T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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311.1 | my mom's sushi recipe | JAKE::UYENO | | Fri Aug 08 1986 21:32 | 60 |
| Jessica,
You mean maki-sushi, right?
Well, this is the recipe I use:
2 cups rice
the dashi: (I don't know what you would call it in English)
3 tablespoons vinegar (rice vinegar is nice)
2 tablespoons sugar
dash Hondashi (fish stock base)
warm up to melt and let cool
then put the dashi in the middle of the cooked rice. let it
sit for a second and mix it in well. (If you want the easy
way out, you can buy packaged dashi, which is a dry mix that
you can mix in with the rice rather than making your own from
scratch.
Then it's all dependent on your taste what you put in the sushi.
I like putting in egg, dried flaked shrimp (pretty colors, too),
gourd (kampyo), black mushroom (shitake), sanma kabayaki (it's a
type of fish that comes in a can....cooked in a sauce similar to
teriyaki), fish cake (kamaboko). The egg I make as if I am making
an omelete, but I don't roll it, so I leave it flat which I cut
into strips. Both the kampyo and shitake I cook in the following
manner:
wash and soak 10 minutes in cold water
wring out excess water
1/2 teaspoon Hondashi bring to boil
1/2 cup water
after the above is boiling, add the kampyo and shitake.
add soy sauce and sugar to taste.
Cook until looks like it's ready (it has taken on some color
and the taste of the "dashi".
To roll the sushi, you'll need something that looks like a bunch
of bamboo skewers tied together (I have no idea what you would call
it in English). Anyway, you lay the seaweed on top of this, and
spread a layer of rice on top of the seaweed, leaving about 1/2
inch of the seaweed from the edge free of rice (need that to help
seal the roll). Then about 3/8ths of the way from the edge (opposite
edge of the riceless one) lay whatever you decided to put into the
middle. Then comes the difficult part, rolling the whole thing
without losing anything. It takes practice to be able to get it
nice and tight. Good luck!
Actually, it might be easier if you find a book with pictures.
By the way, the kampyo comes dried.
|
311.2 | | ZEPPO::MAHLER | Michael | Mon Aug 11 1986 12:00 | 8 |
|
There is an excellent book "Sushi" available in the
Boston Art Museum book store. If I remember, I will
bring it in to work and enter some of it here.
Is the egg you are referring to just scrambled egg
or Tamago ?
|
311.3 | and don't forget... | DONJON::EYRING | | Mon Aug 11 1986 13:13 | 19 |
| When making the rice, it's helpful to use rice suited to sushi.
Joyce Chen (in Acton and Chambridge and who knows where else) sells
such a rice. It cooks up sticker than regular rice which makes
it easier to shape and actually tasts a lot better than other rice.
I use it for everything now.
My favorite filling is raw tuna or other raw fish, but you have
to get it fresh. The Quarter Deck in Maynard is the best. And
don't forget the Japanese horseradish, I don't know what it's called,
but it's sold in very small tins. You mix just a bit of the green
power with water and make a paste. The paste you spread on the
filling just before you roll it all up. You can get this and pickled
ginger to eat on the side at Joyce Chen's also. As for the Saki
(what, sushi without Saki!), the best brand is the only one they
sell in the NH state liquor stores. Heat it by putting it in a
glass jar and putting the jar in hot water. This is making me hungry.
Happy eating.
|
311.4 | I love sushi, too | HECTOR::RICHARDSON | | Mon Aug 11 1986 14:15 | 22 |
| Most kinds of regular rice will not stick together well enough to
make sushi once you have added the vinegar, even if the rice was
fairly sticky to begin with. Sushi being popular now, you can usually
get the right sort of rice at "gourmet" stores, or an oriental grocery
store. Around central Mass., you can buy sushi rice at Duck Soup
in Sudbury (expensive) or at Ichiban on route 9 in framingham (cheaper
- and you can watch my friend Jerry make sushi there, for inspiration
or for your lunch...).
The bamboo thing is usually just called a "sushi mat". Places that
sell the rice usually have them, too, and they are cheap. They
often come with a paddle-shaped wooden fan which you are supposed
to fan the rice with after you have added the vinegar stuff, to
achieve the right temperature and moisture content (nice and maybe
authentic, but not essential).
