Vous êtes sur la page 1sur 25

Pur

chas
eacopyof

Ki
b
atoneoft
hes
er
et
ai
l
er
s
:

KIB
Brimming with Hope

Recipes & Stories from Japans Tohoku

Elizabeth Andoh
Photography by Aya Brackett

Ten Speed Press


Berkeley

Contents
Map
Whats in a Name?
Introduction

Tasting Tradition: Recipes and Culinary Tales from the Tohoku


Onigiri Story

Pressed Rice Sandwiches


(Onigiri) v
The Language of Food

Salmon Rice Topped with Red


Caviar (Harako Meshi)
Fried Tfu and Mountain
Vegetable Pilaf (Michinoku
Kokeshi Bent) v
Creative Kokeshi
Kinkon-Zuk

Ordinary Miso Soup (Teiban no


Miso Shiru) v
Sea Vegetables

Pinched-Noodle Soup with Pork


(Hittsumi-Jiru)
Scaling up for a Small Crowd

Oysters-on-the-River-Bank Hot
Pot (Kaki no Dot Nab)
Home, Hearth, and Hot Pots

Good to the Last Drop: Ojiya


Prepping Shucked Oysters for Hot
Pot Cookery

Celebration Hot Pot (Tsuyuji,


Kozuyu, Zaku Zaku-Jiru) v
Straw-Wrapped, BrineSimmered Tfu (Tsuto Tfu)

Rice Straw (Wara)


Banana Leaves and Corn Husks

Fish Sausage Patties (Sasa


Kamaboko)
Fish Sausage

Miso-Seared Scallops (Hotat no


Miso Yaki)
Squid Jerky and Carrot Strips
(Ika Ninjin)
An Americanized Taste of the
Tohoku
A Vegan Taste of the Tohoku v

Chrysanthemum and noki


Mushroom Salad (Kiku-Bana
to nokidak no Nihai-zu) v
Chrysanthemums (Kiku)
Squash Blossom and Enoki
Mushroom Salad

Walnut-MisoStuffed Shiso
Leaves (Shiso Maki) v
Osechi (A Feast for the New Year

Variation on a Theme: Kelp-Alone


Scrolls (Mini Kobu Maki) v

Foxy Rolls (Kitsun Maki)

Persimmon Stuffed with Fall


Fruits in Pine NutTfu Sauce
(Matsu no Mi Shira A, Kaki
Utsuwa) v
Rice Taffy with Crushed
damam (Zunda Mochi)
Measuring Rice Flour

Salmon-Stuffed Kelp Rolls (Shak


no Kobu Maki)

A Guide to the Kib Kitchen


About Rice

Special Techniques

About Stocks

Special Tools

About Sauces

About Sak

Special Ingredients

Moving Forward: Japan in Recovery


Nuclear Diaspora by
Jane Kitagawa

Brimming with Hope by


Hiroko Sasaki

A Note About Language


The Cast of Kib Characters:
Colleagues, Cohorts, Collaborators, and Contributors
About the Author

