A High End Tempura Restaurant in Japan
Portuguese? Or Japanese? Perhaps a bit of both....The Japanese have borrowed many cooking techniques and ingredients from abroad and adapted them to suit Japanese tastes. "Tempura" and the use of hot oil for cooking was introduced in the 1600s by the Portuguese.
Look familiar? Portuguese deep fried eel looks a lot like tempura!
Rice flour is not normally used for tempura, wheat flour is the norm. Vegetables and seafood are popular tempura items. "Ebi tempura" or jumbo prawns are a favourite in Japan as elsewhere. Shiitake mushrooms are good, as is "kabocha", a kind of Japanese squash.
Tempura batter should be very light and never greasy
Whole soft shell crabs are fried in tempura batter and often used for "Spider Rolls". The entire crab is edible after being fried. The whole crabs make for specatular presentation!
"Spider Rolls" are a popular new sushi roll using whole soft shell crabs
Amaebi are large sweet shrimp served raw as sashimi or nigiri sushi The heads are often fried in tempura and served alongside the raw body. They look strange but they are a crispy, crunchy calcium filled treat...
Yumm...deep fried head.....
A light dipping sauce may be served garnished with fresh grated daikon (radish). Some people prefer just a little salt and a squirt of lemon. Small fish in tempura aren't often seen in the West but they're a crispy, seasonal favourite in Japan...
Even sheets of dried seaweed and herbs can be used in tempura preparations. "Oba" or "shiso" is a Japanese minty basil. The leaves are crispy and delicious when served in a delicate tempura batter.
"Shiso" leaves
Kakiage is a birds nest style tempura that can be made with onions, carrots, shrimp and sometimes "gobo" the root of the burdock tree. Pretty much any leftover veggies can be julienned and thrown together making kakiage popular tempura option to make at home. Served over rice and drizzled with a sweet and savoury sauce it becomes "tendon" (tempura rice bowl)
"Kakiage" style tempura served over rice as "tendon"
"Tempura udon" is a favourite at Sanbiki and traditional cold weather comfort food. Served with udon noodles in soup, it can be garnished with green onion or "shichimi", a Japanese chili powder.
Sanbiki uses homemade stock for our tempura udon
When the Portuguese first introduced "tempura" in Japan, the consumption of animals was prohibited. The name "tempura" is thought to have come from the Latin "quottuor tempora" which refered to the times when Catholics also avoided eating meat. Even today, it is rare to see meat tempura in Japan. Outside Japan, anything pretty much goes; even whole sushi rolls are dunked in tempura and deep fried!
Deep fried sushi rolls? Yes, they're out there....
While the Japanese appeared enthusiastic about the cuisine of Portugal, they were perhaps more reserved about the Portuguese missionaries themselves! "The Barbarians Cookbook", as it was called, was published in the 17th Century and explores the use of not just hot oil, but also eggs and sugar for cooking. It is believed that this is the first time recipes for cookies appeared in Japan. Even today "boro" are crispy, biscotti-like sweet treats.....
These boro are made with buckwheat flour
PANKO is a breadcrumb batter somewhat similar to tempura...."Pan" from the Japanese word for bread (same pronounciation as "pain" in French) "Ko" is a Japanese term for powder or coating. so..."PANKO"=Bread crumb batter. Shrimp, oysters, pork cutlets and chicken can be served fried in panko.
Panko crusted pork, chicken and seafood are popular everywhere
Trying tempura at home? Be careful not to overmix the batter and use cold water. Use a vegetable oil that is clean and hot. Check your recipe carefully as different items should be fried at slightly different temperatures. Make sure the items are of uniform size and not too big or thick as they will not cook quickly and thoroughly. Never use "wet" items, pat them dry with paper towel to ensure they turn out crispy. Don't put too much in the pot at once! This lowers the temperature of the oil, the food absorbs more of it, and becomes greasy! Serve tempura quickly and don't be afraid to experiment!
Not traditonal tempura but tasty!
Have a great week, more blogs to come!
Showing posts with label tendon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tendon. Show all posts
Tuesday, July 17, 2012
TEMPURA
Labels:
japanese fried food,
kamloops japanese restaurant,
sanbiki japanese kitchen,
tempura,
tendon
Sunday, June 3, 2012
DONBURI
The first part of DONBURI names usually indicate the tasty rice topping. "DON" refers to the method of delivery, the rice bowl. So Ten ("tempura") + Don (bowl) = TENDON!