Life is easier if you buy the seaweed sheets (nori) already toasted,
but you can buy the untoasted kind and toast it over a flame
(supposedly; I'm lazy and buy the toasted kind). This is supposed
to improve the flavor and is probably not essential.
I agree that tuna is one of the best things to put in sushi.
|
311.5 | Yum Yum, I cant wait!! | ECAD::CHAN | | Mon Aug 11 1986 15:37 | 13 |
|
Thanks to all of you. I'll give it a try as soon as I got the rice.
What's the exact name or type of rice should I buy? Is there any
brand name that is especially good for making sushi?
For the seaweed part, do I have to steam it first before I wrap
it? Will the toasted one be too crispy to try to wrap?
Thanks,
Jessica
|
311.6 | fyi | ZEPPO::MAHLER | Michael | Mon Aug 11 1986 17:48 | 4 |
|
Japanese HorseRadish = Wasabe (Pronounced Wah-Sah-Bee)
Rice Wine = Sake (Pronounced Sah-Kay)
|
311.7 | | JAKE::UYENO | | Tue Aug 12 1986 01:55 | 11 |
| What's this special sushi rice everyone keeps mentioning? Are you
guys just talking about normal Japanese rice, such as Kokuho Rose
(my favorite and one I grew up eating).
Jessica, don't steam the nori; just toast it.
What's also good to try is strips of cucumber with wasabe (horseradish)
on them. For these, you use only half of hte nori sheet. I also
like making "mini" rolls (using only half of the nori sheet) with
takwan (pickled white radish) as filling.
Re .4: no, not scrambled eggs...what do you mean by tamago....I
have been always taught that "tamago" means egg.
|
311.8 | Something fishy...... | SUSHI::KMACDONALD | Engineer on the Train of Thought | Tue Aug 12 1986 11:30 | 24 |
| re: sushi rice - I found a brand of sushi-nori in the Manchester NH
health food store with a recipe for making sushi rice from standard
short grain BROWN rice. Sounded easy, too, but I haven't tried that
recipe yet.
Other ingredients - wasabi powder - I found some of this in a GNC store,
of all places. Gourmet style supermarkets frequently have it, too.
Wasabi is Japanese style horseradish; I always call it "green death
mustard" for some reason.....
The pickled ginger is known as gari, can be found in bottles for $$$, or
sometimes in cold-pack plastic containers (like tofu comes in), which
seems to taste better. I've only found that in the Washington DC area,
anyone know of source in southern NH?
Fish can be had at the fish market in Nashua on 101A. Don't go in with
the idea that you want a specific fish; ask what they have that day
that's fresh enough for sushi. I had my heart set on salmon last time; I
went in and asked about the nice looking salmon, and they told me that I
didn't want that for sushi today. I got tuna and scallops instead, which
were great.
Enjoy; and invite me over! :-)
ken "sushi boy" macdonald
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311.9 | Sake news..... | SUSHI::KMACDONALD | Engineer on the Train of Thought | Tue Aug 12 1986 11:39 | 10 |
| Also, sake to have with your sushi: Geikekkan (sp) sake can be had in the NH
liquor stores, and is pretty good, but the best I've found is
Kiku-Masamune. Has somewhat more of that subtle rice flavor that makes
sake so neat. Also, for those interested, sake is a rice BEER, not a
wine. Although the final product resembles white wine, is is made by
BREWING (as a beer) and not by VINIFYING (as a wine). It is really a
high-alcohol content flat beer.
The little old sake-brewer,
ken
|
311.10 | Relative to sushi. | ZEPPO::MAHLER | Michael | Tue Aug 12 1986 12:07 | 3 |
|
Tamago as in sweetened omelete. Yes egg.
|
311.11 | | STRSHP::RICHARDSON | | Tue Aug 12 1986 14:01 | 14 |
| Maybe "regular Japanese rice" really *IS* sushi rice; I have been
buying the brand he mentionned, too (Rose), but it is not the same
as "regular American rice" or "regular Chinese rice" or Chinese
glutinous rice (which might work, at that, but would be pretty
strange!). I would be suspicious of brown rice as not sticking
together very well, which is the problem you get if you try to use
regular American long-grain rice.