Hokkaido

Sapporo

Aomori
AOMORI

AKITA

Morioka

Akita

IWATE

YAMAGATA

Yamagata

MIYAGI

Sendai

Niigata
Fukushima
Niigata
FUKUSHIMA

Tochigi
Gumma

Toyama
Toyama

Kanazawa

Nagano

Utsunomiya
Mito

Maebashi

Ibaraki

Ishikawa
Nagano

Fukui

Saitama
Fukui

Urawa

Gifu
Yamanashi
Kofu

Tottori

Matsue

Hiroshima

Kobe
Okayama

Otsu

Chiba

Shiga

Nagoya

Aichi

Yokohama

Shizuoka

Shizuoka

Osaka

Mie

Nara

Tsu

Osaka

Takamatsu

Hiroshima

Kyoto

Tokyo

Chiba

Kyoto

Hyogo

Okayama

Yamaguch
Yamaguchi

Kanagawa

Gifu

Tottori
Shimane

Tokyo

Kagawa

Nara

Wakayama
Tokushima

Matsuyama

Fukuoka

Fukuoka

Ehime

Kochi

Saga

Tokushima
Wakayama

Kochi

Oita
Oita
Nagasaki

Nagasaki

Kumamoto

Kumamoto

Miyazaki

Miyazaki
Kagoshima
Kagoshima

Whats in a Name?
Japans northeast is spoken of in various ways. Most common is the generic
though geographically descriptive word: Tohoku. T means east and hoku
means north.
The word sanriku (literally, three riku, or areas) is territorial terminology that
encompasses riku , riku ch, and riku zen. In 1896 a large and destructive
earthquake hit the region and media coverage at the time coined the phrase
Sanriku to describe the larger area.
Michinoku, literally the remote road, refers to the northern territories and is
cloaked in a romantic aura. It was made famous by the seventeenth century
poet Matsuo Bash in his travel-inspired verse, The Narrow Road to the
Interior. The current spelling of Michinoku, using hiragana (syllabary symbols),
no longer contains clues to the meaning contained in the original calligraphy,
one of which is rikuthe same riku as appears in sanriku.

AOMORI

Aomori
Hachinohe

AKITA

Akita

Morioka
IWATE

MIYAGI

Ishinomaki
Yamagata
YAMAGATA

Sendai

Niigata
Fukushima
Niigata

FUKUSHIMA

Tochigi
Gumma

Futaba

Introduction
The devastation of Japans Tohoku and Kanto regions (see map, page 6)
began with an earthquake of remarkable force on Friday, March 11, 2011,
at 2:46 in the afternoon. The record-breaking tidal waves (tsunami) that
immediately followed left crushing, crippling destruction in their wake. In
the days, weeks, and months thereafter, natures onslaught continued with
hundreds of very strong aftershocks, many accompanied by yet more tsunami
and by landslides. When winter thawed into spring, melting snow revealed
deep, destructive fissures in the landscape. To compound the horror, damage
to the Fukushima power plant produced severe and extensive energy shortages and wreaked radiation havoc, forcing widespread evacuation and focusing world attention on safety issues in the use of nuclear energy. The triple
calamityearthquake, tsunami, and nuclear meltdownofficially has been
named the Great Eastern-Japan Earthquake Disaster (Higashi Nihon DaiShinsai), shortened by most to a painfully simple word: Disaster (Shinsai).
Yet, as Japan struggledcontinues to struggleto rebuild in the aftermath of tragedy, the prevailing mood is one of dogged determination,
imbued with hope. In a single Japanese word: kib. And that is what I have
chosen to name this culinary tribute to the Tohoku.

The Birth of the Kib Book Project


When the first huge, terrifying quake hit on Friday afternoon, March 11, I
was in my Tokyo kitchen preparing for a cooking workshop the following
day. Having lived through several large quakes before, including one in
which I spent hours trapped in an elevator before being rescued, I went
into automatic action trying to pretend it was just a drill, not the real thing.
Trembling (me and the earth together), I shut off the stove and clambered
9

my way to the front door. As I propped it opena precaution since frames


can shift, jamming doors shutI witnessed a crane on the construction site
across the street sway and totter. I donned my emergency-ready knapsack
and crouched down in the doorway. The initial quake lasted for several
minutesit seemed as though it would never stop.
Still trembling (me and the earth), I turned on the emergency news
channel and learned the center of seismic activity (the largest on record in
Japan, revised later that month to 9.0) was off the coast of Sendai (see map,
page 7). Gigantic tsunami (tidal waves) were predicted, and came . . . and
kept coming, with hundreds of aftershocks. Transportation in Tokyo came
to a halt, and communication services were widely disruptedfrustrating,
frightening. And then, news of the nuclear accident in Fukushima . . .
In the weeks that immediately followed the Disaster, it became increasingly clear that mass evacuations, necessitated by the nuclear accident,
would create a diaspora: displaced communities and disrupted lives.
Like others in Japan who had been spared significant property damage
or personal injury, I wondered how I could help. As volunteer groups sprang
up everywhere to address emergency needs, I found myself thinking more
about long-term recovery. I was especially concerned with the plight of
the refugees who were being relocated to distant places. I wondered how a
writer and teacher of Japans traditional culinary arts could assist those in the
devastated Tohoku area. After much soul-searching, I resolved to chronicle
the culinary heritage of the Tohokuespecially of the three prefectures that
were hardest hit: Fukushima, Miyagi, and Iwate (see map, page 7)before
traditional foods there morphed into unrecognizable fare, or disappeared
entirely. By writing in English, I could engage a wide-reaching readership,
introducing them to local flavors while providing the global community with
a way to share in the regions aspirations and determination. Even further, I
sought a publishing house that would join me in supporting Japans rebuilding and renewal efforts.
My stalwart agent, Lisa Ekus, helped me hone my proposal. In the stifling heat of the summer of 2011, with frequent and severe aftershocks still
rocking the Tohoku and nuclear power plant closings throughout Japan
10 | Kib

