Feb 15 2011

Homemade Japanese Nigiri Sushi Recipe


By James A Bruce

If you have been in Japan, I’m sure that you have dined in at some kaiten sushi restaurant (kaiten means spin or rotate). To be honest, I like eating at the kaiten sushi restaurants more than eating at fancy sushi shops. I have dined in many fine sushi shops but what I like about the kaiten sushi is that it keeps my eyes fascinated chasing the sushi plates moving on the conveyor. I find it most entertaining to watch the plates pass by as we ate. The fun thing I like about kaiten sushi is the excitement if someone else had their eyes locked-on on the same plate that I have my eyes on too. It is like a race, a game, a battle, or a war on who gets the targeted plate first.

Though you may not have a kaiten sushi restaurant in your area, you can always make sushi yourself. Here is a recipe for preparing sushi.

Ingredients:

- 500 grams Japanese white grain rice

- One piece of konbu sliced in 2.5 centimeters bristles

- One tablespoon of sugar

- 2 tablespoons of salt

- One teaspoon of glutamate

- Several cups of water

Toppings:

- Six large fresh prawns (not cooked)

- Five fresh scallops

- 130 grams of salmon roe

- 130 grams of fresh tuna

- One tablespoon of rice vinegar or cider

- One tablespoon of powdered green horse radish, Dissolve it in water to form a thick paste.

Preparation:

- Prepare white rice by washing it with water until they are clean. Stain for one hour.

- Put the rice grains inside a rice cooking pot but in the middle of the rice grains add kombu then add more rice grains to cover the konbu.

- Cook rice by using a strong flame just like cooking ordinary rice but just before the water starts to boil, remove the kombu inside the rice cooking pot.

- Adjust the amount of water and cover the rice cooking pot again and reduce the flame to moderate heat.

- Gradually let it boil for about fifteen minutes and for ten second just after you remove the rice cooking pan, increase the flame to full. Let it sit with for about twelve minutes.

- Mix the sugar, salt vinegar and glutamate and heat using moderate heat, Mix well

- Transfer the cooked rice onto a large bowl by using a wooden pestle or a plastic rice pestle.

- Add a small amount of vinegar on the rice and mix well with a wooden pestle or a plastic rice pestle. Mix it using circular motion and fan the rice as you do this. This will make the rice shiny.

- When the rice is warm enough to touch, wet your hands with a little amount of vinegar and make balls the size of meat balls.

Topping:

- Start by boiling salty water in a small casserole. Add prawns and vinegar inside the casserole and cook slowly for one minute. Cool and remove fluid.

- Peel the shells from the prawns. Cut the scallops into two horizontal pieces. Cut the muscles into three discs. Cut the fish diagonally about seven centimeters long.

- Spread a small amount of wasabi on each piece of fish and place it on the rice balls with the wasabi facing down.

- Place the prawns on the remaining rice balls.

- Arrange the sushis in a large plate.

- Slice some radish and cucumber and arrange them around the plate.

- Serve with soy sauce.

I hope you try this sushi recipe.

For more delicious ways on how to prepare Japanese dishes, Japanese recipes -click here!

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Jan 05 2010

Extreme Sushi Explosion


How to Make Sushi Part 1 – Extreme Sushi Explosion, Kapow!
By Mark Hewitt

Let’s talk about Japan’s greatest creation, just barely edging out Ghost in the Shell, bento, Otsuka Ai, Iron Chef, comedy routines based on torturing Morning Musume and Pocky. Sushi!

First, we have to clear up one of the most common misunderstandings in multicultural culinary experience. Sushi is a category of traditional Japanese food consisting mainly of rice mixed with seasoned vinegar, seaweed, vegetables and either cooked or raw fish. The fish doesn’t have to be raw, people! In Japan raw fish is more often used, but it’s still perfectly “authentic” using cooked. Actually, till now I’ve held a general rule that I won’t eat raw fish unless I’m somewhere on the coast, but lately I’ve heard from a lot of people saying that this is mainly a paranoid fear story that we get fed, and raw fish off a fishmonger or supermarket shelf is quite safe to eat.