Don't worry about the nori (which you DON'T boil! That would be
very soggy...); that is why you use a mat to roll up the maki,
to support the nori (you could probably get away with something
like a dry dishtowel or some cheesecloth, if you had to). It gets
more flexible when you have patted the seasoned rice onto it, and
is not as brittle as you would expect.
|
311.12 | | BEORN::BENCE | | Tue Aug 12 1986 15:06 | 5 |
|
"Regular" Japanese rice IS sushi rice. It is short-grained white
rice, as opposed to the long-grained and converted rices most
common in the US.
|
311.13 | Good, Cathy can answer us all! | STRSHP::RICHARDSON | | Wed Aug 13 1986 14:09 | 8 |
| Aha! This note has finally attracted the attention of Cathy Bence,
who knows a good deal more about making sushi than I do (haven't
made any since Jerry Tsai started making it at Ichiban - I cook
so I can eat (except for big parties, like the Chinese NewYear's)).
Cathy, what about the idea of making sushi with short-grain brown
rice? Think it would work? Some folks are really hung up (from
my persepctive - I eat nearly anything) about the nutrional values
of brown rice.
|
311.19 | Sushi mats replacement | DRCS::ABEYA | | Fri Oct 24 1986 08:25 | 21 |
| As a kid, I lived 2 years with a Japanese family, here in Switzerland
So, from time to time I get nostalgia for Japanese Food. This usually
happens on evenings or weekends, i.e. when there is no way to buy
the necessary accessories...
A couple of months ago I decided to make sushi myself for the first
time, and once the rice was cooked, I figured out that I did not
have any banboo mats. I finally used SIMPLE PLASTIC BAGS (the ones
I use for storing food in the fridge). It is not the transparent
soft kind, but the kind which sounds like paper when you crumple
it. I do not put the things inside, but I use It almost the same
way as the mat, with the difference that to squeeze the sushi together
I fold the sheet over the sushi roll, then holding the 2 parts of
the sheet coming together, I use a ruler to press against the
sushi to squeeze it as tightly and regularly together as possible.
It works really well.
By the way, I found some bamboo sushi mats in the nearby supermarket
(Migros)... where they are sold as place mats for the table.
Ines
|
311.20 | plastic wrap | HECTOR::RICHARDSON | | Fri Oct 24 1986 13:59 | 9 |
| I have watched Jerry Tsai, who makes the sushi at Ichiban in
Framingham, Mass., roll maki using plastic wrap, but only when he
is rolling one that has a layer of rice on the outside (he makes
his "California roll" - the kind that has fake crabmeat, avacado,
and mayonnaise in it; I don't know the Japanese name for them -
that way, so that the laver is rolled up inside). I think it is
a lot easier with a bamboo mat if you can get one, but I am not
the expert that Jerry is: in fact, I haven't made sushi since they
hired a sushi chef!
|
311.24 | Nashua Fish Market | CSSE32::GRIME | Pick a Cod, any Cod! | Tue Apr 17 1990 13:31 | 6 |
| In southern NH, the Fish Market in Nashua has really fresh fish. Their
prices may be a bit high, but they have excellent quality and service,
not to mention great take-out.
It's on Route 101A, across from K-mart/Market Basket; next to the PSNH
office. 603.882.1820.
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311.26 | | BRABAM::PHILPOTT | Col I F 'Tsingtao Dhum' Philpott | Thu Apr 19 1990 08:01 | 10 |
|
Actually the Doctah may have a point ... a family friend has a saying in respect
of Sushi
"if it isn't swimming ... it isn't fresh"
Which of course is why so many Oriental fish markets sell fish direct from
holding tanks.
/. Ian .\
|
311.29 | Pickled ginger? | CSOA1::SCHWARTZ_F | North Coast, U.S.A. | Mon Apr 23 1990 09:16 | 12 |
| Re: .27
I agree with Greg's observations in the previous note... some other
cultures cannot understand how we can bring ourselves to eat spoiled,
lumpy milk (read "cheese")! I find some of the "easier" types of
sushi, such as tuna, to be very palatable... if only I hadn't had that
college course on Parasitology!
