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  2. 13 Ways to Make Ramen From a Breakfast Bowl to Traditional ...

    www.aol.com/13-ways-ramen-breakfast-bowl...

    Recipe developer Jasmine Smith matches American favorites like bacon, egg, and cheese with instant ramen for this cosy, warm 20-minute noodle dish to start the day, Get the Recipe Easy Soy Sauce Ramen

  3. Okinawan cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Okinawan_cuisine

    Okinawans make salad, soup, or tempura using seaweeds like mozuku and hijiki. Okinawan cuisine frequently uses kombu (kelp), not only in making soup stock, but also in preparing braised dishes, stir fried dishes and so on. Although it is not cultivated in the region, Okinawa is one of the largest consumers of kombu in Japan. [citation needed]

  4. Tsukudani - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tsukudani

    A dish of tsukudani made from kombu seaweed. Tsukudani (佃煮) is thinly-sliced seafood, meat or seaweed that has been simmered in soy sauce and mirin. [1] As a flavorful accompaniment to plain rice, tsukudani is made salty enough to not go bad, allowing high osmotic pressure to preserve the ingredients from microbial spoilage similarly to other types of pickles. [2]

  5. Shoyu Ramen Recipe - AOL

    www.aol.com/food/recipes/shoyu-ramen

    1. Make the Broth: In a large stockpot, combine the chicken, ribs, leek, ginger, garlic, water and shoyu. Bring to a boil. 2. Meanwhile, in a skillet, heat the oil.

  6. Kazunoko - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kazunoko

    Matsumaezuke is a soy-pickled dish that typically contains chunks of kazunoko in the mix of julienned dried squid and kombu seaweed. [45] [i] The addition of kazunoko allegedly only dates back to 1929, as an arrangement on what was originally a squid and kelp recipe. [47]

  7. How to Make Savory Mochi At Home - AOL

    www.aol.com/savory-mochi-home-224320300.html

    It was born out of a kombu cooking challenge that chef/co-owner Stuart Brioza asked the entire team to do in the fall of 2014. At the time, I was the morning saucier, not yet a chef in the restaurant.

  8. Saccharina japonica - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saccharina_japonica

    In Korean cuisine, dasima is used to make broth, deep-fried into bugak or twigak (coated and uncoated fries), pickled in soy sauce as jangajji, and eaten raw as a sea vegetable for ssam (wraps). It is also used to make dasima-cha (kelp tea). Cheonsa-chae (kelp noodles) is made from the alginic acid from dasima.

  9. Pho vs Ramen: Do You Really Know the Difference? - AOL

    www.aol.com/pho-vs-ramen-really-know-115700752.html

    Pho noodles are clear, tender, and made with white rice flour. Ramen noodles are yellow, bouncy, and made with wheat flour. Pho has a clearer and lighter soup than ramen.