leaving homes and businesses everywhere with little or no cooling, we submitted my proposal to Ten Speed Press.
They responded enthusiastically, and shared my philanthropic commitment! But . . . they also challenged me to rethink the platform, time frame,
and scope of what I had originally envisioned. There would be time later,
they said, for a more exhaustive treatment of the subject. (They knew, all too
well, from working with me on my previous books, Washoku and Kansha,
that my manuscript would be information dense.) Instead, they urged
me to write something much shorter, more timely: an e-original that could
be published by March of 2012, the first anniversary of the Disaster. That
meant delivering a complete manuscript in just a few monthsWashoku
and Kansha had each been five-year projects! Both those books had been
written with the help of a demographically diverse, geographically dispersed
group of volunteer recipe testers whose feedback enabled me to understand
how best to make unfamilar food enticing and accessible. I knew that Kib
would benefit from the same approach, so I immediately sent out a call for
volunteers through my newsletter. I was, thankfully, wonderfully deluged
with offers to assist me.
At the same time, Ten Speed Press assembled a multitalented team of
editors, designers, photographer and food stylist, public relations and marketing experts. Dozens of people came together to help me create this book.
Please read the details in my Cast of Kib Characters (page 124).

Introduction | 11

Tasting Tradition
Recipes and Culinary Tales
from the Tohoku

aving committed to an electronic format and an incredibly short


timeline for finalizing manuscript, I was faced with the difficult task
of selecting just a few dishes to represent the Tohoku region. I consoled
myself with a well-known Japanese saying: hara hachi bu ni isha irazu.
Similar to our saying An apple a day keeps the doctor away, the Japanese
say, A stomach eight-tenths full needs no doctor. Culinary satisfaction
is not linked to satiety, but rather to being slightly hungry when you leave
the table. In Kib, I aim for hara hachi bu: to whet your appetite for more.
In Western cultures, we speak of breaking bread together as a way
of establishing and nurturing human connections. The recipes in Kib are
more likely to have you marveling at the deep, rich flavor of miso-seared
scallops or sharing the simple pleasure of a plain salted rice ball (onigiri)
recalling that it was the first food tasted by most survivors in the shelters.

Onigiri Story
Everyone in Japan has an onigiri story. Most are nostalgic narratives of mother
waking early to pack lunch, hands reddened from pressing steaming rice into
bundles. Mom is likely to have stuffed the rice with katsuo-bushi (fish flakes)
if her child had an athletic competition or an important exam to take (a play on
words because katsuo means winning and bushi means warriors). Biting into a