Tempura veggies and or seafood over rice with a sweet and savoury sauce. TENDON, like other donburi are often eaten with a small vegetable side dish or salad and a bowl of miso soup (as below)
Beef ("gyu") is simmered with onions in a sweet soy based sauce to become GYUDON. A little salty pickled ginger gives the flavour a final kick.
KATSUDON
A Japanese take on a "schnitzel". A pork cutlet ("katsu") is breaded in a crispy breadcrumb ("panko") batter and may be served with tonkatsu sauce. The sauce is savoury with a hint of worcester and fruit. With katsudon, an egg is added in the final minutes of cooking and the dish is garnished with green or fried onions.
IKURADON is similar in the sense that slices of salmon sashimi are served with salmon roe over seasoned sushi rice.
TEKKADON has raw tuna (not fatty) that is sometimes marinated with soy, sesame or a spicy sauce before being put over rice. Finely cut nori (dried seaweed) garnishes the tekkadon below.
Unlike sushi or sashimi, no special etiquette or rules pertain to eating and enjoying donburi. Japanese people do not themselves pour soy sauce directly on to plain white rice but it may be added sparingly to donburi if desired. And of course never leave you chopsticks sticking straight out of the rice bowl. This is how offerings are presented to the dead!
Instead rest your chopsicks on the rim of the bowl or on the "hashioki" (chopstick rest) that may be provided. If one is not provided in a restaurant, some Japanese will fashion their own from the chopstick wrapper....
More soon! Enjoy DONBURI sit down at Sanbiki or visit Mori Mori for Grab and Go sushi and bowls. Made fresh daily!
Tempura veggies and or seafood over rice with a sweet and savoury sauce. TENDON, like other donburi are often eaten with a small vegetable side dish or salad and a bowl of miso soup (as below)
Beef ("gyu") is simmered with onions in a sweet soy based sauce to become GYUDON. A little salty pickled ginger gives the flavour a final kick.
KATSUDON
A Japanese take on a "schnitzel". A pork cutlet ("katsu") is breaded in a crispy breadcrumb ("panko") batter and may be served with tonkatsu sauce. The sauce is savoury with a hint of worcester and fruit. With katsudon, an egg is added in the final minutes of cooking and the dish is garnished with green or fried onions.
UNADON
Grilled or BBQ freshwater eel is "unagi". Pop a few thick slices onto a bowl of steaming hot rice and garnish with sansho (a Japanese peppery herb) Voila! UNADON...
OYAKODON
Many cultures (and thus cusines) have certain foods that are considered "taboo" to serve. One of the best known is the Jewish reference to "not boiling a kid in it's mothers milk". A "child" is never served alongside it's "mother". This is reversed in Japan. OYAKODON roughly translates as "mother and child" and consists of chicken cooked with egg, veggies and seasonings.IKURADON is similar in the sense that slices of salmon sashimi are served with salmon roe over seasoned sushi rice.
Other "sushi bowls" include CHIRASHI, NEGITORODON and TEKKADON. Sushi rice is used instead of hot steamed rice and topped with raw fish and seafood. CHIRASHI often has tamago (omelette), unagi (eel) and veggies mixed in with sushi rice on the bottom, and is topped off with slices of mixed sashimi. Sanbiki's chirashi (below) is a customer favourite.
NEGITORODON is made with fatty tuna (toro) and finely chopped spring onion (negi) Like other donburi, sushi bowls are popular "Grab and Go" meals for busy bodies.
TEKKADON has raw tuna (not fatty) that is sometimes marinated with soy, sesame or a spicy sauce before being put over rice. Finely cut nori (dried seaweed) garnishes the tekkadon below.
Unlike sushi or sashimi, no special etiquette or rules pertain to eating and enjoying donburi. Japanese people do not themselves pour soy sauce directly on to plain white rice but it may be added sparingly to donburi if desired. And of course never leave you chopsticks sticking straight out of the rice bowl. This is how offerings are presented to the dead!
Instead rest your chopsicks on the rim of the bowl or on the "hashioki" (chopstick rest) that may be provided. If one is not provided in a restaurant, some Japanese will fashion their own from the chopstick wrapper....
More soon! Enjoy DONBURI sit down at Sanbiki or visit Mori Mori for Grab and Go sushi and bowls. Made fresh daily!
Labels:
chirashi,
donburi,
gyudon,
Japanese food,
katsudon,
rice bowls,
sanbiki restaurant kamloops,
tendon
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