dashi là gì

Dashi is the basic Japanese soup stock used in many Japanese dishes. Learn how to tát make Awase Dashi at home page with umami-packed ingredients lượt thích kombu (dried kelp) and katsuobushi (dried bonito flakes).

Awase Dashi in a measuring cup, and kombu and katsuobushi on a bamboo basket.

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When you decide to tát make Japanese food, you will realize that a lot of recipes require dashi, Japanese soup stock.

With this unfamiliar ingredient, you may think Japanese food is hard to tát replicate at home page. On the contrary, dashi is actually the easiest soup stock anyone can make from scratch as it requires only 1-2 ingredients and 20-minute prep time. This post shows you how you can make Awase Dashi using a combination of ingredients. Once you learn the ins and outs of dashi making, you'll be ready to tát tackle Japanese cooking with a breeze.

Table of Contents

  • What is Dashi?
  • How to tát Make All-Purpose Basic Dashi
    • The First Dashi
    • The Second Dashi
    • Do we really need to tát make dashi twice?
  • Dashi Shortcut
  • Easy & Delicious Recipes Using Dashi
  • The Ultimate Dashi Guide

What is Dashi?

Dashi (だし, 出汁) is Japanese soup stock that builds the bases for many of your favorite Japanese dishes lượt thích miso soup, chawanmushi, ramen, and shabu shabu. It is the essence of authentic Japanese flavor, and it tells the dishes apart if other substitutions are being used in place of the soup stock. And what defines dashi is the use of carefully selected ingredients lượt thích kombu, bonito flakes, shiitake mushrooms, and anchovies, and each ingredient is uniquely Japanese.

In general, there are five different types of dashi (two are vegan). Scroll down to tát see 5 different types or check out my Ultimate Dashi Guide. When we say "dashi" in nhật bản, it usually implies Awase Dashi because it's the most commonly used stock.

Awase Dashi (合わせだし) is made from a combination of kombu (dried kelp) and katsuobushi (dried bonito flakes), and it's the seafood-based stock. *Awase (合わせ) means "to combine", "mixed", or "together."

Awase Dashi in a measuring cup, and kombu and katsuobushi on a bamboo basket.

How to tát Make All-Purpose Basic Dashi

The First Dashi

The base of Awase Dashi is a vegan Kombu Dashi made from dried kelp. You can cold brew or hot brew kombu to tát make the dashi. Then you would add dried bonito flakes to tát the kombu dashi. This makes the stock more enriched. When you make dashi from the spent kombu and katsuobushi, it's called Ichiban Dashi (一番だし). It's basically the first pure dashi.

The Second Dashi

Niban Dashi (二番だし), or the second dashi is made from the spent kombu and katsuobushi, which you reserved from making Ichiban Dashi. Niban Dashi is a lighter, less intense dashi, yet still provides a great umami flavor despite the previously used ingredients.

Homemade Japanese rice seasoning, Furikake, in a Japanese xanh lơ and white ceramic bowl.

Do we really need to tát make dashi twice?

At a regular household, we make such a small amount of dashi that it's not very efficient to tát make both Ichiban Dashi and Niban Dashi. My suggestion is to tát make very good Ichiban Dashi and utilize the used kombu and katsuobushi to tát make Homemade Furikake (rice seasoning) and Kombu Tsukudani (simmered kombu) after collecting enough used kombu and katsuobushi. This way, there will be no waste, and you get another side dish to tát accompany your meal.

So then who makes Niban Dashi? Japanese restaurants make a huge batch of dashi daily. They use Ichiban Dashi for dishes lượt thích Clear Soups (Osumashi おすまし) and Chawanmushi, which require the pure and maximum amount of umami from the dashi ingredients. They typically use Niban Dashi for simmered food (Nimono) and miso soup, which doesn't require much flavor from the soup stock.


Dashi Shortcut

Sometimes life happens and you just don't have trăng tròn minutes to tát make dashi from scratch. On those occasions, you can use Dashi Packet or Dashi Powder.

Dashi Shortcut | Easy Japanese Recipes at JustOneCookbook.com

I love using Kayanoya Dashi Packet (left) and Shimaya Dashi Powder (right). Both are MSG-free and additive-free. You can purchase them at Japanese grocery stores or on Amazon:

  • Kayanoya Dashi Packet
  • Shimaya Dashi Powder

The instruction on how to tát use them (recipes) can be found in the Dashi Packet post and Dashi Powder post.

4 wooden miso soup bowls containing different types of miso soup.

Easy & Delicious Recipes Using Dashi

  • Homemade Miso Soup
  • Spicy Shoyu Ramen
  • Agedashi Tofu
  • Japanese Hot Pots and Stews
5 different types of dashi in a jar and their ingredients.