13

fish flakefilled onigiri half a century later, a retired businessman might recall
the glorious moment he learned of his acceptance to a top university, or the
day his high school ball club won the regional pennant. For many of todays
teenagers, whose mothers are no longer dedicated homemakers, onigiri might
conjure up konbini camaraderie: classmates gathering at the local convenience store for an afterschool snack.
What is my onigiri story? Had you asked me before the Disaster, I would have
reminisced about the young New York woman who visited rural Japan in the
1960s (me, then) who became a middle-aged omusubi maven (me, now) (see
The Language of Food, page 20). The story would have started with my first
taste of shockingly sour umboshi (pickled plum). Buried deep inside a bundle
of lightly salted rice that the locals had called omusubi (not onigiri), I found the
softly wrinkled, dusty-pink, mouth-puckering plum oddly wonderful with the
rice: an unexpectedly satisfying mini-meal. In the ensuing years, I have made
countless omusubi for my daughter and her grade-school teammates (I wonder
if their food memories associate smoky-sweet katsuo-bushi with winning the
swim tournament?), for my husband and his fishing buddies (their preferred
filling is tarako or cod roe), for my kitchen assistants (omusubi filled with bits of
soy-stewed kombu or salted salmon flakes . . . or whatever happened to be on
hand that day), and for myself (I remain a staunch fan of umboshi ).
Now, after the Disaster, I have a different tale to tell: it is an ode to onigiri,
a chronicle of culinary bonding between a culturally diverse, compassionate communityYanesen, part of Tokyos retro Shitamachi districtand the
survivors of tsunami-ravaged Kesennuma Port, in Miyagi Prefecture (see map,
page 7).
Like many Tokyoites who had survived March 11 greatly shaken-up but with
little personal injury or property damage, Yanesen residents wanted to help
those in the stricken Tohoku shelters where ready-to-eat food was still in
short supply weeks later. They swung into action with a soup kitchen of
sorts. Dubbing themselves the Onigiri Troops, local housewives, shopkeepers,
and members of the Otsuka Mosque (a Tokyo-based Islamic group) gathered at

14 | Kib

Genkoji (Buddhist) Temple to produce thousands of onigiri. Their activity was


recorded by nonfiction writer Mayumi Mori and posted to her blog, which is
how I became aware of their efforts.
Moris camera zooms in and out, creating a riveting collage of images and
sound snippets early in April. We see the mosques truck being packed up with
food and supplies (somehow they managed to navigate nearly 200 miles of
quake-ruptured roadways to make multiple deliveries). We hear the organizers
tell us how they gathered dozens of volunteers and got donations from local
merchants. We see the efficient onigiri production line (scooping, weighing,
shaping, and wrapping the rice bundles) and follow a woman who hauls a
tray laden with hundreds of finished onigiri to the bone-chilling room at back.
(Optimal kitchen hygiene requires the rice be completely cooled before packing it up for the long journey.) We see tired women taking turns massaging
each others sore shoulders and taking care of each others children.
The most poignant episode is of a young, bandana-clad mother struggling with
her decision to leave the Tokyo area; her newly launched business selling produce from small local farms cannot survive the onslaught of consumer uncertainty regarding possible radiation contamination. She is concerned, too, for
the safety of her own family. But she does not want to abandon the Yanesen
community that so warmly welcomed them, the newcomers from Osaka, just a
few years ago. The camera captures her tears, and then gently pulls back.
In closing, the production line replays in slow motion, ending with mini-portraits of several volunteersdisposable gloves removed now that the ricepressing work is finished. Gauze masks lowered reveal tired, but smiling, faces.

TASTING TR ADITION | 15

Pressed Rice Sandwiches v


Onigiri
Salted, pressed rice sandwichesonigiriare easy to pack up, transport, and
eat, making them a substantial, satisfying finger food. Most are shaped into
triangles, though logs called tawara, or rice sheath, and balls are also common. Plain, white rice stuffed (like a sandwich) with a filling is the norm, but
maz gohan (cooked rice that has been tossed with other cooked foods) is also
used in making onigiri. Rice sandwiches are usually wrapped with strips of
nori (laver), though onigiri are sometimes slathered with miso or brushed with
soy sauce and grilled. (These are called yaki onigiri, or grilled pressed-rice and
are divine!) In childrens lunchboxes, onigiri are often decorated and made into
cute shapes. The finished food can be called either onigiri or omusubi (see The
Language of Food, page 20).
This recipe shows you how to form four (substantial-sized) to six (smallsized) triangular-shaped onigiri from 2 cups of cooked rice. You can easily
feed a large crowd by cooking more rice; consult the chart in the Cooked White
Rice recipe (page 78). I offer instructions here for stuffing your onigiri with
classic fillingsumboshi (sour pickled plum) and/or okaka (seasoned fish
flakes)and wrapping them with nori (laver), but feel free to experiment with
other foods.
Makes 4 to 6 onigiri