Anyway, on with the sushi thing. I’ll talk about ingredients and preparation today, and construction tomorrow, as I think this is a subject which deserves detailed attention.

First, you need the right rice. This is easier to obtain than you might have been told – a lot of places (I see it mostly in health food shops) sell “sushi rice” which is usually overpriced and not particularly special. I have made great sushi from this, from arborio rice (italian risotto rice), pudding rice and regular big huge economy bag short grain rice. As long as it’s short grain and cooked the right way, it’ll be fine.

“Cooked right” means cooked the way I’m about to tell you, no deviations. This method of rice cooking is 100% bullet-proof and 99% idiot-proof. It’s derived from the guidance of Yasuko-San, who is an actual bona fide Japanese mother. You do not mess with a Japanese mother when it comes to cooking rice. You shut up and cook the darn rice they way they tell you to. Actually I had to adjust the figures a bit because the rice we get over here has a different absorption ratio, but the principle still stands.

(for 2-3 people) Take one and a half cups of short grain rice, wash it till the water runs clean, and put it in a saucepan with 3 cups of water. The saucepan must have a tight-fitting lid. Now, put the saucepan on a medium heat, and simmer it for 15 minutes. DO NOT move the lid at any time or Yasuko-san will find you and beat you with her samoji*.

Now, crank the heat up to the top and cook the rice for 1 full minute. You should hear it start to sizzle at the bottom of the pan at the end of the minute. If you’re using electric hobs (as I am cursed with, living in a high-rise), have a hob preheated to high heat and just slide the pan over onto it. Then take it off the heat, with the lid STILL TIGHTLY ON, and let it stand for 10 minutes WITHOUT TOUCHING THE DARN LID.

Rice cooked in this way will have the perfect consistency, will need no draining (because all the water is absorbed), and actually tastes better. For long grain rice, it will be firm and smooth – with a quarter teaspoon of salt added to the boiling water, I’ll eat a plain bowl of white rice cooked this way with gusto. For short grain rice it will be sticky but the grains will keep their shape, perfect for sushi or rice balls. All hail Yasuko-san! Ganbatte! Ganbarimasu!

For the seasoned vinegar, combine a quarter cup of white wine vinegar (best of all rice wine vinegar), 1 and a half tablespoons of sugar and 3/4 teaspoon of salt in a small pan, and heat it just to boiling so it all dissolves. Once the rice has finished its 10 minutes rest, spread it out in a shallow container (I use my vertical-sided saute pan which is perfect) and drizzle the vinegar mixture over it, then dig it in well with a spatula or wooden spoon. Try not to squash the grains too much, you want them firm and well-shaped for perfect sushi.

Now you need to cool the rice before rolling. A real sushi chef would fan it by hand. Actually, scratch that, a real professional sushi chef would have one of his underpaid kitchen monkeys fan it by hand. Fortunately we have the benefits of modern technology, and an almost-total disregard for tradition. Stick it in front of an electric fan for about a minute, then dig it around with a spatula to bring the hot rice from the bottom to the top, and leave it there for another minute. This will leave the rice cool, and slightly drier (but still moist and sticky enough to shape well).

So you’ve got your rice ready, perfectly cooked and seasoned, awaiting your rolling skills. Now all that remains is the final transformation. Find out more tomorrow, as we venture deeper into the world of sushi! Thrills, spills and seaweed! There’s danger at every turn!

* Rice paddle

Mark Hewitt is an English foodie, cook, philosopher, geek, shaman and writer. At the start of 2007 he sold or gave away almost all his possessions and left on a backpacking journey round the world, the purpose being (at least in part) to figure out why he would want to do such a thing. You can follow his journey and find other articles at: http://www.scadindustries.com

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