The Ultimate Dashi Guide

Dashi plays an important role as a flavor enhancer in Japanese cooking, so sánh you don’t need to tát season the food with too much salt, fat, and sugar. Rich in minerals and other vitamins, dashi is considered a healthy ingredient in our daily diet.

There are six different types of dashi you can use in Japanese cooking, including vegetarian and vegan dashi (*).

  1. Awase Dashi - a stock made from a combination of dried kelp + bonito flakes
  2. Kombu Dashi * - a stock made from dried kelp
  3. Katsuo Dashi - a stock made from dried bonito flakes
  4. Iriko Dashi - a stock made from dried anchovies/sardines
  5. Shiitake Dashi * - a stock made from dried shiitake mushrooms
  6. Vegan Dashi * - a stock made from dried shiitake mushrooms and kombu

If you are new to tát different types of dashi, kiểm tra out my Ultimate Dashi Guide.


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Awase Dashi (Japanese Soup Stock)

Dashi is the basic Japanese soup stock used in many Japanese dishes. Learn how to tát make Awase Dashi at home page with umami-packed ingredients lượt thích kombu (kelp) and katsuobushi (bonito flakes).

  • 1 piece kombu (dried kelp) ((10 g; 4 inches x 4 inches, 10 centimet x 10 cm))
  • 1 cup katsuobushi (dried bonito flakes) ((10 g))
  • 4 cups water

Before You Start...

  1. Sometimes life happens and you just don't have trăng tròn minutes to tát make dashi from scratch. On those occasions, you can use Dashi Packet or Dashi Powder.



  2. Gather all the ingredients. Most Japanese recipes would say to tát gently clean the kombu with a damp cloth. However, these days, kombu is quite clean, so sánh just make sure it doesn't have any mold spots and it's ready to tát use. Do not wash or wipe off the white powdery substance, as it has lots of umami.



  3. Xem thêm: cap hay đăng ảnh

    Make several slits in the kombu to tát release more flavor.



To Make the Cold Brew Kombu Dashi Ahead of Time (Optional)

  1. Put the water and kombu in a large bottle and let it steep on the counter for 2-3 hours in the summertime and 4-5 hours in the wintertime. You can also cold brew the kombu dashi overnight in the refrigerator.



To Make the Awase Dashi

  1. Add the kombu and water to tát a medium saucepan. If you have cold brew Kombu Dashi (previous step), add the Kombu Dashi and hydrated kombu to tát the saucepan.



  2. Turn on the heat to tát medium low and slowly bring to tát almost boiling, about 10 minutes.



  3. Meanwhile, clean the dashi by skimming the foam and debris from the surface.



  4. Just before the dashi starts boiling gently, remove the kombu from the saucepan (discard or repurpose in other recipes—suggestions follow). If you leave the kombu in the saucepan, the dashi will become slimy and bitter. 



  5. Add the katsuobushi and bring it back to tát a boil again.



  6. Once the dashi is boiling, reduce the heat, simmer for just 30 seconds, and turn off the heat.



  7. Let the katsuobushi sink to tát the bottom, about 10 minutes.



  8. Strain the dashi through a fine-mesh sieve over a bowl or measuring cup. Reserve the katsuobushi and repurpose it; see the suggested recipes that follow. The Awase Dashi is ready to tát use.



To Store

  1. If you are not using the dashi right away, store the dashi in a bottle or mason jar and keep it in the refrigerator for 3-5 days or in the freezer for 2 weeks.



What to tát bởi with the spent katsuobushi and kombu?

  1. Save the spent kombu and katsuobushi in an airtight container and store it in the refrigerator for a week or in the freezer for up to tát a month.



  2. With the spent kombu, you can make Simmered Kombu (Kombu Tsukudani).



  3. You can also make Homemade Furikake (Rice Seasoning).



Optional: Niban (Second) Dashi

  1. In a medium saucepan, put 2-4 cups* of water and previously used kombu and katsuobushi from making the first dashi. Bring it to tát a boil over medium-low heat. *2 cups would make a stronger dashi.

  2. Remove the kombu just before the liquid comes to tát a boil, then lower the heat, and cook for 10 minutes, skimming occasionally.

  3. Add an additional ½ cup (5 grams) of fresh katsuobushi and turn off the heat.

  4. Let the katsuobushi sink to tát the bottom and strain the dashi through the fine-mesh sieve.

Condiments
Japanese
dashi, katsuobushi, kombu, stock

Editor's Note: This post was originally published in January 2013. The images and nội dung have been updated in April 2019.

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