/4 teaspoon salt

2 cups cooked white rice (meshi, page 78),


freshly prepared and still warm
1 umboshi (pickled plum), flesh pulled from
pit, torn into 2 or 3 pieces

1 (3- or 5-gram) packet katsuo-bushi (fish


flakes, see page 91), drizzled with a few
drops of regular soy sauce, then tossed
to moisten (this mixture is called okaka,
seasoned fish flakes)
1 (7-by 8-inch) sheet nori (laver)

Salt the rice. When making onigiri more than 30 minutes in advance of
eating, salting and cooling the rice is critically important to maintain proper
hygiene (salt retards spoilage). Transfer freshly cooked rice from the bowl of
TASTING TR ADITION | 17

your appliance or stove-top pot to a large wide bowl. The classic Japanese
vessel is a flat-bottomed, wooden tub called a handai that is briefly wet down
with water to keep the rice from sticking to it. If you do not have a handai,
a heat-resistant shallow glass bowl is fine (and preferable to a metal one,
because glass does not retain heat). A large wooden salad bowl that has not
been previously seasoned with garlic or oil is also an option.
Using light cutting and folding motions (pretend you are working with
whipped egg whites, folding them into a cake batter), spread the rice out
in your bowl. Sprinkle with half the salt and toss the rice with light cutting
and folding motions to distribute. Cool the rice to the point that large clouds
of steam are no longer visible. The Japanese use a broad, flat fan called an
uchiwa to aid in this process; stiff cardboard (from a pad of paper) also works
well. Sprinkle the rice with the remaining salt and toss to distribute evenly.
Divide the rice into four 1/2-cup or six 1/3-cup portions. Have a bowl of room
temperature water nearby, to dip your hands and/or spatula in as needed to
keep the rice from sticking to them.
Wet both hands with water, shaking off excess. Scoop up a portion of rice and
lightly compact it into a sphere (this action is called nigiru and is the origin
of the name of this dish). Transfer the rice to your nondominant hand and,
1 with the fingertips of your dominant hand, press the center to make an
indentation. 2 Place either 1 of the pieces of umboshi or a half (if stuffing 2 onigiri) or a third (if stuffing 3 onigiri) of the okaka mixture in the
indented space. As you do this, cup the palm of your hand to enclose the
filling, making a sphere. Repeat to stuff all portions, setting aside stuffed
rice bundles on a clean work surface (covering a cutting board with plastic
wrap first will keep them from sticking and simplify cleanup).
Take a stuffed rice sphere in your moistened, nondominant hand. 3Bend
your dampened fingers of the other hand to form a V-shaped roof over
the top of the rice ball. Exert gentle pressure with this top hand to mold the
ricethis roof becomes one of the triangles pointed tipsand flatten out
18 | Kib

the bottom. Flex your wrist, turning your fingers up. As you do this, the rice
ball will flip so that the edge that previously was formed against your top
hand now rests on the flat palm of your bottom hand. Exert gentle pressure
again to form the second pointed tip on top. Repeat the roll, press, and flip
motion to complete the making of the triangle.
Repeat to make the remaining onigiri. As you work, group the rice bundles
by filling to make it easier to identify later. Many home cooks will create their
own system of identification according to the shape of the rice (triangle, log,
or ball) or design of the nori band (kimono-like crossed-in-front strips or
short bands placed under the base and pressed to front and back of triangular
onigiri; bracelet-like bands, some broad and others narrow, for log-shaped
onigiri; smiling faces or basketball designs drawn with strips of nori on
balls). Have fun inventing your own. If you are making 6 small-sized onigiri,
filling half with umboshi and half with okaka, I suggest you cut your sheet
of nori in half lengthwise, then across twice to yield 6 short strips, each about
11/2 by 4 inches. If you are making 4 larger onigiri, its best to cut a single
sheet of nori into 4 strips, lengthwise.
Finished onigiri can be served on a platter. If you are making them ahead of
time, cover the platter with clear plastic wrap and store at cool room temperature. Refrigerating the rice bundles makes them unpleasantly tough.
If you are packing onigiri into a picnic box, wrap each in clear plasticthe
modern methodor in dried bamboo leaves called taknokawa, the oldfashioned method (see photo, page 16). Nori can be wrapped around the
TASTING TR ADITION | 19

rice bundles immediately after shaping them (sticks easily to warm rice) or
just before eating, which gives the onigiri a more distinct seashore aroma
and slightly crispier texture.

