A clear soup stock, usually with a fish or vegetable base.
[Japanese, broth.]
Dictionary:
da·shi (dä'shē) ![]() |
[Japanese, broth.]
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[DA-shee] Used extensively in Japanese cooking, dashi is a soup stock made with dried bonito tuna flakes (katsuobushi), kombu and water. Dashi-no-moto is this stock in instant form; it comes granulated, powdered and in a concentrate.
| Wikipedia: Dashi |
Dashi (出汁, だし) is a class of soup and cooking stocks considered fundamental to Japanese cooking. In 1980, Shizuo Tsuji wrote:
"Many substitutes for dashi are possible, but without dashi, dishes are merely a la japonaise and lack the authentic flavor."[citation needed]
Dashi forms the base for miso soups, clear broth soups, Japanese noodle broths, and many Japanese simmering liquids.[citation needed]
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The most common form of dashi is a simple broth or stock made by boiling kombu (edible kelp) and kezurikatsuo (shavings of katsuobushi) and then straining the resultant liquid.[citation needed]
Fresh dashi made from dried kelp and katsuobushi is rare today, even in Japan.[1] Most people now use granulated or liquid instant substitutes.[citation needed]
Other kinds of dashi stock are made by soaking kelp, niboshi, or shiitake in water for many hours or by heating them in water nearly to boiling and straining the resultant broth.[citation needed]
In 1908, the unusual and strong flavor of kelp dashi was identified by Kikunae Ikeda as umami, the "fifth flavor", attributed to unique human taste receptors responding to glutamic acid.[citation needed]
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