P.S. I haven't noticed this information in the conference... has anyone
been able to make their OWN pickled ginger (the thin pinkish slices
served with sushi) that tastes close to that served at the sushi bars?
Would/has someone posted a recipe for this?
|
311.31 | My friend makes a lot of pickled ginger | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Mon Apr 23 1990 11:30 | 14 |
| A friend of mine swears by pickled ginger as a cure for seasickness and
carsickness (both of which give him a lot of trouble - he has to drive
a lot). He makes it by slicing fresh peeled ginger ropot very finely,
covering it with a small amount of water in a saucepan, and then
boiling it until it changes color (goes from grey to sort of the color
of ground dried ginger - orange-y). Then he drains the stuff and
bottles it with Japanese rice vinegar, a pinch of sugar, and sometimes
some salt. It keeps for a long time in the refrigerator, but he eats
so much of this stuff that I bet a batch never lasts a week in that
household anyhow. Apparently the proportions of ingredients aren't
critical. His finished product doesn't quite taste like what a sushi
place gives you - the commercial pickled ginger is usually saltier than
my friend's, and comes out much pinker (food coloring?).
|
311.33 | Food coloring--ick | JURAN::TEASDALE | | Wed Apr 25 1990 12:35 | 4 |
| Pickled ginger's pink color comes from beefsteak leaves (shiso?).
Sorry, I have no idea where you might find these.
Nancy
|
311.35 | | RANGER::CANNOY | Fnord | Wed Apr 25 1990 13:59 | 6 |
| Beefsteak plant or shiso is also sold by seed companies such as Burpee
as Perilla (sp). It comes as either Red Perilla or green. It's very
easy to grow in a pot and is a wonderful herb for flavoring. I'm
starting some as we speak.
Tamzen
|
311.36 | | SQM::WARRINER | Municipal court jester | Wed Sep 11 1991 23:17 | 16 |
| First of all, I am a sushi lover.
I always would hear stories from people who didn't like sushi about
how it would make you sick. For the most part I ignored them, and
decided if you get food poisoning it would not be fun but what's
a day or two of being sick for this stuff, and besides I would
just use VERY fresh fish and stick to reputable restaurants.
I have been hearing stories lately about the parasites that live in
fresh fish and how if they get in your system they stick with you for
life. I am hard pressed, however, to find any literature on the
subject or any hard facts.
Can anyone enlighten me, or provide me with a fact or two.
-David
|
311.37 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Hell Bent for Leather | Thu Sep 12 1991 09:32 | 7 |
| I'll look through my back issues of Sportfishing because I think they did
an article on this subject a year or two ago.
I believe that tuna are considered to be safe in that the only parasites
they get are not harmful to humans. I can't remember about the rest of them
(but I recall that there are indeed some parasites which doctors do not yet
know how to get rid of). I'd stick to sashimi in the meanwhile. :-)
|
311.38 | well, yes... | TLE::SASAKI | Marty Sasaki ZK02-3N30 381-0151 | Thu Sep 12 1991 13:18 | 16 |
| I'll relate something from a friend of mine. Those of you who are
squimish should probably stop reading...
Okay, my friend ended up needing an enema, so his doctor sent him over
to the guy that does these. As the water comes back out, this guy
watches the fluid. He is looking for blood and other signs of potential
problems.
He suddenly asks my friend if he ate a lot of sushi. My friend
answered, yes, and asked why he was asked the question. The guy doing
the enema said that he recognized some parasites in the fluid.
So, the answer is that there are parasites in some fish that can live
in your colon. My friend is healthy, so the parasites aren't harmful.
Marty Sasaki
|
311.39 | | JOET::JOET | Question authority. | Sat Aug 29 1992 21:06 | 8 |
| I just saw "Wall Street" on cable the other day and was wondering if
the plexiglass sushi maker used in the movie was real and if anyone has
any information about it.
Being into the eating and not the authenticity, it sure would make my
life easier.
-joet
|