The Language of Food


tonjiki
Tonjiki, written with calligraphy for gather and food, are thought to be the
prototype for modern-day onigiri. Several references to tonjiki appear in the
eleventh-century novel Tale of Genji by Lady Murasaki Shikubu. In her tale of
court romance and intrigue, tonjiki are described as compact, egg-shaped
spheres of cooked rice. It seems they were prepared in the banquet kitchens
not to be served to guests, but rather to feed the household help. The rice
was mixed with millet and other less costly grains.
onigiri nigiru
omusubi musubu
The Japanese language today has two words for pressed rice bundles: onigiri
and omusubi. Both words begin with an honorific o, showing that rice, no
matter what you call it, is a food to be honored. Each of the words, onigiri and
omusubi, derive from verbs that describe the compressing action needed
to shape cooked rice into easy-to-carry bundles. Nigiru means to press
together. Musubu means to tie together, to bind.

20 | Kib

Persimmons Stuffed with


Fall Fruits in Pine NutTfu Sauce
Matsu no Mi Shira A, Kaki Utsuwa
Many food cultures scoop out juicy melons and citrus fruits then serve the fruit,
cut into bite-sized pieces, in the hollowed-out shell. In Japan, persimmons are
used in a similar fashion. The carved-out shell becomes an impressive cup in
which the diced persimmon is served on its own or in combination with other
fall fruitsgrapes, pears, crisp applesthat have been napped with a classic
sauce of pine nuts and tfu called shira a.
To make the creamy sauce, some cooks merely mash tfu and season it with
a drizzle of mirin (sweet rice wine) and a drop of usukuchi shyu (light-colored
soy sauce); others will blend mashed tfu with sweet, pale miso or a spoonful
of rich sesame paste. In the Tohoku region, many cooks add toasted, crushed
pine nuts to enhance their rendition of shira a.
Serves 4

4 small firm persimmons, preferably the


boxy-shaped Fuyu variety
2 ounces seedless green or red grapes (about
10), sliced in quarters lengthwise

1 small Fuji apple, cored and diced


1 cup Matsu no Mi Shira A (Pine NutTfu
Sauce, page 87)

Slice off the top of one of the persimmons to make a lid about 1/4 inch thick.
With a curved serrated knife (the kind used to cut grapefruit segments),
carefully trace a circle around the inner rim of each persimmon. Ideally, you
will leave about 1/4- to 1/3-inch thick walls. Repeat to make four persimmon
cups, each with its own lid.
Dice the flesh you removed from the persimmon cups and put the pieces in
a bowl with the grapes and apple.

TASTING TR ADITION | 71

Just before serving, toss the mixed fruit with the tfu sauce. Divide among
the four persimmon cups, mounding the filling slightly. Set the lids at a
jaunty angle to the side of each.

Rice Taffy Dumplings


with Crushed damam

Zunda Mochi
A traditional Tohoku dish, jade-colored zunda is true to its namethe word
is written with calligraphy for crushing and beans. The beans in question
are damamthe same green soybeans that are served salted in their pods as
a beer snack. But in this dish, the damam are transformed into a dessert-like
dish by grinding them into a sweet topping for chewy little rice-flour dumplings, called omochi.
Makes 20 marble-sized dumplings and 1/2 cup sauce, to serve 4

Sugar Syrup
/4 cup sugar

2 tablespoons water

Zunda Sauce
8 ounces flash-frozen damam in the pod
(see page 90) (half of a 400-gram bag)

Dumplings
/2 cup lightly packed rice flour, preferably
dango ko (about 2 ounces) or 1/4 cup
shiratama ko or mochi ko (rice flour made
from mochi-gom or sticky rice) and
1
/4 cup jshin ko, rice flour made from
uruchi mai or ordinary table rice (about
2 ounces total) (see page 101)

