miso
A Japanese miso primer

This is a post that has been a long time coming. I kept on holding it off until I had a good variety of miso on hand to show photos of. I can’t say I have a comprehensive selection to show you, but I hope you will find this article useful anyway.
Miso (味噌、みそ), as you probably know already, is a naturally fermented paste made by combining cooked soy beans, salt, and often some other ingredient such as white or brown rice, barley, and so on. The texture can range from smooth to chunky, and the color from a light yellow-brown to reddish brown to dark chocolate brown, and the flavor ranges from mildly salty and sweet to strong and very salty. It is packed with umami and protein, not to mention all sorts of nutrients.
Miso-like fermented bean products and pastes exist all over Asia, but here I will mainly limit myself to the most commonly used Japanese misos. continue reading...
New potatoes with sweet-spicy miso

Here is another great way to enjoy new potatoes. It’s almost as simple to make as new potatoes with soy sauce and butter, though it uses a few more ingredients. Boiled whole new potatoes are panfried in a little sesame oil, then coated in a sticky sweet-salty-spicy miso sauce. The strong flavors of the miso sauce really go well with the blandness of the potatoes. continue reading...
Miso soup wrapup, and choosing and caring for lacquered soup bowls
The top black bowl is resin; the bottom two are real lacquered bowls. continue reading...
A week of miso soup, day 5: Ground shrimp, ginger and miso
A week of miso soup, day 4: Hokkaido-style corn, chicken and cabbage soup with miso
Today's miso soup may not look like miso soup, but it does have miso in it. It shows how to use miso as a background flavoring, instead of the predominant one. Since it has milk and a little butter in it, I've called it Hokkaido style after the northenmost main island in the archipelago that makes up Japan. continue reading...
A week of miso soup, day 3: Grilled eggplant (aubergine) and mushroom
A week of miso soup, day 1: Zucchini miso soup

Continuing my series on Japanese home cooking, this week I would like to introduce different kinds of miso soup. Miso soup (miroshiru) is one of the key parts of a Japanese meal. Another kind of soup that is served often is a clear soup called osumashi, but the miso soup base is more adaptable to all kinds of variations. continue reading...
Japanese basics: miso and miso soup
[Update:] See an updated miso soup how-to with step by step photos.









