Rainy Season Kitchen

Jun 1, 2020 | Recipes, Summer

RAINY SEASON KITCHEN

TSUYU (梅雨 literally, “plum rain”) comes to the Japanese archipelago every year as spring turns to summer. The constant dampness of tsuyu encourages the growth of kabi (mildew, and molds) requiring a strategy (taisaku 対策) … and diligence (doryoku努力).

But, despite careful, persistent efforts to keep sheets of nori crisp and crunchy osembei crackers from going soggy, inevitably dampness overtakes all. Here are some tasty solutions to done-in-by-dampness foodstuffs.

Briny Black Sauce spread on slabs of tōfu broiled dengaku-style.

High humidity in Japan, especially during the rainy season, makes it a challenge to keep dried foods, dry. Despite the anti-moisture pellets that are included in most modern packages, rice crackers get sticky, and sheets of yaki nori, the toasted laver best known to Americans as wrappers for rolled sushi, go limp. Soggy yaki nori can be transformed into a thick, yummy sauce to spread on skillet-seared sea scallops, or blocks of tōfu before being broiled. This sauce can even be spread on bread instead of butter or mayo when making a grilled or toasted sandwich.

Download a recipe for BRINY BLACK SAUCE

Spicy Smashed-Sembei Sliders

I LOVE osembei rice crackers! But they chip, break, crack and get crushed, all too easily. But… crushed osembei make a TERRIFIC binder for ground meat – much tastier than plain breadcrumbs. So, when your osembei go limp and soggy: smash them!

And use the meal to make meatloaf, burgers… or these SPICY SMASHED-SEMBEI SLIDERS .

Kiriboshi Daikon

Kiriboshi Daikon

Before refrigeration became widely available, pre-modern societies struggled with keeping fresh food from spoiling. A variety of ingenious techniques were developed throughout the world, including drying fresh foods in well-ventilated shade. In Japan, the resulting...

Funky Fish Sauces

Funky Fish Sauces

Fermented fish sauces can be found in many parts of the world, most having been produced for thousands of years. It is unclear whether each was an independent "discovery" or whether they influenced each other by way of shared ancient trade routes and/or political...

Miso Soup

Miso Soup

An Honorable Bowl of Soup The Japanese have several words to describe their ubiquitous soup seasoned and enriched with miso. The prosaic miso shiru 味噌汁 is a generic word meaning "miso-thickened broth" while miso ji-daté 味噌仕立て is a functional, culinary term meaning...

Kumquats

Kumquats

Kumquats are called kinkan 金柑 in Japanese, meaning "golden citrus."  The fruit is native to south-east China where they have been cultivated for hundreds of years, though the scientific name is Citrus japonica. There are dozens of varities of kumquats but the round...

Recent Posts & Projects