2 to 3 tablespoons warm water

To make the sugar syrup, heat the sugar and water in a small pot, stirring to
dissolve. Continue to cook over medium heat, stirring, for 1 minute, or until
the mixture becomes transparent, begins to thicken, and the bubbles become

72 | Kib

Matsu no Mi Shira A
Pine Nut Tfu Sauce
Foods dressed with a creamy tfu sauce are called shira aa classic dish in
Japans culinary repertoire. To make the sauce, some cooks merely mash the
tfu and season it with a drizzle of mirin (sweet rice wine) and a drop of usukuchi shyu (light-colored soy sauce); others will blend mashed tfu with sweet,
pale miso or a spoonful of rich sesame paste. In the Tohoku region, many cooks
will add toasted, crushed pine nuts to enhance their rendition of shira a.
The sauce goes marvelously well with fall fruit such as grapes, pears, and tart,
crisp apples. Think of this dish as a Japanese Waldorf salad, minus the mayo (see
Persimmons Stuffed with Fall Fruits in PineNut Tfu Sauce, page 71). The fruit
can be tossed in the sauce alone, or in combination with blanched leafy greens
(slightly bitter ones, such as dandelion greens or watercress, are especially good).
Makes about 1 cup, 4 to 6 servings

/4 to 1/3 large block firm tfu (see page


105), about 4 ounces, drained

Pinch of salt
Drop of mirin (see page 95)

/ to 1/3 cup pine nuts (matsu no mi),


untoasted

1 4

Bring a pot of water to a vigorous boil, add the tfu, and cook for 1 minute
(boil for 2 to 3 minutes if the tfu is left over from a previous use). With a
slotted spoon, remove the tfu, draining it well as you set it aside.
In a heavy skillet set over medium heat, dry roast the pine nuts, stirring them
with a spatula or gently swirling the skillet to keep the nuts in motion. When
the nuts are aromatic and very lightly colored, about 2 minutes, remove the
skillet from the stove. The nuts will continue to roast with retained heat, so
remove when the color is on the light side. While still warm, transfer the
nuts to a suribachi (grooved mortar) to crush them the old-fashioned way or
to the bowl of a mini-sized food processor to crush them the modern way.
A GU IDE TO THE KIB KITCHEN

| 87

Text and some photos copyright 2012 by Elizabeth Andoh


Photographs copyright 2012 by Aya Brackett
All rights reserved.
Published in the United States by Ten Speed Press, an imprint of the Crown Publishing Group,
a division of Random House, Inc., New York.
www.crownpublishing.com
www.tenspeed.com
Ten Speed Press and the Ten Speed Press colophon are registered trademarks of Random House, Inc.
With the exception of text and photographs by Elizabeth Andoh and Aya Brackett,
the following essays, additional photographs, and illustrations are reprinted by permission:
About Sake, copyright 2012 by Yukari Sakamoto. All rights reserved.
Nuclear Diaspora and accompanying photograph, copyright 2012 by Jane Kitagawa.
All rights reserved.
Brimming with Hope and accompanying photograph, copyright 2012 by Hiroko Sasaki.
All rights reserved.
Photographs on page 57 by Karen Shinto
Photographs on pages 49, 60, 62, and 64 by Rebecca Womack
Ceramics shown on pages 70, 94, and 114 by Catherine White
Maps on pages 6 and 7, copyright by Map Resources
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Andoh, Elizabeth.
Kibo (brimming with hope) : recipes and stories from Japans Tohoku / Elizabeth Andoh ;
photographs by Aya Brackett. 1st ed.
p. cm.
Summary: A tribute to the recipes and traditions of the people of Japans Tohoku region
before and after the earthquake of March 2011, by Japanese culinary authority Elizabeth Andoh
Provided by publisher.
1. Cooking, Japanese. 2. CookingJapanTohoku Region. 3. Cookbooks. I. Title.
TX724.5.J3A526 2012
641.595211--dc23
2011051573
eISBN 978-1-60774-370-5
Design by Toni Tajima
Food styling by Karen Shinto
v3.1
A Ten Speed Ebook Original

Pur
chas
eacopyof

Ki
b
atoneoft
hes
er
et
ai
l
er
s
:

Vous aimerez peut-être aussi