marinated in a solution of rice vinegar with added sugar, salt, and pepper).

  3. List of mushroom dishes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_mushroom_dishes

    Duxelles – finely chopped (minced) mixture of mushrooms or mushroom stems, onions, shallots, and herbs sautéed in butter, and reduced to a paste. Marinated mushrooms – chopped mushrooms marinated with spices, popular in Russian cuisine under brands Uniservis [5] and Mikado [6]

  4. Matsutake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matsutake

    This results in prices in the Japanese market highly dependent on quality, availability, and origin that can range from as high as $1,000 per kilogram ($450 per pound) for domestically harvested matsutake at the beginning of the season to as low as $4.41/kg ($2/lb), though the average value for imported matsutake is about $90/kg ($41/lb).

  5. List of Japanese dishes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Japanese_dishes

    Dango: a Japanese dumpling and sweet made from mochiko (rice flour),[1] [citation not found] related to mochi. Hanabiramochi: a Japanese sweet (wagashi), usually eaten at the beginning of the year. Higashi: a type of wagashi, which is dry and contains very little moisture, and thus keeps relatively longer than other kinds of wagashi.

  6. Shiitake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shiitake

    The Japanese cultivated the mushroom by cutting shii trees with axes and placing the logs by trees that were already growing shiitake or contained shiitake spores. [ 10 ] [ 11 ] Before 1982, the Japan Islands' variety of these mushrooms could only be grown in traditional locations using ancient methods. [ 12 ]

  7. Jingisukan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jingisukan

    Jingisukan (ジンギスカン, "Genghis Khan") is a Japanese grilled mutton dish prepared on a convex metal skillet or other grill. It is often cooked alongside beansprouts, onions, mushrooms, and bell peppers, and served with a sauce based in either soy sauce or sake. The dish is particularly popular on the northern island of Hokkaidō and in ...

  8. Pleurotus citrinopileatus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pleurotus_citrinopileatus

    Pleurotus citrinopileatus, the golden oyster mushroom (tamogitake in Japanese), is an edible gilled fungus.Native to eastern Russia, northern China, and Japan, the golden oyster mushroom is very closely related to P. cornucopiae of Europe, with some authors considering them to be at the rank of subspecies. [2]

  9. Shimeji - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shimeji

    Japanese popular mushrooms, clockwise from left, enokitake, buna-shimeji, bunapi-shimeji, king oyster mushroom and shiitake (front). Lyophyllum shimeji Bunapi (developed by Hokuto Corporation) Shimeji (Japanese: シメジ, 占地 or 湿地) is a group of edible mushrooms native to East Asia, but also found in northern Europe. [1]

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